3 audiocassettes
AV MA 20-0008
AV MA 20-0007
AV MA 20-0006
Tape T-6
South Dakota Paint Horse club tapes over director's meetings
- South Dakota Public Radio, South Dakota forum Guest Jim Englebrecht, November 8,1996
- South Dakota Public radio, September 13, 1996, Dr. Holm in Spearfish with doctor of Rapid City
The South Dakota Nurses’ Association Records document the activities, governance, and advocacy efforts of the state’s principal professional nursing organization from the early 20th century through the late 1990s. The collection includes extensive materials from SDNA committees, task forces, board meetings, conventions, and district branches. Committee and task force files contain meeting minutes, correspondence, surveys, reports, and materials related to ongoing projects, reflecting the association’s focus on education, practice standards, health care policy, and labor conditions. Of particular note are the Economic and General Welfare Committee and SDNA’s Continuing Education Approval and Recognition Program (SD-CEARP), which offer insight into labor advocacy and professional development in South Dakota nursing.
The collection features broad correspondence from SDNA leadership, including the board of directors and district presidents, as well as communication with state agencies, legislators, and national nursing organizations. Reports include annual summaries from committees and districts, financial audits, and documentation of major initiatives such as Project Motion and the Economic Security Program. Membership materials track recruitment, retention, and survey results across districts. Extensive district-level documentation includes bylaws, officer lists, newsletters, and reports.
Other highlights include material from SDNA’s annual conventions, National Nurses Day celebrations, and Nurses Day at the Legislature, along with lobbying files detailing the association’s legislative priorities and partnerships. Project files document SDNA’s participation in state and national efforts, including public health outreach and the Vietnam Women’s Memorial. Scrapbooks, photographs, clippings, and audiovisual materials preserve the visual history of nursing in South Dakota.
Collected publications cover a wide range of nursing-related topics, including continuing education, standards of practice, nursing history, and health care legislation. The collection also holds records from affiliated organizations such as the American Nurses Association, South Dakota Board of Nursing, South Dakota League for Nursing Education, and other health-related groups. Physical artifacts, including uniforms, caps, and commemorative items, offer tangible connections to the nursing profession’s heritage in the state.
This collection offers insight into the evolution of nursing in South Dakota. It serves as a vital resource for studying professional development, health care advocacy, women’s leadership, public health policy, and the organizational history of nursing. The records document how South Dakota’s nurses helped shape statewide standards, responded to national trends, and promoted both education and workplace rights in a changing medical landscape.
South Dakota Nurses' AssociationThe South Dakota Farmers Union Records provide a comprehensive account of the organization's history, advocacy, and role in shaping agricultural policy from the early 20th century to the early 2000s. The collection documents the Union's efforts to support family farmers, promote cooperative enterprises, and influence state and national agricultural legislation. Materials include organizational records, correspondence, meeting minutes, financial statements, educational materials, photographs, audiovisual recordings, and publications.
A significant portion of the collection pertains to the Union's legislative and political engagement, featuring records from state and national conventions, speeches, campaign materials, and lobbying efforts. These materials illustrate the Union's role in advocating agricultural policy reforms, rural economic development, and cooperative business models. Key figures such as Ben Radcliffe, George McGovern, Hubert Humphrey, and Eleanor Roosevelt are represented in convention proceedings, recorded speeches, and radio broadcasts. The 1972 Supreme Court case on public school funding through property tax is also documented through clippings, correspondence, and legal evidence.
The audiovisual materials consist of 13 audiocassettes, 156 open reel tapes, 6 wire recordings, and 34 16mm motion picture films, spanning from 1948 to 1992. These recordings capture state and national conventions, radio programs, speeches, and advertisements, along with footage of state camp activities, tours, picnics, and parades. Many of the materials promote legislative initiatives and endorse political candidates. In 2018, the South Dakota Farmers Union audiovisual collection was digitized with the support of a Recordings at Risk grant from the Council on Library and Information Resources. Due to the fragile state of many recordings, the Archives partnered with George Blood L.P. to ensure high-quality digital preservation in sustainable formats.
The Cooperative Legacy Project, spearheaded by Chuck Groth, communications director for the South Dakota Farmers Union from 1972 to 2008, provides an in-depth oral history of the cooperative movement in South Dakota. This project includes over 110 hours of digital audio interviews with Farmers Union members, cooperative managers, and farm organization leaders. The interviews, recorded in MP3 and WAV formats, are supplemented by documents, scanned photographs, and rough transcriptions, offering insight into the history and impact of the cooperative movement.
The collection also includes publications from the National Farmers Union and various state organizations, as well as South Dakota Farmers Union-produced materials such as convention programs (1938-1983), policy statements (1954-1988), handbooks, and brochures. The photographic collection, comprising over 33,000 photographs and negatives, documents youth programs, conventions, picnics, tours, and key moments in the organization's history, as well as images published in the South Dakota Union Farmer.
