Inscription
Custer with 7th Cavalry, 800 men, 700 horses, 202 mules and families of officers and enlisted men left Yankton early that day and made his night camp here, going on to the Owen’s Ranch on Snatch Creek the next day. He was enroute to Fort Abraham Lincoln, near Bismarck.
Location
Sources
More markers in Yankton
First Territorial Capital
Yankton, SD
1861-1883 Dakota Territory, extending N to Canada and W to the summit of the Rockies, a fourth larger than Texas, was created March 2, 1861.
First Dakota National Bank of Yankton
Yankton, SD
Dakota Territories first bank was that of Mark M. Parmer started at Yankton in September, 1869 which became the private banking...
Robert Mc Clellan Fur Post 1805-1806
Gayville, SD
In 1806 the mouth of the James River was about one-half mile South.
Jack Mc Call Burial Site
Jack McCall was hung for murder of ‘Wild Bill’ Hickok on March 1st 1877 at corner of State Hospital Grounds on US 81.
First Building at Yankton Site May 1858
C.J. Holman, for a Sioux City group, rivals of Frost, Todd & Co.’s Upper Missouri Land Company came in March 1858, was run off by...
