![]() While the names changed, the nickname “Crouch Line” stuck because it was easier to remember. One of the lines that came into the area was "The Crouch Line" in 1890, then referred to as the Dakota, Wyoming and Missouri River Railroad. In terms of modern transportation, trains came into the area first, and the railroads brought ever more people looking for a change. ![]() The military roads of the mid-19th century made crossing the plains a little easier, and by the 1880s the business of running freight wagons and stage coach lines from distant railheads on the Missouri River to developing Black Hills communities was thriving. Steamboats carried mail and supplies to the forts and small settlements on the Missouri River, some 200 miles from the Black Hills. The first European Americans traveled here on foot, on horseback or livestock-drawn wagons. The Black Hills and surrounding area were crisscrossed by wildlife trails and those used by Native peoples living in the area before white settlement. From the first railroads to the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally and everything in between, the history of transportation in the Black Hills is varied and special. ![]()
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