Sioux Falls, South Dakota Sioux Falls, South Dakota Downtown Sioux Falls, near the intersection of 10th St.

Downtown Sioux Falls, near the intersection of 10th St.

Official seal of Sioux Falls, South Dakota Location of Sioux Falls in the adjoining United States Sioux Falls (/ su f lz/) (Lakota: Ieyae Okableca Ot uewahe; "Stone Shatter City") is the biggest city in the U.S.

It is the 47th fastest-growing town/city in the United States and the fastest-growing metro region in South Dakota, with a populace increase of 22% between 2000 and 2010. As of 2016, Sioux Falls had an estimated populace of 178,500.

It is also the major city of the Sioux Falls-Sioux City Designated Market Area (DMA), a larger media market region that covers parts of four states and has a populace of 1,043,450. Chartered in 1856 on the banks of the Big Sioux River, the town/city is situated in the rolling hills on the edge of the Midwest at the junction of Interstate 90 and Interstate 29.

Main articles: History of Sioux Falls, South Dakota and Timeline of Sioux Falls, South Dakota Falls of the Big Sioux River The history of Sioux Falls revolves around the cascades of the Big Sioux River.

The falls were created about 14,000 years ago amid the last ice age.

Lakota populate urban and reservation communities in the intact state and many Lakota, Dakota, Nakota, and various other Indigenous Americans reside in Sioux Falls today. The first documented visit by an American (of European descent) was by Philander Prescott, who camped overnight at the falls in December 1832.

Jacob Ferris described the Falls in his 1856 book "The States and Territories of the Great West". Seventeen men then spent "the first winter" in Sioux Falls.

The Village of Sioux Falls, consisting of 1,200 acres (4.9 km2), was incorporated in 1876 and was granted a town/city charter by the Dakota Territorial council on March 3, 1883. The populace of Sioux Falls mushroomed from 2,164 in 1880 to 10,167 at the close of the decade.

Downtown Sioux Falls in 1908, looking west.

In 1955 the town/city decided to consolidate the neighboring incorporated town/city of South Sioux Falls.

At the time South Sioux Falls had a populace of nearly 1,600 inhabitants, as stated to the 1950 census.

It was third biggest city in the county after Sioux Falls and Dell Rapids.

By October 18, 1955 South Sioux Falls inhabitants voted 704 in favor and 227 against to consolidate with Sioux Falls.

On the same issue, Sioux Falls inhabitants voted on November 15 by the vote 2,714 in favor and 450 against.

In 1981, to take favor of recently relaxed state usury laws, Citibank relocated its major credit card center from New York City to Sioux Falls.

Some claim that this event was the major impetus for the increased populace and job expansion rates that Sioux Falls has experienced over the past quarter century.

Sioux Falls has grown at a rapid pace since the late 1970s, with the city's populace increasing from 81,000 in 1980 to 153,888 in 2010.

Downtown Sioux Falls in 2010, looking west.

Primary geographic features of Sioux Falls.

Sioux Falls is positioned at 43 32'11" North, 96 43'54" West (43.536285, 96.731780). According to the United States Enumeration Bureau, the town/city has a total region of 73.47 square miles (190.29 km2), of which, 72.96 square miles (188.97 km2) is territory and 0.51 square miles (1.32 km2) is water. The town/city is positioned in the extreme easterly part of South Dakota, about 15 miles (24 km) west of the Minnesota border.

Sioux Falls has been assigned the ZIP codes 57101, 57103 57110, 57117 57118, 57188 57189 and 57192 57198 and the FIPS place code 59020.

The Sioux Falls Metropolitan Travel Destination consists of four counties, all of which are positioned in South Dakota: Lincoln, Mc - Cook, Minnehaha, and Turner.

The estimated populace of this MSA in 2014 was 248,351, an increase of 6.68% from the 2010 census. According to recent estimates, Lincoln County is the ninth fastest-growing county (by percentage) in the United States. In addition to Sioux Falls, a several cities and suburbs included in the urbane region are Canton, Brandon, Dell Rapids, Tea, Harrisburg, Worthing, Beresford, Lennox, Hartford, Crooks, Baltic, Montrose, Salem, Renner, Rowena, Chancellor, Colton, Humboldt, Parker, Hurley, Garretson, Sherman, Corson, Viborg, Irene, and Centerville.

Sioux Falls has more than 70 parks and greenways.

Probably the best known is Falls Park, established around the city's namesake waterfalls on the Big Sioux River, just north of downtown.

