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Arnold Archambeau (born 1972), a member of the Yankton Sioux Tribe, was raised on its reservation in the southeastern half of Charles Mix County, South Dakota.Raised by his grandmother after his mother's death in his teens, [4] Archambeau was living with an aunt [5] and working at the Fort Randall Casino at the time of his disappearance. [4]
Gurney was born in Yankton, South Dakota on May 21, 1896, a son of Deloss Butler Gurney and Henrietta (Klopping) Gurney. [1] [2] He attended the public schools of Yankton and graduated from Yankton High School in 1915. [1] He became active in his father's business, Gurney's Seed and Nursery Company, of which was appointed secretary and ...
George S. Mickelson Middle School in Brookings is named after him, as is the George S. Mickelson Trail in the Black Hills and the George S. Mickelson Center for the Neurosciences in Yankton, South Dakota. The George S. Mickelson Education Center at Southeast Technical Institute in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, was built in 1990. The George S ...
McCall was buried in Sacred Heart Cemetery in Yankton County, South Dakota, [5] a cemetery which was moved in 1881. When McCall's body was exhumed, it was found to have the noose still around its neck. [1] McCall was the first person to be executed by federal officials in the Dakota Territory. [6]
Born in Yankton, South Dakota, Bogue received a Bachelor of Science degree from South Dakota State College in 1941 and was in the United States Army Signal Corps during World War II, from 1943 to 1946. He received a Bachelor of Laws from the University of South Dakota School of Law in 1947.
Ronald Dean Blaylock (born May 27, 1939) is a former American football coach. He served the head football coach at Yankton College in Yankton, South Dakota from 1962 to 1965 and Kansas State Teachers College—now known as Emporia State University—in Emporia, Kansas from 1967 to 1968, compiling a career college football coaching record of 19–25–2.
Bedridden and unable to attend the final constitutional convention in 1889, he died on December 11, 1889, a few weeks after South Dakota was admitted as a state. In 1963, the State of South Dakota donated a marble statue of Ward to the United States Capitol's National Statuary Hall Collection .
Chester Allan Poage (July 4, 1980 – March 13, 2000) [1] was an American man who was kidnapped, tortured, and murdered by three men in Spearfish, South Dakota, on March 13, 2000.