Records from local unions throughout South Dakota provide insight into grassroots organizing efforts, consisting of charter records, attendance logs, minutes, and correspondence, with some materials accompanied by photographs. This material includes essential governance documents such as constitutions, by-laws, speeches, scrapbooks, and advertising materials, with Farmers Union annual convention minutes spanning from 1926 to 1946.
This collection serves as an resource for researchers studying agricultural policy, rural advocacy, cooperative movements, and the political and economic history of farming in South Dakota and the United States. Through its extensive documentation of legislative efforts, community programs, and cooperative business models, the South Dakota Farmers Union Records provide a unique perspective on the evolving landscape of American agriculture.
South Dakota Farmers UnionThis collection documents the 1977 South Dakota Delegation trip to Cuba, which included members of the South Dakota State University basketball team. The material primarily captures the media coverage and public reception surrounding the trip. It includes national, state, and unidentified newspaper clippings; press releases; and excerpts from radio broadcasts, many of which report on the delegation’s activities and the political context of the visit. Also included are photographs, rosters of participants, and an audio tape outline titled Cuban Stories, which appears to provide a narrative or interview content related to the trip.
The collection contains correspondence that sheds light on the earliest stages of planning, including references to Fidel Castro and U.S. Senator George McGovern, whose 1975 trip to Cuba helped catalyze this exchange. Though much of the formal planning documentation is missing, the surviving memoranda and letters illustrate efforts to coordinate the trip under challenging diplomatic conditions. Additional items include material from the Cuban newspaper Granma and various internal and external communications concerning the delegation.
The collection is a resource documenting a rare Cold War-era cultural exchange between a U.S. university delegation and Cuba. It offers insight into the role of sports diplomacy, the influence of political figures such as George McGovern, and the broader media and public perception of such initiatives during the late 1970s.
SDSU Men's Basketball Trip to CubaThe Robert F. Karolevitz Papers document the life and work of a prolific South Dakota journalist, author, public speaker, and historian. Spanning the years 1833 to 2005, with the bulk of the material dating from 1910 to 1999, the collection offers comprehensive insight into Karolevitz’s personal life, professional writing career, civic activities, and historical research.
The collection includes personal files such as education records, family correspondence, financial and legal documents, memorabilia, and ephemera. These materials trace Karolevitz’s academic path through Yankton High School, South Dakota State College, and the University of Oregon, as well as his later roles as a public speaker and educator. Family records highlight several generations of the Karolevitz family, with photographs, commemorative materials, and genealogical documentation reflecting his strong ties to Yankton and Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
Professional files encompass manuscripts, published and unpublished writings, newspaper columns, speeches, advertising and political ghostwriting, and correspondence with publishers. Among the most notable works documented are Flight of Eagles, This Was Trucking, With a Shirt Tail Full of Type, and The Prairie is My Garden. Supplementary materials include book layouts, catalogs, and awards from institutions such as South Dakota State University, the South Dakota Newspaper Association, and Toastmasters International.
Karolevitz’s extensive research files span a wide range of historical subjects, including South Dakota and regional history, Catholic institutions, journalism, automotive culture, and American military history. These files contain clippings, correspondence, notes, pamphlets, and illustrations gathered in support of his writing and historical interests.
A major strength of the collection is its substantial photographic holdings, comprising thousands of prints, negatives, slides, and postcards. Subjects include early automobiles, farm equipment, American Indian communities, historic newspaper offices, Catholic parishes, World War I, and South Dakota towns and landscapes. These visual materials significantly enrich the documentation of regional culture and 20th-century American life.
Collectively, the Robert F. Karolevitz Papers form a rich resource for scholars of American regional history, journalism, Catholic heritage, and South Dakota’s cultural identity. The collection offers a deeply personal and professionally expansive view of one of the state’s most dedicated chroniclers.
Karolevitz, Robert F.- July 24, 31, 1996, Rick at Olympics
AV MA 20-0002
AV MA 20-0001
3 audiocassettes
includes audiocassettes and correspondence
unabridged read by Sandra Burr for Brilliance Audio; 5 audiocassettes
This collection was compiled by Lawrence Hunt’s daughter, Gayle (Hunt) Matz, and documents aspects of Hunt’s personal history and family legacy. It includes a short biography written by Matz, an audio cassette recording titled Grandy Hunt 1918–1989, in which Lawrence Hunt shares memories of the Great Depression and his World War II service, and seven digital photographs. The cassette was recorded by Hunt’s granddaughter, Erin, as part of a school project. Materials offer insight into 20th-century American family life and military service through a personal narrative lens.