The path follows the course of the Big Sioux River, forming a loop around Sioux Falls, along with a several spurs off the chief bike trail.

The town/city is in the process of expanding the bike trail network east from Sioux Falls at Lien Park to eventually connect to Brandon, South Dakota and ultimately the Big Sioux Recreation Area.

The South Dakota Department of Game, Fish and Parks has an Outdoor Campus in Sioux Falls at Sertoma Park where it has a several outside areas and acreages devoted to fish and wildlife.

Due to its inland location, Sioux Falls experiences a humid continental climate (Koppen Dfa), which is characterized by hot, mostly humid summers and cold, dry winters, and is positioned in USDA Plant Hardiness Zone 4b. The monthly daily average temperature ranges from 16.6 F ( 8.6 C) in January to 73.0 F (22.8 C) in July, while there are 18 days of 90 F (32 C)+ highs and 26 days with sub-0 F ( 18 C) lows annually.

Climate data for Sioux Falls, South Dakota (1981 2010 normals) City government: The town/city of Sioux Falls is led by a mayor-council (strong mayor) form of government.

Sioux Falls operates under a home rule charter as permitted by the South Dakota constitution. Crime: The per-capita general violent crime rate in Sioux Falls is roughly half the United States average. The Sioux Falls Police Department is the municipal law enforcement agency.

3,200 Sioux Falls School District 1,228 City of Sioux Falls Originally centered on quarrying and agriculturally based industries, the economy of Sioux Falls has turn into diversified and more service-based over the last half-century, making the town/city a locale for financial services, community care, and retail trade.

Partially due to the lack of a state corporate income tax, Sioux Falls is the home of a number of financial companies.

Other meaningful financial service companies positioned in Sioux Falls include Great Western Bank, Western Surety Company (CNA Surety), Total Card Inc., Capital Card Services, Midland National Life Insurance Company, Meta - Bank, and First Premier Bank.

Sioux Falls is a momentous county-wide community care center.

There are four primary hospitals in Sioux Falls: Sanford Health (formerly Sioux Valley), Avera Mc - Kennan Hospital, the South Dakota Veterans Affairs Hospital, and the Avera Heart Hospital of South Dakota.

Emergency medical services (EMS) are provided by Paramedics Plus and Sioux Falls Fire Rescue.

Companies based in Sioux Falls include Raven Industries, retailers Lewis Drug and Sunshine Foods, as well as communications companies SONIFI Solutions and Midcontinent Communications.

The John Morrell plant, owned by Smithfield Foods Inc., has always been a primary employer in Sioux Falls, although the city's economy has turn into more diversified in recent decades.

Because of the mostly long distances between Sioux Falls and larger cities, Sioux Falls has emerged as an meaningful county-wide center of shopping and dining.

While no longer as economically dominant as it once was, the manufacturing and food refining sector remains an meaningful component of the economy of Sioux Falls.

The USGS Earth Resources Observation and Science Center is positioned approximately 10 miles north of Sioux Falls.

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Sioux Falls, one of two dioceses in the state, assembled St.

Sioux Falls is also the seat of the Episcopal Diocese of South Dakota.

Sioux Falls is home to the University of Sioux Falls, Augustana University (formerly Augustana College), Sioux Falls Seminary, Kilian Community College, Southeast Technical Institute, National American University, the South Dakota School for the Deaf, Globe University/Minnesota School of Business, the University of South Dakota's Sanford School of Medicine (Sioux Falls campus), Stewart School and the South Dakota Public Universities and Research Center (formerly known as USDSU).

The Sioux Falls School District serves over 23,000 students living in Sioux Falls and some of its encircling suburbs. Suburbs around Sioux Falls continue to experience dramatic expansion as Sioux Falls expands.

Many of these districts serve students who live on the outer edges of Sioux Falls town/city limits, and serve thousands of Metro-Area students.

The Sioux Falls School District has signed an agreement that will allow the precinct to participate in an Athletic Conference known as the "Metro Conference." Sioux Falls Lincoln, Washington, and Roosevelt High School along with Sioux Falls O'Gorman and Brandon Valley High School will compete in this conference, along with other potential suburban districts to help cut down on costs and to increase competition between schools in the Sioux Falls Metro Area.

School Enrollment (Fall 2015) The school precinct also operates two alternative high schools serving grades 9-12, and one specialized middle/high school alternative education center: School Enrollment (Fall 2014) Note: Axtell Park replaced the former Joe Foss High School beginning fall 2014 to consolidate both middle and high school alternative programs into one location.

