CEMETERIES of MEADE COUNTY

 


BLACK HILLS NATIONAL CEMETERY

Black Hills National Cemetery is located three miles east of Sturgis, S.D., in the shadows of the Black Hills. This region is the homeland of the Lakota Sioux Indians who traversed the Great Plains before the advent of Europeans in the mid 18th century. French explorers first arrived in the early 1740s, and Spain acquired sovereignty over the region in 1762. The 1803 Louisiana Purchase gave the United States title to the region. Yet, until 1856 when Fort Randall was established, fur trappers and traders were the sole European settlers. Soon after, the towns of Vermillion and Yankton became permanent establishments, and by 1861 the Dakota Territory had been formed.

The greatest rush of European immigration came in 1874 when gold was discovered in the Black Hills. A wave of prospectors flooded the area, radically transforming the region and causing disturbances as well as creating opportunities. Legally, the Black Hills had been closed to white settlement under the Treaty of Fort Laramie. The military, however, was in no position to halt the advancing settlers. In fact, it was the military that encouraged settlements when the 7th Cavalry, under Gen. George Custer, reported the discovery of gold.

America's first transcontinental railroad was completed in May 1869 through the combined efforts of government and private corporations. Subsidiary rail lines such as the Dakota Southern Railroad, established in 1872, proved to be more important for bringing newcomers into the region. Between 1870 and 1890, the white population in the Dakota Territory increased six fold.

The influx of settlers onto the Great Sioux Reservation culminated in a war of cultures at the Battle of Little Bighorn in June 1876. As a result of Custer’s defeat, American Indians were forced to accept a reduction in their reservation land. This cleared the way for further development by settlers, which further angered the American Indians. As a result, the Fort Meade military reservation was established in the region shortly afterwards. The last serious cultural conflict began in the fall of 1890 with the death of Sitting Bull and ended with the massacre of hundreds of American Indians at Wounded Knee. Thus, barriers to settlement of the region eased.

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, new railroads were laid across the Dakotas and aided in the further development of numerous communities. In 1890, Pierre was chosen as the permanent capital of South Dakota. Twelve years later, in 1902, the Battle Mountain Sanitarium was established in nearby Hot Springs to aid in the care of veterans within the region. Cemeteries at both the Fort Meade Military Reservation and the former sanitarium eventually became a part of the National Cemetery System in 1973.

Source: United States Department of Veterans Affairs



NAME BIRTH DEATH RELATIONSHIPS/NOTES GRAVE LOCATION CONTRIBUTOR
AALSETH, Charlotte Arleen (Fetter) 22 Jun 1938, Gordon, Sheridan co., NE 05 Jan 2009, Sturgis, Meade co., SD wife of AALSETH, Sidney Edward, married 11 May 1963 Section H Site 512 DonZas
AALSETH, Robert Martin 24 Apr 1923 12 Jan 1989 husband of AALSETH, Loraine Section G Site 7783 DonZas
AALSETH, Loraine 29 Aug 1926 19 Apr 1991 wife of AALSETH, Robert Martin Section G, Site 7763 DonZas
AARON, John Steven 01 Jul 1948 16 Dec 2008   Section I, Site 322 DonZas
AASBY, Leonard L. 04 May 1927 05 Nov 2002   Section J, Site 888 DonZas
AASEN, Edwin Kenneth, Sr. 27 Oct 1914 15 May 2001 husband of AASEN, Virginia E.; Lt. Col., US Army Section E, Site 1959 DonZas
AASEN, Virginia E. 15 Oct 1914 06 Feb 1996 wife of AASEN, Edwin Kenneth, Sr. Section E, Site 1959 DonZas
ABBENHAUD, Louis Edward 27 Sep 1905 12 Aug 1984   Section F, Site 1772 DonZas
ABBEY, Eugene Dwain 15 Jan 1931 26 Sep 2002   Section O, Site 576 DonZas
ABEL, Marilynn Aileen (Beck) 12 Jun 1926 20 Nov 2009   Section C, Site 698 DonZas
ABEL, Vivian Gladys 16 Sep 1923 22 Oct 2006   Section E, Site 2173 DonZas
ABERLE, Leta 29 Dec 1928 01 Sep 2003   Section O, Site 464 DonZas
ABIE, Eugene Leslie 05 Nov 1948 23 Dec 2003   Section H, Site 928 DonZas
ABOUREZK, Thomas John 29 Apr 1921 19 Apr 2001   Section I, Site 1027 DonZas
ABRAHAMSON, Bernice Elberta 08 Apr 1918 04 May 2008   Section D, Site 382 DonZas
ABRAMS, Richard 04 Apr 1916 28 Jan 1989   Section G, Site 7780 DonZas

 

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