Side 1: Flora Ziemann, Ft. Pierre, South Dakota
Side 2: all
Side 1-2: Willmet and Jolus on Rapid City, South Dakota [names hard to read]
Side 1-2: Laure Ingalls Wilder Pageant 'Happy Golden Years" 1989-07-02
Side 1-2: Laura Ingalls Wilder ? House, etc. 1989-06-30; Pageant 'Happy Golden Years" 1989-07-02
Side 1-2: Laure Ingalls Wilder Pageant 'Happy Golden Years" 1989-07-02
Side 1: Alvin White, Wessington, South Dakota
Side 2: think this is blank
Side 1: Patt Ward and others talk about Pluto Hall and Cousa Opera House
Side 1-2: Smokey Wallum, Iroquois South Dakota [first 15 minutes]
Side 1: Wall Drug #2
Side 2: Prairie Village, Ray Johnson, Wall, South Dakota
Side 1: Wall Drug #1
Side 2: full
Side 1: Preacher Vernon Vincent, 9-30-85, De Smet, South Dakota; Nat Stimson, 10-2-85, De Smet, South Dakota
Side 2: Nat Stimson, De Smet, South Dakota
Side A: PHC and then John Thune talk about Jim Abdnor [around Abdnor' s death]
Side B:
Side 1: Edith Thompson, Retirement Center. Brookings, South Dakota
Side 2: Full
Side A: [full]: Harriet Swedlund, 5/25/2005 by John Milkler
Side 1: Glenn Stymiest, Lake Preston Manor
Side 2: Glenn Stymiest, Altamon, South Dakota - Dad hunt with Marvin Hushitt
Side 1-2: Al Strandel, Wall, South Dakota [transcribed]
Side 1: Nat Stimson
Side 2:
Side 1: Nat Stimson
Side 2:
Side 1:
Side 2: Nat Stimson
Side 1: Bert Stewart [first 20 minutes]; Aubrey Sherwood
Side 2: Full
transcribed all
Side 1: South Dakota Public Radio Noon Forum Interviews George McGovern on his 85 birthday
Side 1: South Dakota Public Radio Noon Forum
Side 2:
Side A: Talk politics on South Dakota Public Radio Noon Forum
Side B:
Side A: Bill Janklow' s Career and Legacy, South Dakota Public Radio Forum [all of side A and z few minutes of side B]
Side B: Gary Ellenboldt, Steve Hemmingson, Bill Richardson, Kevin Woster, Dave Kranz, Kermit Staggers
Side 1: South Dakota Public Radio Program on TV movie about Wounded Knee in 1973
Side 2:
Side A: South Dakota Public Radio - Jeff Henderson on Indian Health
Side B:
Side A: South Dakota Public Radio - George McGovern on War
Side B:
Side A: South Dakota Public Radio talking about South Dakota Legislature
Side B:
Side 1-2: Alvilda Sorenson, Brookings, South Dakota
transcribed - tape ran out on side 2
Side A-B: John Miller interviews Sheldon Songstad, GOP legislator, in Buffalo Ridge, South Dakota [both sides full]
Side 1: V.J. Smith on South Dakota Public Radio Noon Forum talking about his Marty book
Side 2:
Side 1: Herb and Bernice Smallfield; Dick and Mary Seibert - Elkton, South Dakota
Side 2:
Side 1: Pool and Smalls in store, Blunt, South Dakota [10 minutes]
Side 2: Cecil Small ]son Harlan Small] and Wayne Pool, some Edna Osterkamp
Side A: John Miller interviews Frank Brost in Sioux Falls, South Dakota
Side B:
Side 1-2: Amon Short, 2 miles south of Mansfield, Missouri on a farm - transcribed
Side 1-2: Laura Sherwood - De Smet, South Dakota [all of side 1, half of side 2]
Side 1: Aubrey Sherwood - transcribed [20 minutes]
Side 2: empty
Side A: Senior Center, Miller, South Dakota
Side B:
Side 1-2: Neta Seal; Nava Austin Mansfield, Missouri - transcribed
Side 1-2: Theodore Schultz, Chicago, Illinois
Side 1-2: Theodore Schultz, Chicago, Illinois
Side 1-2: Sparky Schultz - transcribed
Side 1-2: Skinny Schultz - transcribed
Side 1-2: Hank Schultz, Lake Norden, South Dakota - transcribed
Side 1: Ron Schiebe, Wolsey, South Dakota at cafe with Ed Siemens [first half]
Side 2: Ive Montgomery and Hazel Carson in Wolsey, South Dakota cafe; Jack Steel, Vice Presidents of bank in Wolsey, South Dakota
Side 1-2: John Miller and Jon Lauck interview Rollie Samp in Flandreau, South Dakota [tape 2]