School Enrollment (Fall 2014) Note: George Mc - Govern Middle School replaced Axtell Park as one of the 5 major middle schools serving Sioux Falls beginning with the 2014 2015 school year.

There are 25 enhance elementary schools in Sioux Falls, serving grades K-5.

Elementary school Enrollment (Fall 2014) Sioux Falls Catholic Schools is a centralized Catholic school fitness that includes eight schools: six elementary schools, all Pre - K-6 (St.

Approximately 2,800 students attend Sioux Falls Catholic Schools.

Other private schools include Sioux Falls Christian Schools, Christian Center, The Baan Dek Montessori, Cornerstone School and Sioux Falls Lutheran Schools.

Sioux Falls is home to a several Lutheran schools teaching students from pre-school through high school.

Lutheran schools include: Open Arms Christian Child Development Center, Sioux Falls Lutheran School, Lutheran High School of Sioux Falls.

Downtown Sioux Falls plays host to a Sculpture - Walk every summer.

Downtown Sioux Falls also hosts "First Fridays." The Downtown Riverfest is an annual Sioux Falls festival that embraces the beauty of the Big Sioux.

The Sioux Empire Spectacular draws Drum Corps participants and fans from athwart the country to Sioux Falls for this county-wide competition.

The event is run by DCI and by the music departments of the Sioux Falls School District.

Lyon Fairgrounds and the Sioux Falls Jazz - Fest is hosted at Yankton Trail Park each year.

In the beginning of the 21st century, Sioux Falls experienced a renaissance of cultural interest.

The Sioux Empire Arts Council continues to be an initiating prestige in the arts scene of the Sioux Falls region and give out Mayor's Awards each year in a several categories for excellence demonstrated by Sioux Falls inhabitants inside the particular form. The Sioux Falls Sculpture - Walk was the first visual evidence of the renaissance and is an attraction of both visitors and resident artists and hosts over 55 sculptures today. One of the earliest promoters of the intact arts scene was Sheila Agee, who still lives in close-by Brandon. Her work was essential to the renovation of the initial Washington High School into the Washington Pavilion (housing two performing arts, a visual arts, and a science center). The Northern Plains Indian Art Market (NPIAM) was established in 1988 by American Indian Services, Inc., of Sioux Falls, SD, as the Northern Plains Tribal Arts Show (NPTA) Northern Plains Tribal Arts had dominated the Sioux Falls art scene from its inception in 1988.

Poetry and literary affairs began to come to greater popularity with the opening of the Sioux Empire Arts Council Horse Barn Gallery as the 21st century began (then directed by Deb Klebanoff), and due to a National Endowment for the Arts-supported Y Writer's Voice, established and directed by Allison Hedge Coke. The Y Writer's Voice encompassed a reading series of 38 nationally known poets and writers (per year) who performed works and youth workshops through the Sioux Falls Writers Voice in small-town performance spaces, at the YMCA afterschool program, and in small-town region schools, gaining nationwide attention. These two entities along with the resurgence of affairs regularly hosted at the Washington Pavilion's Leonardo's Cafe (Lincoln High School Writer's Guild advised by SFSD Official Writer in Residence, Allison Hedge Coke, who also served on the Pavilion's Community Task Force, see Washington Pavilion Visual Arts Center - Timeline), the Sioux Empire Arts Council's Horse Barn Art Gallery, and a several coffee homes.

During this renaissance, Allison Hedge Coke had moved to Sioux Falls from Rapid City (shortly after winning an American Book Award), as she was serving the state of South Dakota (SDAC & Arts - Corr), first as a part-time literary artist in the Sioux Falls Schools (while still serving schools and incarcerated youth centers athwart the state) and then as a full-time literary artist in residence for the Sioux Falls school precinct (SFSD, SDAC, & Office of Indian Ed funded).

She held the literary artist part with the school precinct while simultaneously teaching at Kilian College and the University of Sioux Falls and founding/directing a Y Writers Voice at the Sioux Falls YMCA for a several years, hosting readings at the Washington Pavilion, the Dakota Conference at the Great Plains Center of Augustana College, with Deb Klebanoff at the Art Barn, in Siouxland Sioux Falls Library, in Zandbroz Bookstore, and with the Sioux Falls Multicultural Center.

