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Miller, South Dakota: A Peek into Small Town America

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July 31, 2025

Welcome to Miller, South Dakota! It’s a bright and clear Sunday afternoon here in South Dakota. There is only a slight breeze and a hint of humidity, which belies the temperature of 84°. It feels much warmer though.

Miller’s giant water tower proclaims this burg to be the home of the “Rustlers.” The lettering and the cowboy icon are green like the surrounding grain fields. Over the years, Miller has produced a state governor and a few other notables. These days, Miller is a town of two business blocks and thirteen hundred occupants.

A mural around the corner provides some historical context for this little prairie town. Miller, like so many other places in the Great Plains states, began in 1889 with the coming of the railroad.

Miller’s town mural reminds everyone of the day the railroad brought the world to town.

Miller has grown substantially since the early railroad days; here’s Main Street today.

Traffic along Broadway in Miller, South Dakota

The countryside surrounding Miller supports a mix of corn and soybean fields. The plains are nearly flat here, with only slight ripples to interrupt the cultivation. The soil must be excellent since I saw very few cattle ranches interrupting the cultivated acres.

Miller is the market town for those surrounding farms. It’s a nice-looking place. Let’s take a closer look.

The line-up: Miller Rexall Drug, the Clothes Garden, and Helping Hands at the end of the block.
Hand County Title Company, Farm Bureau Financial Services, and Sommers Bar.

(Every South Dakota bar has a few video poker machines hidden in the corner, hidden out of sight to encourage shame, I think. I played a machine at Sommers and won $20 — I bought a beer with it.)

Here are some more pillars of the community. I say that with no sarcasm; people couldn’t survive without these services.

The Sa’ Hair’ rah Hair Stylist, Anson Law Office, and the Main Street Lunch Box.

Above are the town’s shops, below are the homes of the town’s shopkeepers and their customers. I’d sure love to have a house on a corner lot with a front porch and balcony like this one.

It’s nice to see a small town have a photography studio; here memories are created and saved for generations.

Reflections by Leah. Miller, South Dakota.

Hand County was created in 1873 by the Dakota territorial legislature (before “Dakotah” became states and were split into North and South) and named for George A. Hand, territorial secretary. The Hand County Courthouse, built in 1925, is the most prominent building in the town, and in the county too. The building is an prime example of neo-classical architectural style prevalent in the decade of the 1920s.

Hand County Courthouse, Miller, South Dakota
Hand County Courthouse, Miller, South Dakota
Hand County Veterans Memorial (every good courthouse has a veterans memorial).

Carved marble walls and stairways fill the courthouse’s interior. The stained-glass ceiling and the old-fashioned elevator are both time pieces of neo-classical design of the 1920s. Whenever I see the prolific use of marble in courthouses (and I’ve seen it often in 1920s courthouses), I’m awestruck at how expensive and investment it must have been. It’s all beautiful and magnificent, but sadly such decor is a relic of a bygone era — it would be of the question to build in such a manner today.

Every good courthouse is a local history lesson. Hand County’s is no slouch in that regard:

Can’t forget the small-town churches:

First Presbyterian Church. Miller, South Dakota.

Let’s say goodbye to Miller with an homage to neon signs:

A striking mural I found in Miller, South Dakota.
Hand County within the state of South Dakota

Click here for a list of all TimManBlog American County Seats Series posts.
The photos in this post were taken on July 9, 2023, and are copyrighted by Tim Seibel.

Donations to TimManBlog

I post about a visit to one of America’s 3,150 county seats each month. Donations are greatly appreciated to help defray my travel costs.

$1.00

Check out the FREEDOM VOYAGES book series! These books document my road trips across the United States and include hundreds of stunning photographs. Each of the four books in the series is available on Amazon and Barnes & Noble. This includes my most recent release, FREEDOM VOYAGES Volume 4: Christmastime in Texas!

FREEDOM VOYAGES Volume 4: Christmastime in Texas. Available at Amazon.com and Barnes & Noble.

Earlier volumes in the FREEDOM VOYAGES series are also available:
Vol. 1: North-Central North Dakota
Vol. 2: Go West! From the Loneliest Road in America to California’s Gold Country
Vol. 3: A Proud, Dignified People in Lincoln’s Illinois

All FREEDOM VOYAGES books are on sale at Amazon.com and Barnes & Noble.

Eagle River’s Transformation: Winter to Fall

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March 31, 2025

Welcome to Michigan’s Keweenaw County!

Pronounced “KEE-wə-naw,” the county is named for the Keweenaw Peninsula, a spur of land jutting 65 miles into Lake Superior from Michigan’s Upper Peninsula (known as the “U.P.”). Because of its northern exposure, “The Keweenaw” bears the brunt of some of the worst winter weather in the United States. For example, the village of Calumet, Michigan, often measures over 300 inches of snowfall annually.

