This week on Dakota Life digital Edition we show you a high school athletics award that continued this spring despite the lack of State Basketball Tournaments. We explore the dance of prairie chickens and sharp tailed grouse, learn about an influential woman who helped to lead the suffrage movement in South Dakota, learn how art is helping children cope with the pandemic and get a few tips on shade plants for your BACKYARD.
The Spirit of Su Experience of 2020
by: Nate Wek
Every basketball season since 1994, the Spirit of Su award has been presented at halftime of the championship game of each state tournament. Fast forward to the year 2020, and the tradition was forced to change.
There were no state championship basketball games this spring, which meant no special awards, such as the All-Tournament team, Spirit of Six, and Spirit of Su award, being handed out – or so we thought.
Last week, the South Dakota High School Activities Association, the ‘Visions of SuAnne’ Foundation, and the South Dakota High School Basketball Coaches Association teamed up to present six ‘Spirit of Su’ awards, because there are six classes of high school basketball in South Dakota, to worthy individuals.
The six award recipients were Cooper Cornemann (AA boys), Emma Osmundson (AA girls), Maxwell Nielson (A Boys), Morgan Hammerbeck (A Girls), Nicholas Sayler (B Boys), and Sydnie Schauer (B Girls).
For Morgan Hammerbeck of Winner High School, who like all of the honorees this season was one of the best high school basketball in the state, the award was a surprise.
“[Winner head coach Larry Aaker], he texted me and said ‘hey, can you come in Tuesday for a picture with your all-state plaque?’ I was like ‘ok, yeah, I can do that, I’ll get it done and be there.’ He said ‘how about your family comes?’ And I was like ‘hmm that’s kind of weird, but maybe we want a family picture or whatever.’ So then I went in and they surprised me a half an hour before the [SDHSAA] got there,” explained senior basketball standout Morgan Hammerbeck. “It was surreal. It’s been a dream of mine for as long as I can remember, so it was pretty crazy.”
That’s right, instead of receiving the award in front of thousands of fans, in the middle of March, the award was presented to her in an empty gymnasium with a small group of people present. This is how all six awards were presented. Members of the SDHSAA traveled across the state to present each kid with a plaque and quilt that comes with the ‘Spirit of Su’ honor.
“It was a weird feeling having my family and maybe a few other community members or people from my school. It wasn’t a big ceremony or anything, but it was just as special having everyone there,” Hammerbeck stated. “It was kind of like I won this big award, took it home and laid it in the living room. It was a big event, but it all just settled down so quickly.”
The ‘Spirit of Su’ award is presented each year to a basketball student athlete at the high school level who display excellence in academics, athletics, leadership, and community service. And, the award is only given to a senior, meaning this year, the award recipients are a part of the 2020 graduation class.
For most who win the award, they recognize the magnitude of it. This is no different with Morgan Hammerbeck.
“It’s been a dream of mine. I remember when I was in 5th or 6th grade watching the ‘AA’ class play their state tournament and I remember watching Macy Miller win it, and then I remember looking at my mom and saying ‘I want to win that award someday,’” exclaimed Hammerbeck. “It still hasn’t really sunk in.”
While the coronavirus has forced many traditions to stop completely this spring, the ‘Spirit of Su,’ despite the ceremony being a bit modified, found a way to continue on.
While People Sheltered in Place, Prairie Chickens, Sharptails Danced
by Michael Zimny
The elaborate Spring mating rituals of prairie chickens and sharp-tailed grouse are worth waking up early for. The birds start at twilight and wrap up around sunrise.
In recent years, Buffalo Gap National Grassland staff have placed blinds near the leks for viewers. This year that program was put on hold. The birds… still pushed their life cycle along.
Artists And COVID-19: Rachel Butzin
by Chynna Lockett
Art projects and craft work have been helping many people cope during the pandemic. Kids are no exception. An art teacher from St. Joseph's Indian School in Chamberlain is making free coloring pages to keep kids entertained.
The pages feature popular characters from T.V. and video games with a cultural twist. Rachel Butzin thought them up.
“I like to draw silly stuff all the time with the kids. One day I was like really super down and so I wanted to draw something that the kids would’ve suggested for me to draw. And so I started drawing pictures from The Mandalorian and Baby Yoda doing different Native stuff like canoeing or Baby Yoda in a cradle board, and Super Mario and Yoshi all powwow style and I was just having fun.
She shared the coloring pages virtually and encourages families to print them off for free and share their finished works. Organizers from several tribes include them in COVID-19 care packages.
Butzin is also working on several digital animation projects for bilingual books and even a music video.