Hedge Coke edited and presented two anthologies amid her tenure at Sioux Falls School District: Coming to Life: Poems of Peace in the Wake of 9-11 and They Wanted Children: Poems and Stories of Coping with Sudanese, Native, Latino, Asian, and Euro - American students in the district.

She continually participated at-large in the nationwide literary field as a visiting writer/performing artist and publishing widely while serving on the Sioux Falls Housing Board and as a town/city Housing Revitalization Task Member, promoting arts, civil rights, affordability and inclusion. Hedge Coke also formally proposed a Poetry Sidewalk (contest for chose poems to be etched in Sioux Falls Quartzite to match the park beautiful) amid city council meetings for the cleaning up and evolution of Falls Park and the downtown area. A version of the universal is presently coming to fruition (in concrete, to match the Cathedral District) "Everyone deserves beauty," said Wayne Wagner, housing evolution director for Affordable Housing Solutions.

Ron Robinson, a substantial Sioux Falls writer and professor of English at Augustana College, was persistently on the scene. Steve Boint; Charles Luden; Nicole Allen; Jason Freeman; Suzanne Sunshower lives converged in Sioux Falls, SD while performing poetry at Michelle's Coffee and at the Horsebarn Arts Center.

Together, they presented From the lonely cold : poems by Nicole Allen, Charles Luden, Jason Freeman, Suzanne Sunshower, Steve Boint. Jason Freeman, poet and disability promote was born in Sioux Falls (son of artist-writer/neurologist Dr.

Jerome Freeman) and has been a part of the literary arts scene since his youth. Tom Foster moved to Sioux Falls (from California), having already advanced a existence in the California Slam scene and was integral to keeping enhance open-mics going strong.

The Washington Pavilion continued to donate space for literary activities as well as the Siouxland Sioux Falls Library.

Eventually, David Allan Evans returned to Sioux Falls as the current State of South Dakota Poet Laureate and enhanced the literary scene with his reintroduction to the Sioux Falls improve and existence as the state poet.

Patrick Hicks, poet/writer, came to the town/city to teach at Augustana College and presented the anthology A Harvest of Words: Contemporary South Dakota Poetry, later, in 2010. Rosalee Blunk was the initial organizer for the Poetry Out Loud state finals held annually in Sioux Falls. Maddie Lukomski, a Poetry Out Loud junior at Sioux Falls Lincoln High School in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, was titled a winner in the National Endowment for the Arts Poetry Ourselves competition spoken category, most recently (May 2016). The Sioux Falls Mayor's Awards in Literary Arts designated movers and shakers amid the expansion and evolution of the literary arts scene. Deb Klebanoff, born in Sioux Falls, who began the reading series at the Horse Barn with Allison Hedge Coke, after serving on the Sioux Falls Chamber of Commerce's Cultural Affairs committee, including a term as its chair and for almost a decade with the Sioux Empire Arts Council, including 8 years as its Executive Director.

Later moved south of Sioux Falls and established a Writers' Retreat, The Retreat at Pointer's Ridge, a momentous additional to the state's literary arts scene.

In addition to Literary Arts Awards, there are Mayor's Awards in Visual Arts, Performing Arts, Music, Organizing in the Arts, Advocacy, and Lifetime Achievement, per mayor's discretion, and various visual artists who got their start in and/or represent the city, including Carl Grupp, Mary Groth, Ceca Cooper, Marian Henjum, Brad Kringen, Nancyjane Huehl, Don Hooper, Nathan Holman, Gary Hartenhoff, Sheila Agee, Mary Selvig, Martha Baker, Chad Mohr, Paul Schiller, Liz Heeren, Edward Two Eagle, Edwin Two Eagle, James Starkey, and painter/muralist Byob Mergia The Sioux Falls Jazz and Blues Festival is a three-day outside musical event featuring two stages and is no-charge to the public.

The event is held the third weekend in July at Yankton Trail Park in Sioux Falls. The Sioux Falls Jazz & Blues Society plays host to nationwide musicians amid their annual concert series.

The Downtown Riverfest brings live music, art, kids' activities and more as an annual Sioux Falls festival that embraces the beauty of the Big Sioux. Downtown Sioux Falls boasts Ipso Gallery directed by Liz Bashore Heeren, The Orpheum Theater, Sculpture - Walk, Sioux Empire Community Theater, Sioux Falls State Theater, The Museum of Visual Materials, The Interactive Water Fountain, Exposure Gallery and Studios, Falls Park and Cinema Falls, Creative Spirits, Eastbank Art Gallery, JAM Art and Supplies, and the Washington Pavilion is home to the South Dakota Symphony Orchestra and the occasional Poets & Painters show (P1, P2, P3, P4, P5...), in addition to the other arts noted above.

