North Dakota
After leaving Glendive, Montana and the Mikoshika State Park, we headed up I-94 to Medora located in the North Dakota Badlands. This little town of 100 to 150 is mostly the caretakers for The Theodore Roosevelt National Park and the Marquis de Mores 26 room Chateau that we spent several days visiting. Roosevelt’s ranch was part of the national park. The park drive is 36-mile of beautiful grassy hills where you will find bison grazing like the days of old.
That same year, a sickly, bookish, young Teddy Roosevelt showed up. He w
We learned neither of their business ventures was successful, the marquis’s meat packing business failed within six years and Roosevelt’s ranching enterprise soon ceased as a terrible winter killed many on his herd and his ranch foreman quit to return to the east coast.
Roosevelt went on to form the Rough Riders and create the National Forest System. He also won the Nobel Peace Prize. Marquis de Mores returned to France and was
We realize our travels are but extensions of history lessons and this certainly falls into that category. As we roam through this part of the country, I see imaginary buffalo herds grazing on tall grass as far as the eye can see. At one time, there were 40-60 million bison roaming the land.
George Armstrong Custer was on the losing end of a famous clash between native Americans and the U.S. Army at the Battle of Little Bighorn in 1876. Custer graduated at the bottom of his class at West Point military academy, but saw extensive action as a Union cavalry officer in the Civil War and reached the wartime rank of major general. After the war he was made lieutenant-colonel of the Seventh Cavalry on America's western frontier. At Little Bighorn, his troops faced combined bands of Lakota Sioux, Cheyenne, and Arapaho indians led by the chief Sitting Bull.
General Custer's closet as seen on our tour of his home in North Dakota.
Sitting Bull, c.1831–1890, Native American chief, Sioux leader in the battle of the Little Bighorn. He rose to prominence in the Sioux warfare against the whites and the resistance of the Native Americans under his command to forced settlement on a reservation led to a punitive expedition. In the course of the resistance occurred the Native American victory on the Little Bighorn, where George Armstrong Custer and his men were defeated and killed on June 25, 1876.
We went to see his burial site at Mobridge, South Dakota which was nearer to his birthplace.