News

The Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara Nation, also known as Three Affiliated Tribes, is breaking ground this week for new water facilities at New Town and Mandaree. According to MHA Nation information, the ...
MHA Nation is breaking ground on a new water treatment plant that was built to replace the old one in Mandaree.
A trapper by the name of "Teaspoon" finished first in the annual Trapper's Run — a contest of grit and physical stamina held during the 24th anniversary of the Fort Connah Rendezvous, June 14-15 at ...
As more than 6,000 people gathered in downtown Missoula Saturday to protest authoritarianism, Native voices stood grounded in ...
Early records show that the earliest Black people to come to North Dakota came as slaves of explorers and traders. One of these was York, who was William Clark’s slave and accompanied both him and ...
It’s not something you expect to hear about at a casino, but for staff at Prairie Knights Casino & Resort in Fort Yates, ...
Growing up in Mandan, Johan Stenslie’s childhood was steeped in history and Norwegian culture. Dinner table conversations ...
The open road has a way of turning ordinary travel into unforgettable adventure, and few places offer a better backdrop for a classic American road trip than North Dakota. From wide-open highways to ...
With a map of Lewis and Clark's route over the Rocky Mountains as a backdrop, Amy Mossett from Fort Berthold, N.D., shares her views on the life of Sacagawea on Friday morning as part of "A ...
1805: Lewis and Clark Expedition leaves Fort Mandan (on the Missouri River near what is now Washburn, North Dakota), beginning their journey to the Pacific Ocean.
While wintering at Fort Mandan, North Dakota they replaced it. ... Reaching Fort Clatsop in November, 1805, it would be September of 1806 before they would return to St. Louis.
At Fort Mandan State Historic Site and the Lewis and Clark Interpretive Center in Washburn, north of Bismarck, we learned they spent more time in North Dakota than anywhere else on their epic ...