Rockerville, South Dakota Explained

Official Name:Rockerville, South Dakota
Settlement Type:Place
Pushpin Map:South Dakota
Pushpin Label Position:right
Pushpin Label:Rockerville
Pushpin Map Caption:Location of Rockerville in South Dakota.
Coordinates:43.9581°N -103.3586°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:United States
Subdivision Type1:State
Subdivision Name1:South Dakota
Subdivision Type2:County
Subdivision Name2:Pennington
Timezone:MST
Utc Offset:-7
Timezone Dst:MDT
Utc Offset Dst:-6
Elevation M:1332
Elevation Ft:4370
Area Code:605
Blank1 Name:GNIS feature ID

Rockerville is a small unincorporated community in Pennington County in the Black Hills of the U.S. state of South Dakota. Originally established as a mining camp, it was named for the "rockers" which were used to separate placer gold from stream gravel.

History

Rockerville was founded in 1876 as the result of a gold rush.[1]

It was a tourist town in the 1950s and 1960s because of its key location on US Highway 16 between Rapid City and Mount Rushmore National Memorial. It had a variety of tourist attractions, including a "Mellerdrammer" (Melodrama) live theatre, a "Ghost town" of various buildings with tourist shops and small amusements, "It's a Small World" Museum (featuring an 1880 Tiny Town model and other miniature collections), a motel, campgrounds and RV parks. However, in the conversion of US Highway 16 to four lanes in the mid-1960s, the original townsite was placed literally between the two separate roadways, as there was no way to widen the original highway through the town without completely destroying it. With construction of at least three exits into the town from both directions, the town continued to be a vibrant tourist attraction in the 1970s and 1980s. The tourist could take in daily wild west shows, shootouts, stagecoach rides and gold panning. Fine dining was and still is available at the Gaslight Restaurant. Travelers could stay in town at the local Trading Post Motel, buy groceries and gas up their cars at the Rockerville Trading Post.

In the 1990s, the town virtually died, as a lack of visibility to tourists zipping down the highway at 55 miles per hour sent the local economy into a nosedive from which it never recovered. The only remaining business within the generally accepted city limits is the Gaslight Saloon, which was recently rebuilt after a devastating fire. Virtually all the older tourist-era businesses have long since closed, fallen into decay, and been demolished. This severe local economic damage today is sometimes referred to in South Dakota as "Rockerville Syndrome" and has had a significant bearing in the construction of new bypasses and highway improvements as recently as 1998 and 2001, in and around such small towns as Hill City and Corson.

Geography

Today, several subdivisions and rural residential areas have been built around Rockerville, which also has a sawmill and other commercial activities, leaving the small town rather like a doughnut. It is located close enough to Rapid City, Hill City, and Keystone to serve as a bedroom community. A larger commercial area has grown up on US Highway 16 approximately 1 mile east, known as "East Rockerville" or "Rockerville Flats" with various tourist-oriented businesses and more residential areas.

To the west, on the old alignment of US Highway 16, now called Silver Mountain Road, is the rural community of Silver Mountain, including Storm Mountain Center, a United Methodist camping facility. The Flume Trail, a hiking trail following the alignment and remains of a water flume built to provide water for those gold rockers in the 1880s, connects Rockerville, Storm Mountain, and Boulder Hills with Sheridan Lake, deeper in the Hills. Also, the west is Beretta Gulch, US Forest Service land well known to locals as a popular shooting range, and the Keystone Wye, where US 16 and US 16A divide, and famous for what was once the world's largest timber arch bridge.

Stratosphere Bowl

Off U.S. Route 16, geographically located 1.5miles northeast of Rockerville bearing 2miles southwest of Colonial Pine Hills, is the Stratosphere Bowl.[2] A geological depression located in the narrow middle valley of Spring Creek, made famous in the 1930s serving as a discharge site for the Explorer II being two US Army and Smithsonian Institution balloon launches sending men to the Stratosphere.[3] [4] The Stratobowl is located at 43.9767°N -103.3453°W.[5]

Government

Rockerville's only organized government is the Rockerville Fire District, which protects the area. Otherwise, government services are provided by Pennington County.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Historical Gazetteer of the United States . Routledge . May 13, 2013 . 30 November 2013 . Hellmann, Paul T. . 997. 978-1135948597 .
  2. Web site: Marks of History: Stratosphere Bowl . South Dakota State News . State of South Dakota Government.
  3. Web site: Cabin, "EXPLORER II" . Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum . Smithsonian Institution.
  4. Web site: "Stratosphere Bowl" History Quest . 2008-11-12 . 2011-07-11 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110711171417/http://www.historyquest.com/state/sd/radA82DD_south_dakota_historic_site.html . dead .
  5. Web site: Stratosphere Bowl . HomeTownLocator . HTL, Inc..