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Finding Aid
Donald Berg Papers
SDSU-Archives UA 053.047 · Papers · 1985-2012

The Donald Berg Papers are composed primarily of materials documenting the Conference on American Indian History and Culture, including records from the first through eighteenth annual conferences held between 1993 and 2010. These materials include organizational records, conference letterhead, and participant lists dating from 1993 to 2004. The collection also contains research files assembled by Berg related to the Dakota, Minnesota, and Eastern Railroad, with a focus on railroad safety in Brookings, South Dakota, and proposed expansion projects. These materials include extensive newspaper clippings from 1997 through 2012, draft and supplemental environmental impact statements, Powder River Basin Coal Expansion Project maps, photographs of railroad infrastructure in Rochester, Minnesota, and digital files stored on floppy disks. Additional materials include a Brookings Railroad Safety Plan dated 2007 and a small amount of professional ephemera such as business cards

This collection documents of Berg’s sustained scholarly and public engagement with American Indian history and culture through nearly two decades of conference activity. The railroad research files document local and regional responses to proposed rail expansion, environmental review processes, and railroad safety concerns, illustrating Berg’s application of geographic and historical research methods to contemporary infrastructure and policy issues in South Dakota and the upper Midwest.

Berg, Donald
SDSU-Archives MA 058-MA 58: B01 · Box
Part of South Dakota County Histories

This collection consists of historical sketches and county histories for South Dakota counties, dating from 1901 to 1963, with some undated materials. The records include typed and printed narratives documenting local history, settlement, county development, civic institutions, community identity, and regional change across the state. Of particular note are histories of Lyman County from 1888 to 1906, Custer County and the City of Custer, “Indian Life in Haakon County,” and multiple versions of Campbell and Stanley County histories. The collection is significant for its broad geographic coverage and its value as a source for studying South Dakota local history, county formation, settlement patterns, and the ways communities recorded their own pasts during the early and mid-twentieth century.