2/12/2005:
On this date in 1991, the Senate approved a bill to name the Nokota horse North Dakota’s honorary state equine.
Back when he was living here, Teddy Roosevelt wrote, “In a great many...localities there are wild horses to be found, which (are) as wild as the antelope on whose range they have intruded.”
That changed after the Great Depression, when officials decided to eradicate the horses, which were descended from Sitting Bull’s war and buffalo ponies. After being rounded up or shot for the next 20 years, a small number found safe haven when they were accidentally trapped inside Theodore Roosevelt National Park. That was during the ‘40s. Since then, those, too, were removed and were replaced by domestic breeds. Thankfully, the Nokota Horse Conservancy, a non-profit organization at Linton, works to protect the breed from extinction.
Dakota Datebook written by Merry Helm