South Dakota
The Mount Rushmore State
Quick Stats
Map
Seal & Motto
"Under God, the People Rule"
Additional Information
The state's constitutional motto, affirming democratic principles grounded in faith.
Adopted 1889.
Population Growth
Overview
South Dakota, the 'Mount Rushmore State,' is a land of dramatic contrasts and quiet grandeur. The flat golden prairies of the east give way dramatically to the ancient granite peaks of the Black Hills, a sacred landscape where four presidents gaze from a cliff face, a Lakota warrior is slowly being carved into a mountain, and bison still roam free across the rolling grasslands.
Historical Significance
South Dakota officially joined the Union on November 2, 1889, as the 40th state — admitted simultaneously with North Dakota. Its history is inseparable from that of the Great Sioux Nation, from the 1876 Black Hills Gold Rush that violated the Fort Laramie Treaty, through the tragic Wounded Knee Massacre of 1890, to the completion of Mount Rushmore in 1941.
Top Cities & Hubs
Sioux Falls
Population: ~195,000The state's largest and fastest-growing city, a thriving financial and healthcare hub on the Big Sioux River known for its stunning quartzite waterfalls and a booming economy anchored by major banking institutions.
Rapid City
Population: ~75,000The "Gateway to the Black Hills," the primary tourist hub for Mount Rushmore, Badlands National Park, and Crazy Horse Memorial, known as the "City of Presidents" for its life-size presidential statues downtown.
Aberdeen
Population: ~28,000The commercial and healthcare hub of northeastern South Dakota, home to Northern State University and serving as a regional center for agriculture and logistics.
Brookings
Population: ~24,000A college town anchored by South Dakota State University, a growing center for agricultural research, high-tech manufacturing, and sustainable energy development.
Pierre
Population: ~14,000The state capital and one of the most isolated state capitals in the nation, a small riverside city on the Missouri River known for its beautiful waterfront and historic role in government.
Key Landmarks & Economy
Did You Know?
- The Black Hills are among the oldest geological formations in North America, with granite cores predating the Rocky Mountains by hundreds of millions of years, formed over 1.8 billion years ago.
- The Corn Palace in Mitchell is the world's only corn palace, entirely re-decorated with new murals made from corn and other grains each year since 1892 — a unique South Dakota tradition.
- South Dakota has no state income tax and is home to more national bank credit-card operations than almost any other state, thanks to laws passed in 1981 eliminating interest-rate caps.