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Guide to North Dakota


Lodgingwithall North Dakota destination guide is where you can make hotel reservations and find information and tips on travel to North Dakota. This lodging guide will help our readers find the perfect places to stay for lodging accommodations in North Dakota. Whether you are traveling with your family on a leisure holiday vacation or visiting on a corporate business trip, our North Dakota lodging guide will help you find a hotel room that suits your specific needs. This is where you can find available luxury five star North Dakota resorts, comfortable four star North Dakota hotels, clean three star North Dakota lodges, convenient two star North Dakota inns, budget one star North Dakota motels, the best North Dakota vacation rentals, and other North Dakota accomodations.

 

In Bismarck stands a heroic statuary group, Pioneer Family, by Avard Fairbanks; behind it, gleaming white against the sky, towers the famous skyscraper capitol. One symbolizes the North Dakota of wagon trains and General Custer. The other symbolizes the North Dakota that has emerged in recent years-a land where a thousand oil wells have sprouted, dams have harnessed erratic rivers, vast lignite resources have been developed, and industry is absorbing surplus farm labor created by mechanization.

At various times, Spain, France, and England claimed what is now North Dakota as part of their empires. French Canadian fur trappers were the first Europeans to explore the land. With the Louisiana Purchase, Lewis and Clark crossed Dakota, establishing Fort Mandan. The earliest permanent European settlement was at Pembina with the establishment of Alexander Henry's trading post in 1801. Settlers from the Earl of Selkirk's colony in Manitoba arrived in 1812. The first military post at Fort Abercrombie served as a gateway into the area for settlers. The Dakota Territory was organized on March 2, 1861, but major settlement of what later became North Dakota followed after the entry of the Northern Pacific Railroad in the early 1870s.

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This is a fascinating land of prairies, rich river valleys, small cities, huge ranches, and vast stretches of wheat. Bordering Canada for 320 miles to the north, it shares straight-line borders with Montana to the west and South Dakota to the south. The Red River of the North forms its eastern boundary with Minnesota. The Garrison Dam has changed much of the internal geography of the state's western areas, converting the Missouri River, known as Big Muddy, into a broad waterway with splendid recreation areas bordering the reservoir, Lake Sakajawea. In addition, the Oahe Dam in South Dakota impounds Lake Oahe, which stretches north almost to Bismarck. To the southwest stretch the Badlands in all their natural grandeur, amid the open range about which Theodore Roosevelt wrote so eloquently in his Ranch Life and the Hunting Trail.

North Dakota's wealth is still in its soil--agriculture, crude oil, and lignite (a brown variety of very soft coal). It is estimated that one-third of the state is under oil and gas lease, and it ranks high in the nation for the production of oil; the largest deposits of lignite coal in the world are here. The same land through which Custer's men rode with range grass growing up to their stirrups now makes North Dakota the nation's number one cash grain state. North Dakota leads the nation in the production of barley, durum, spring wheat, pinto beans, oats, and flaxseed. Nearly 2,000,000 head of cattle and more than 165,000 sheep are produced on North Dakota grass.

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  • Bismarck
  • Devils Lake
     
  • Dickinson
  • Fargo
  • Grand Forks
  • Jamestown
  • Minot
  • Rugby
  • Wahpeton
  • West Fargo
  • While the rural areas comprise the economic backbone of North Dakota, attractions attributed to a big city can be found. In July 1981, blackjack became a legal form of gambling, causing a number of casinos to open statewide. High-stakes games and slot machines can be found in casinos operated by Native Americans on four reservations. Pari-mutuel horseracing was legalized in 1987. All gambling profits, above expenses, go to nonprofit and charitable organizations.

    This is the state in which to trace 19th-century frontier history, to explore the International Peace Garden, to stand at the center of the continent, to watch Native American dances and outdoor dramas, to fish in the 180-mile-long Lake Sakajawea, or to watch the 10 million migratory waterfowl that soar across the sky each spring and fall.

    Water-related activities, hiking, riding, various other sports, picnicking and visitor centers, as well as camping, are available in many state parks. Camping facilities ($3-$14/night with electricity; $5-$7/night, no electricity; $4 less with annual permit) at state parks. All motor vehicles entering a state park must obtain a motor vehicle permit: annual $25; daily $5. Pets on leash only. Species found in the state are trout, pike, sauger, walleye, bass, salmon, panfish, catfish, and muskie. Fishing season is year-round in many waters. The pothole and slough regions of central North Dakota annually harbor up to 4 million ducks; waterfowl hunting is tops. Pheasants, sharptails, Hungarian partridge, and deer are also found here.

    North Dakota winters are long and merciless, with bitter cold temperatures and insistent winds. Spring is cool and rainy; summers are hot and sunny. Summer hailstorms and thunderstorms are not uncommon in the Badlands.


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