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American
Interstate System
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| exit # | community | exit # | community | |
| 10-14 | Spearfish | 260 | Oacoma | |
| 17-30 | Deadwood | 263 | Chamberlain | |
| 30 | Sturgis | 284 | Kimball | |
| 48 | Black Hawk | 308 | Plankinton | |
| 57-60 | Rapid City | 330-332 | Mitchell | |
| 110 | Wall | 368 | Canistota | |
| 150 | Kadoka | 399 | Sioux Falls | |
| 191-192 | Murdo | 410 | Brandon |
» I-90 State Index «
SOUTH DAKOTA I-90 Strip
Map »
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USA Interstate Map featuring I-90 «
| There
seems to be a debate about almost everything; where the Great Plains
start is no exception. We chose the school of thought which states that
the Great Plains start with the Black Hills. So... welcome to the Great
Plains. This is some of the richest and most productive soil on this earth. Even before the 'white man' started cultivating it, the natural prairie grasses were among the most nutritious anywhere. Today, you'll see those "... amber waves of grain ..." like waves of the ocean as you drive along I-90.
Visitors' Center - Located in downtown Spearfish, just off their delightful Main Street, take I-90 exit 12 and follow Jackson Blvd west into town to Main Street. Turn right, go 1 block and the Visitors' Center is to your left on the opposite corner at 106 West Kansas Street. For more information, phone (toll free) 1-800-626-8013. Black Hills Passion Play
- A pageant of the last seven days in the life of Christ. This is the
oldest, longest running 'passion play' in the U.S. It is held in a 6,000
seat amphitheatre at 8p every Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday during June,
July and August. Reservations are recommended but not required. Tickets
range from about $12 to $18; less for children. Booth Historic Fish
Hatchery - Constructed in 1896 by D. C. Booth who used it to
introduce trout to the Black Hills. Situated next to his house (also
open to tourists) on a beautiful park-like campus, the site also
includes a museum and ca 1899 ice house. Currently maintained by the
U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, one very popular feature is the
underwater viewing window. Dolls at Home Museum
- When your collection grows until you just run out of space, what do
you do? Johanna Meier, former international opera singer, started a
museum. Her collection is world=famous, has been featured on National
Public Television and even featured in the Wall Street Journal. Bear Butte State
Park - A holy mountain to the Sioux and Cheyenne tribes; they still
make pilgrimages to this spot. One of the rituals is to tie special
pieces of cloth - or pouches filled with meaningful articles - to the
trees to assist the ascension of prayers to the Great Spirit. The rock,
protruding above the desert floor like a bubble is just that, - a
volcanic bubble created millions of years ago. Artifacts have been found
in this area dating back 10,000 years. Mt. Rushmore National Monument The National
Monument is about 20 miles from I-90 but easily accessed by US-16. From
I-90 take exit 57 and follow I-190 to its end at SD-44 (Omaha Street).
Turn left, go 1 block to US-16 (8th Street) and turn right. Now follow
US-16 to US-16 Alt. Just watch for the signs to Mt. Rushmore). Follow
US-16-Alt through Keystone to SD-244 (again, watch for the Mt. Rushmore
sign). Turn right and follow 244 to the Mt. Rushmore National Memorial
parking area and visitors' center. Visitors' Center -
The Convention and Visitors' Bureau is just a couple blocks from the end
of I-190. From
I-90 take exit 57 and follow I-190 to its end at SD-44 (Omaha Street).
Turn left, go 1 block to US-16 (8th Street) and turn right. You'll cross
a whole bunch of tracks and the visitors' center is to your left on the
other side at 444 Mount Rushmore Road (US-16). For information, phone
(toll free) 1-800-487-3223. Circle B Ranch
- Here is a very different venue - especially attractive to folks not
residents of the American West. The Horn family puts on a old-fashioned
western chuck wagon supper (tin plates and all). You might as well come
hungry because it is an 'all you can eat' fest. After everybody has
filled their bottomless pits to the max, you get to see a hilarious
show. There is so much more - especially for the younger kids. Prices
start at $16 (believe it was half price for kids even though they
probably eat twice as much). Their main season is June through August. Black Hills
Caverns - What can you say - it is a set of caverns - and they're
all different. The folks here have put in a lot of thought to
organization. They even have a special, 30 minute tour for those of us
for whom walking isn't quite so easy anymore. (The 60 minute tour takes
you through three levels of caverns and something like 150 steps to
climb up and down.) Ellsworth Air
Force Base - The South Dakota Air and Space Museum (which is just
outside the main entrance of the base) has something over two dozen
aircraft on display, some inside their building and some outside.