South Dakota Battleship Memorial to the World War II battleship USS South Dakota is on State Highway 42 (West 12th Street) and Kiwanis Avenue.

Most inhabitants of Sioux Falls travel and commute by car.

Interstate 90 passes east to west athwart the northern edge of the city, while Interstate 29 bisects the portion of the town/city from the north and south.

Interstate 229 forms a partial loop around Sioux Falls, and joins with Interstate 90 to the northeast and Interstate 29 to the southwest.

Over the next decade, the town/city of Sioux Falls and the South Dakota Department of Transportation plan to construct a limited-access highway around the outer edges of the town/city to the south and east known as South Dakota Highway 100. This highway will start at the northern Tea exit (Exit 73 on I-29, 101st Street) and will travel east on 101st Street, and curve northeast east of Western Avenue, then turn northerly near Sycamore Avenue.

Sioux Area Metro, the small-town enhance transit organization, operates 16 bus lines inside the city. Recently, the town/city added a new transfer station in Sioux Falls on Louise Avenue between 49th and 57th Streets.

The Sioux Area Metro Paratransit serves members of the improve who would otherwise not be able to travel by providing door to door service.

Sioux Falls also has a several taxi companies that operate inside the city.

Jefferson Lines runs long-distance bus routes to Sioux Falls.

Five domestic airlines (Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, American Airlines, Allegiant Air, and Frontier Airlines) serve Sioux Falls Regional Airport. The airport is also known as Joe Foss Field (in honor of famed aviator and former Governor Joe Foss).

Sioux Falls Canaries AAIPB, Baseball Sioux Falls Stadium 1993 1 Sioux Falls Stampede USHL, Ice hockey Denny Sanford Premier Center 1999 3 Sioux Falls Storm IFL, Indoor football Denny Sanford Premier Center 2000 9 Sioux Falls Skyforce NBA-DL, Basketball Sanford Pentagon 1989 2 The Sioux Falls Canaries were known as the Sioux Falls Fighting Pheasants from 2010 to 2013.

The Sioux Falls Canaries won the 2008 American Association championship, beating the Grand Prairie Airhogs in a 5-game series that was capped off with a 5 to 4 walk-off win in the 12th inning of Game 4.

The Sioux Falls Skyforce have reached the playoffs nine times, winning the CBA Championship amid the 1995 96 season, and later amid the 2004 5 season.

The Sioux Falls Storm, who presently play in the IFL, won four consecutive championships from 2005 to 2008, and have now won in 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, and 2015 for a total of nine titles.

The Sioux Falls Stampede won the United States Hockey League's Anderson Cup amid the 2005 6 season and two Clark Cup championships in the 2006 7 season and the 2014 2015 season.

Sioux Falls has a several multipurpose athletic stadiums: the primarily-baseball Sioux Falls Stadium, indoor Sioux Falls Arena, indoor Sanford Pentagon, and indoor Denny Sanford Premier Center.

Sioux Falls Stadium played host to the 2007 American Association of Independent Professional Baseball all-star game. Sioux Falls Arena hosted the Continental Basketball Association all-star game in 1996, 2000 and 2003.

Sioux Falls hosted the 16 - U Amateur Softball Association A National Championship of fastpitch softball in July 2009 and the 14 - U ASA A National Championship of fastpitch softball in July 2012.

In August 1989 and 2009, Sioux Falls hosted the Air National Guard National Softball Tournament at Sherman Park Complex.

On September 26, 2007, the Sioux Falls Spitfire suspended operations. In accordance with Sister Cities International, an organization that began under President Dwight Eisenhower in 1956, Sioux Falls has been given three global sister metros/cities in an attempt to foster cross-cultural understanding: See also: Media in Sioux Falls, South Dakota In 1992, a healthy economy, low unemployment, and a low crime rate led to Sioux Falls being titled "the best place to live in America" by Money magazine. In 2006, Men's Health Magazine ranked Sioux Falls as the 93rd Angriest City in the Nation, out of 100 metros/cities studied in the survey. In 2007, Allstate awarded Sioux Falls with the Allstate Safety Leadership Award in recognition of the safe drivers of the area, with Sioux Falls inhabitants averaging an accident once every 13.7 years. Sioux Falls was honored with the award again in 2008.

