Unlike some of the more well-known national parks in the West, this one feels like a well-kept secret. There are no endless ...
In April of 1911, Roosevelt experienced a warm reception in southwestern North Dakota, where he greeted old friends and recalled his 1886 Fourth of July speech in Dickinson.
The library rises from the flat, grassy top of a butte across a highway from Theodore Roosevelt National Park, which had more ...
MEDORA, N.D. — Theodore Roosevelt tangled with a couple of mean broncos — one nicknamed “the Devil,” the other “Man Killer” — as a tenderfoot rancher wrangling alongside hardened cowboys in the Little ...
The watch is engraved with the words, "THEODORE ROOSEVELT FROM D.R. & C.R.R." Jason Wickersty / National Park Service When a client brought in a late-1800s pocket watch, Edwin Bailey, owner of ...