The museum also provides bus tours of some of the facilities of the base
(e.g., an old Minuteman Missile silo and a bit of the support for the
B-1 bombers based here. |
Wall Drug Store is
a warmly regarded, famous old fixture in the northern Great Plains.
Before there was an Interstate 90, there was US-14. The drive from
Pierre to Rapid City was hot and tiring but you know that when you got
to Wall there would be a tall glass of water, filled with ice, awaiting
you - and free of charge. A simple act which no only became famous but
certainly put Wall Drug Store on the map. » Hotels in Wall « Corn Palace
- This is the world's only
'Corn Palace' - a building, the entire facade of which, is decked out in
murals of agricultural products. A drive by the Corn Palace is a must. Enchanted World
Doll Museum - Here's another 'can't miss' attraction - visually and
spiritually. Right next door (yes, this place looks almost like Disney
Land) is a reproduction of an Middle Ages English castle, moat, turrets,
drawbridge and all. Inside - if you dare enter - are over 4,000 dolls
all carefully organized into about 400 real-life scenes, some even
animated. Call this the land of 3-D displays. Strolling
downtown Mitchell - We needed to find a Post Office and were told it
is only two blocks from the Corn Palace. So we walked west 1 block on
6th Avenue. There were a couple novelty stores (gift shops?) just around
the corner. Detour One. Then we walked south on Rowley Street to the
Post Office. No surprises, here. We asked if Mitchell has a coffee shop
where you can quietly sit down and enjoy a cup of coffee and some
diet-breaking sweets. "Absolutely!" was the response;
"Walk one block (east on 5th Avenue) and it's around the corner
next door to Kay's Kreations." While there we encountered a
military family on their way to Fort Bragg, NC. Our grandchildren
accompanying us were 8 and 10; the other family's children were 14 and
16. They wanted to go to the Dairy Queen across the street so we enjoyed
almost an hour of adult conversation - free baby sitters! Prehistoric
Indian Village & Museum - Here you can view - and walk through -
the site of a millennium-old Native American village. Though this is an
active archaeological site, you can witness, first hand, how the
artifacts are uncovered, restored and then placed on display. Walk
through a full-scale reproduction of an ancient earth lodge; view a
fully reconstructed buffalo skeleton. Audio-visual presentations
supplement the displays. Visitors' Center - With a Visitors' Center near the I-29 interchange (I-90 exit 396), their main office is at 200 N. Phillips Avenue. Get on I-229 (on the east side of Sioux Falls) and drive to exit 6. Drive west on 10th Street (SD-38) to Phillips Ave (4 blocks after you cross the Big Sioux River). Turn right on Phillips , go 2 blocks north. The Sioux Falls Convention & Visitors' Bureau is on the opposite corner at your right. Falls
Park Visitors Center & Tower - Another, perhaps more
interesting, visitors' center, is just a few blocks from the downtown
Convention & Visitors Bureau is the Falls Park location - just a few
blocks away. Next to their office is a tall, enclosed viewing tower with
an outdoor viewing deck. No stairs, folks, they have an elevator. You
look down at the waterfalls, the city and the surrounding area - a great
view and well worth the detour. Sioux
Falls: The Waterfalls - It may be one thing to have a large,
powerful river running right through your downtown but Sioux Falls has
something more: a 300 foot waterfall. Catfish
Bays Greatest Show on H20 - This is a
90 minute summer theater production that has acting, singing and dancing but all choreographed to amazing stunts on the water. This is probably the most popular summer show in Sioux Falls area. Chuck E.
Cheese - First, we did not visit the
place but were told about it by a family who had. The following
information is condensed from a phone conversation with the folks at
Chuck E. Cheese. Sertoma Butterly
House - Step into the world of tropical and semi-tropical
butterflies. Here you can stand among them as they, free-flying, wander
about looking for bright colors and, hopefully, nourishment. They do
have a snack shop and a gift shop. |
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