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  1. Stradling the South Dakota and North Dakota border, the Standing Rock Indian Reservation covers 2.3 million acres, stretching across endless prairie plains, rolling hills and buttes that border the Missouri River.

  2. The sixth-largest Native American reservation in land area in the US, Standing Rock includes all of Sioux County, North Dakota, and all of Corson County, South Dakota, plus slivers of northern Dewey and Ziebach counties in South Dakota, along their northern county lines at Highway 20.

  3. www.standingrock.org › about › visit-usVisit Us - Standing Rock

    Prairie Knights Casino and Lodge. Owned and managed by the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe. Located on Hwy. 12, 5 miles west of Mobridge, on the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation.

  4. Standing Rock Sioux Tribe. Covering 2.3 million acres, the Standing Rock Indian Reservation is the fifth-largest reservation in the United States. It stretches across the expansive tallgrass plains, rolling hills and buttes that border the Missouri River.

  5. Mar 22, 2023 · Standing Rock Reservation is one of the most significant Native American territories in North Dakota. The reservation has a rich history and a vibrant culture that dates back centuries. It represents not only a geographical boundary but also encapsulates the spiritual, cultural, and social essence of the Sioux tribes.

  6. The Standing Rock Sioux Reservation is situated in North and South Dakota. The people of Standing Rock, often called Sioux, are members of the Dakota and Lakota nations. “Dakota” and “Lakota” mean “friends” or “allies.”

  7. This scenic route brings you across the middle of Standing Rock Indian Reservation, which falls mainly in South Dakota but stretches about 30 mi (48 km) over the border. On Hwy-1806, at tiny Kenel, a historical marker points out the site of fur-trading Fort Manuel, where Lewis and Clark’s guide Sacagawea may have died of fever in 1812, at the ...

  8. The Standing Rock Sioux Reservation • Home to Lakota and Dakota Sioux. • Located about 40 miles south of Mandan and extends into South Dakota. • Almost entirely in Sioux County. • Tribal headquarters is at Fort Yates is home to Lakota and Dakota Sioux people.

  9. The Standing Rock Sioux Indian Reservation is home to Dakota and Lakota people of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe. Since time immemorial, they have lived and governed a vast territory throughout North and South Dakota, and parts of Montana, Wyoming, Minnesota, Iowa and Nebraska.

  10. The Act of 1889 broke up the Great Sioux Nation into smaller reservations of which two million acres formed the Standing Rock Reservation: the Yanktonais and Cuthead on the North Dakota side and the Hunkpapas and Blackfeet on the South Dakota side of the reservations.