Wall Drug
As I was driving across South Dakota, I saw some of the signs for Wall Drug. You can’t help but see them.

Wall Drug began in 1931 when Ted and Dorothy Hustead moved to Wall, South Dakota and started the Hustead’s Drug Store. It was the middle of the Great Depression, with a 25% unemployment at the time, which meant little to no customers each day.
By 1936, the Husteads were about ready to give up on the store before Dorothy Hustead thought to advertise and hand out free water to travelers, since there weren’t coolers or resealable water bottles in the ’30s.
Ted Hustead went to the highway that day and put up the first billboard sign: “Get a soda. Get a root beer. Turn next corner, just as near to Highway 16 and 14. Free Ice Water. Wall Drug.” Before he got back to the store, the first customers already stopped in.





Dinosaur Park
Located in Rapid City, Dinosaur Park is one of the area’s original tourist attractions. It sits on a ridge of sandstone that encircles the Black Hills. Along this ridge, dinosaurs of the Late Jurassic and Early Cretaceous have been found. The park has seven life-sized replicas.







Wall Drug! We remember that icon from our camping trip back in 1972. I don’t know how many of those 300 billboards we saw but I do know it was an amazing number. Good memories!
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Sounds like Wall Drug is the South of the Border of the west!!
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That is exactly how I described it!!!
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Another interesting post. When I saw those steps It made me cringe.
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