Blog Archives
Webster’s Dakota Foundry employees are also the bosses
In 2004, corporate owners of Mereen-Johnson Machine Company announced plans to sell the Foundry Division in Webster. Josh Bartos soon discovered the company was more likely to close than sell, meaning laying off all of the company employees. Read More »
Up by their own boot straps
What happens when the major employer in a community—an employer that represents a community’s identity, and that is a significant supporter of community causes—closes its doors? That’s the situation that Clark, S.D., faced in 2002, when McCain’s, a French fry processing facility, shut down. Read More »
What is the DP.LA?
What if you could visit each of the nation’s most prestigious libraries and museums within seconds? It’s now possible—at least, virtually. Read More »
Time to rethink the “Shrinking Rural Population” idea
I am a transplant to South Dakota. I grew up in New Jersey, in outer suburbia, and then spent more than 20 years in the U.S. Navy, traveling the country and the world. Then, in 2004, my wife and I bought a turn-of- the-century farmhouse in the James River Valley area. Read More »
People still gather at The Galley, thanks to local investors
When the Bunkhouse Motel and Get Away along Highway 12 in Webster was set to close, a group of people came together to save it. Nine shareholders went together in 2007 and reopened the business as The Galley Steakhouse, Lounge and Hotel. Read More »
Club Eden wings its way upward with local investors
Club Eden began in May 2005. In a town with a population of 89, the new owners knew they needed to do something different to succeed. So Club Eden opened as an investor-owned bar and cafe. The business gives their financiers the opportunity to work off their investments. Read More »
Lake Grocery is community-owned success story
Willow Lake Area Advancement didn’t intend to go into the grocery business. Read More »
Communities mind their own business
Sometimes being rural means coloring outside the lines to paint your own picture of success. Read More »
Kulm is my town
When Esther Lindgren saw that some of her friends needed to leave town for doctor care, she didn’t just offer a ride. She bought a van. Read More »