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Description area
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History
David Richards grew up on a ranch along the Belle Fourche River, approximately 20 miles east of Sturgis, South Dakota, during the 1930s. He attended a one-room rural school and enrolled at South Dakota State College in 1946, graduating in 1950. As a student, Richards participated in various academic and extracurricular activities. He worked on a joint research project with institutions in Ames, Iowa, and the University of Minnesota to identify effective chemical dwarfing agents for lawn grass, and later conducted a senior project on budding and grafting evergreens. He was active on the Rifle Team, served as president of the Presbyterian student group, and was a member of ROTC.
After college, Richards returned to Meade County, where he became a dedicated rancher and agricultural leader. He served as president of the Meade County Stockgrowers, was involved with the Meade County Farm Bureau for over 60 years, and helped organize Ag Unity. In 1958, he received the Outstanding Young Farmer Award from the Sturgis Jaycees.
Richards was a long-time admirer of Niels Ebbesen Hansen, a pioneering horticulturist known for introducing hardy plant varieties suitable for the harsh climates of the Northern Plains. Hansen’s career with the South Dakota Agricultural Experiment Station produced a wealth of bulletins, circulars, and scientific manuscripts. After Hansen's death in 1950, Richards received permission to salvage numerous discarded documents from his office, recognizing their historical significance. His efforts preserved a valuable collection of Hansen’s writings, correspondence, research materials, plant catalogs, and travel records. Additional contributions by Helen Hansen Loen further enrich the understanding of Hansen’s personal and professional legacy.