25 Market St   Aberdeen, SD 57401

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Unit 1: How Aberdeen was Founded


train route mapIn the late 1800s, Aberdeen did not look like it does today. Very few people lived where Aberdeen is today because there were no roads to bring people here, and there were no homes, stores, schools or other buildings here either. Aberdeen was part of a large grassy area called a prairie.

The population of America was growing, and the people who lived in the eastern part of the country wanted to find new places to live in the unsettled western part of the country where Aberdeen was. Many farmers in Minnesota and Wisconsin wanted to have larger farms but there were no more farms for them to buy where they lived, so they were also interested in moving west to places like Aberdeen. This was a time of expansion for our country.

Railroad companies were the first businesses to come into the prairie area, building tracks so their trains could bring people and supplies to the unsettled parts of America. Charles PriorCharles Prior (pictured at left, courtesy of Dacotah Prairie Museum) worked for the Chicago, Milwaukee, and St. Paul railroad in Minneapolis, and his job was to decide where the new railroad tracks would go and make new towns along the railroad, including Aberdeen. Charles Prior named each town he founded after a place or person he knew. He called our town Aberdeen because Mr. Prior’s boss, Alexander Mitchell, came from Aberdeen, Scotland.

The first train came to Aberdeen on the new tracks on July 6, 1881, carrying lumber and other supplies to start the town, so July 6 is Aberdeen’s birthday. The first train carrying people arrived on August 1, 1881. These people came from places like New York, Wisconsin, Minnesota, and the New England states. Some people also came from foreign countries like Germany, Russia, and England. These people were called settlers or pioneers because they were the first ones to live here.

After this, many other railroad companies built tracks to Aberdeen, and Aberdeen became known as the Hub City because all these tracks met here like spokes on a wheel meet in the center or hub of the wheel.

The first time our new settlers saw Aberdeen they saw lots of tall grass but no trees, and the landscape was very flat compared to where they lived before. This is because Aberdeen was part of the prairie. The new town was also very small with only 16 blocks platted. This area quickly filled up with houses and businesses that our pioneers built.Mr. Mills' second drugstore

The first business in Aberdeen was a drugstore built by Mr. Mills. The people in Aberdeen called Mr. Mill’s store, The Pillbox, because he sold lots of pills. The Pillbox was very small, only 10 feet by 12 feet, and was built out of wood. Later, Mr. Mills built a larger store.

Charles Prior founded our town, but he never lived here. He was busy starting other new towns as his railroad company continued to work its way westward through South Dakota.

Do you think you would have liked to be one of Aberdeen’s pioneers?