Also in 2007, Street & Smith's Sports Business Journal ranked Sioux Falls the 9th Best City for Minor League Sports, In its ranking of Minor League Markets. In the November 2007 copy of Men's Health Magazine, Sioux Falls was ranked #2 on the list of metros/cities with the least debt, finishing just behind Billings, Montana.

Forbes titled Sioux Falls the #1 Best Small Place For Business And Careers in 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 and 2009.

Forbes also released the University of Cincinnati's 2006 "United States Drinking Water Quality Study Report", which had Sioux Falls ranked 3rd in Cleanest Drinking Water.

In 2009, CNN ranked Sioux Falls the 45th best place to live and launch a company out of a list of 100. Benny Castillo 11-year minor league baseball player, manager of Duluth Superior Dukes, Jamestown Jammers, Yuma Scorpions, and Sioux City Explorers, former Sioux Falls Canaries hitting coach Allison Hedge Coke writer/educator//editor, including the Sioux Falls county-wide verse play Blood Run and two anthologies of Sioux Falls School District student writing Coming to Life and They Wanted Children.

1998 American Book Award winner; 2003 Sioux Falls Mayor's Award; Excellence in Literary Arts; Two Sioux Falls Community Foundation Excellence in Teaching Award Grants; Several State of South Dakota Arts Council Grants and Fellowships; NEH Visiting Distinguished Professor, Hartwick College; Distinguished Paula and Clarice Reynolds Chair, UNK; Visiting Artist-Writer UCO; Distinguished Writer in Residence UH Manoa, 2016 Library of Congress Witter Bynner Fellow., a b "City of Sioux Falls Mayor's Office".

"History of Sioux Falls".

City of Sioux Falls.

"Sioux Falls".

Sioux Falls 25 years after Citibank's arrival.

"Average Weather for Sioux Falls, SD Temperature and Precipitation".

"Station Name: SD SIOUX FALLS".

City of Sioux Falls.

"Sioux Falls Crime Statistics" (CSV).

Sioux Falls Development Foundation.

"Home - Sioux Falls School District".

"Sculpture - Walk Sioux Falls homepage".

Sioux Empire Arts Council.

Sculpture - Walk Sioux Falls.

"Indian Education - Sioux Falls School District".

"Good Earth State Park at Blood Run South Dakota".

"Sioux Falls Poetry Contest Set in Stone".

"Charles Luden | South Dakota Festival of Books".

Sioux Falls: The Center for Western Studies, Augustana College, 2010.

"Featured Artists Sioux Falls Area Community Foundation".

"About Jazz - Fest Sioux Falls Jazz - Fest 2017".

"Sioux Falls Jazz - Fest 2017".

"History of SFJB | Sioux Falls Jazz and Blues".

"Downtown Riverfest | Downtown Sioux Falls".

"Ipso Gallery Presents: Boonie | Downtown Sioux Falls".

"South Dakota 100 Corridor Preservation Project".

"Sioux Falls Transit First to Deploy Route - Match Software's Fixed Route CAD/AVL Solution".

"Sioux Falls Regional Airport - Home".

"Sioux Falls sports scene benefits from Sanford".

"Sioux Falls Business Journal".

Sioux Falls Business Journal.

"Norwegian Immigrants in Early Sioux Falls: A Demographic Profile", Norwegian-American Studies, 36 (2011), pp 45 84.

"A Dakota Boomtown: Sioux Falls, 1877 1880", Great Plains Quarterly (2004) 24#1 pp 17 30 Reveille for Sioux Falls: A World War II Army Air Forces Technical School Changes a South Dakota City.

Mission in Sioux Falls: The First Baptist Church, 1875 1975 (1975) Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sioux Falls, South Dakota.

Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclop dia Britannica article Sioux Falls.

Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Sioux Falls.

Sioux Falls Area Chamber of Commerce Sioux Falls Convention and Visitors Bureau Sioux Falls Development Foundation Sioux Falls School District Sioux Falls Airport Sioux Falls Argus Leader the city's daily journal Sioux Falls Events Sioux Falls Transit knowledge Greetings from Sioux Falls A look at the history of Sioux Falls through postcards Sioux Falls Municipalities and communities of Lincoln County, South Dakota, United States Municipalities and communities of Minnehaha County, South Dakota, United States

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Sioux Falls, South Dakota - County seats in South Dakota - Sioux Falls urbane region - Populated places established in 1856 - Cities in Minnehaha County, South Dakota - Cities in Lincoln County, South Dakota