Keweenaw County within the state of Michigan

I’ve been to the U.P. many times, and I love it because it’s an entirely different place from one season to the next. In this post, I’ll first show you pictures taken during a March 2009 visit. Then, I’ll show you photos of the same spots in October, several years later. It’s like pictures of two different worlds.

On March 1, 2009, I started my activities by tracing U.S. Highway 41 to its northern terminus at Copper Harbor, Michigan. The “BEGIN Highway 41” sign peeks above a snowbank to tell us that Miami, Florida, is at U.S. 41’s southern end, 1990 miles away. The sign mentions the Isle Royale Ferry, which only operates during the summer. Isle Royale is an island in Lake Superior off the coast of the Keweenaw Peninsula; it makes up most of Isle Royale National Park.

U.S. Highway 41 in Keweenaw County resembles a path through the woods instead of a national highway. The road was snow-packed, with trees and five-foot high snowbanks instead of guard rails. From Copper Harbor, Highway 41 continues for 23 miles until it reaches the Keweenaw County seat of Eagle River. With a 2020 Census population of 65, the village of Eagle River is barely a town.

It was a quiet Sunday afternoon. Eagle River has a “Main Street” and a general store. But the store was closed. A red Toyota parked near the general store was covered with snow plowed from the street. A nearby footbridge over a creek leads to the Eagle River Lighthouse on the other side. The path was blocked by snowbanks.

Main Street leads down to the Lake Superior beachfront. Little dunes of sand covered the beach, and all the sand was snow-covered. Chunks of ice covered the waters below a whitish horizon, beyond which was nothingness. Looking down the street toward all this whiteness gives Eagle River an otherworldly feel, like it was the end of the earth.

Main Street Eagle River, looking down toward the Lake Superior shoreline on March 1st, 2009.

It’s a clear day today. Still, the north wind is blowing off Lake Superior, and the wind chill is below zero. Lake-effect snow showers come with the winds. In the Keweenaw, you don’t need a weather front to get snow; all you need is a northerly wind.

The Keweenaw County Courthouse is perched atop a hill overlooking a few houses scattered below toward the lakeshore. The courthouse is a small, two-story wood building painted white with white pillars at its entrance. I can’t imagine any other county courthouse in Michigan being smaller.

The Keweenaw County Courthouse in Eagle River, Michigan, on March 1, 2009.

In the cold, I had to stop and look around for a moment. It was so quiet. It was so cold. An old dog was chained across the street but couldn’t muster the strength to bark more than twice. Down the hill were a crowd of twenty deer digging in the snow for food.

Beyond the deer lay the frozen chunks of water in Lake Superior. Soon, these chunks will melt to become waves, and the Keweenaw will burst open as a summer resort. Today is March 1; February passed last night. Winter has made its final stop, and Spring is marching ahead.


I returned to Eagle River, Michigan, on October 4, 2021. My first visit had been at the end of winter, while this visit took place at the end of summer. The courthouse and the town were adorned with autumn leaves, starkly contrasting the snowbanks I had seen in March.

The first floor of the courthouse features five display cases. They contain local ore samples from old copper and iron mines on the Keweenaw Peninsula. Further down the hallway, two large pencil drawings of Presidents Washington and Lincoln hang from the walls.

(below left) A historical sign explains the history of Eagle River. (right) A well-kept home in town shows off some delicate wood trim on its front porch.

Just past the courthouse, I walked across the Eagle River Timber Arch Bridge and photographed Eagle River Falls.

Eagle River’s Main Street looks quite different after a long summer.

Main Street Eagle River, looking down toward the Lake Superior shoreline on October 4, 2021.

This is the Lake Superior shoreline in Eagle River. In the top right photo, a tanker ship (perhaps carrying iron ore?) can be seen on the distant horizon.


Click here to see a list of all posts in the TimManBlog American County Seats Series.
The photos in this post were taken on March 1, 2009 or October 4, 2021. All photos are copyrighted by Tim Seibel.

My hobby is attempting to visit all 3,150 of America’s county courthouses. Each month, I post about a visit to a scenic or historic county seat. Donations are greatly appreciated to help cover my costs.

Donations to TimManBlog

Please use this form to donate to my travel writing. (Change the number in the ‘Price’ box to increase the donation amount.) The form accepts PayPal, Visa, Mastercard, Amex, Discover, and Maestro.

$1.00

Check out the FREEDOM VOYAGES series! These books document my road trips across the United States and include hundreds of stunning photographs. Each of the four books in the series is available on Amazon and Barnes & Noble. This includes my most recent release, FREEDOM VOYAGES Volume 4: Christmastime in Texas!

FREEDOM VOYAGES Volume 4: Christmastime in Texas. Available at Amazon.com and Barnes & Noble.

Earlier volumes in the FREEDOM VOYAGES series are also available:
Vol. 1: North-Central North Dakota
Vol. 2: Go West! From the Loneliest Road in America to California’s Gold Country
Vol. 3: A Proud, Dignified People in Lincoln’s Illinois

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