“Because of COVID they couldn't film the video so she reached out to me. That was like a different project than anything I’d got to do before.”
She’s noticed an uptick in artist collaboration projects like these since the pandemic. Butzin has taken on this extra artwork while finishing out the school year, taking care of her family and earning her masters in education online.
“Yeah, I just don’t sleep.”
And she recently started getting back into beadwork.
“It’s like a challenge to myself to make something better than whatever I did last time so I lose track of time because I just really get into it.”
Butzin’s coloring pages and other work is available through her online shop, My Little Native.
Influential Women of SD: Marietta Bones
by Lori Walsh
Lori Walsh: During the centennial year of the ratification of the 19th Amendment, which assured that women in the United States have a right to vote, SDPB has embarked on a project to tell the history of suffrage in South Dakota. Today we continue our look at that history with a profile of Marietta M. Bones of Webster. Bones gained national prominence in the movement only to switch sides, after infighting within the movement left her disillusioned with the cause and actively working against it. Here to tell us more about this story is Nancy Tystad Koupal. She is the director of the South Dakota Historical Society Press in Pierre. Nancy, welcome back to the program. Thanks for being here.
Nancy Tystad-Koupal: Thank you. Thanks for having me.
Lori Walsh: Let's go back a little bit in the story of Marietta Bones, because I think people might be surprised when she was active in South Dakota, but I want to hear how she got here in the first place. What do we know about her early years?
Nancy Tystad-Koupal: Well, not as much as I wish we did, is the short answer. She grew up in an abolitionist family in the East and married out there and then divorced and came out here with her second husband, who was a political appointee in the Republican party in Dade County.
Lori Walsh: How common was it for a woman to be divorced in this timeframe?
Nancy Tystad-Koupal: Not that common, you put your finger on it, but by that time it was becoming more common because the laws were changing. People were looking, women were lobbying for leaner, or not leaner, but more lenient divorce laws, so that women could bring suit to get out of particularly abusive relationships and that sort of thing.
Lori Walsh: So, does her divorce and that process of figuring out what happened in her life next? Because I understand, she didn't get a lot of money or support, she got zero, she says. Tell us a little bit about how she got interested in this idea of giving women a voice and a vote?
Nancy Tystad-Koupal: Well, I think a lot of that goes back to the fact that her family was involved in the abolitionist movement. That's the route that a lot of the early women took to come to suffrage, was fighting for freedom for the African American slaves. So, I think that's where it started. And she obviously came from a family that believed in public service and service to your fellow man. She was always working on one cause or another, and she was very personal with it. I was just reading a little bit before this, for example, she would champion people that were ill. She would take them to Chicago, if they couldn't get the care they needed in South Dakota, for example. So, she was just very passionate about helping others and she felt that the vote for women was the way to make a lot of social change. And she was like that, I mean, that was not unusual for women of the period. They were looking for social change through votes for women. I hope I answered your question there.
Lori Walsh: How does she become close to people like Susan B. Anthony, Matilda Gage? What are some of her connections with them? And tell us a little bit about her relationship with Susan B. Anthony, at first.
Nancy Tystad-Koupal: I think that she became connected with these people, in particular, when she came out here to Dakota territory in the early 1880s. And she was a part of the National American Women's Suffrage Association and she was designated a vice president. I think the women became very connected through those movements. They got to know one another, she went to national meetings. She met Susan B. Anthony, I think for the first time, down in Nebraska at a meeting, suffrage meeting, in the early '80s down there, 1881. And because there were so few of them working out here, the national suffrages got to know these women because they corresponded. It's now a very lost art, but they wrote copious letters back and forth.
Lori Walsh: Why is it important on the path to statehood, what was the hope at that point, that becoming a state in 1889 would be paired with suffrage?
Nancy Tystad-Koupal: Well, the women had been promoting votes for women for many years. And in 1883, Marietta Bones had actually lobbied the state constitutional convention to put a woman's suffrage plank in the state constitution, and they didn't do that. They didn't do it in '83, but in '85, they rethought what they were doing and put a plank in that said, the people could vote on this issue, there was the idea that you shouldn't just do something without people being able to vote on it. So, the problem, of course, was that only males were voters. So, it was self serving in many ways.
Lori Walsh: What do we know about the changing of her mind or her evolution? Because she comes out vocally and with strong leadership on one side of an issue and ends up to be a pretty fierce opponent of it, take us through her transition.
Nancy Tystad-Koupal: Well, I think, that often we tend to think that the suffrage movement ... I think that view's changing, but I think for many, many years, we always thought that all the women were on the same page. They all wanted suffrage. They all worked together with that idea in mind. But, in fact, they were individuals just like all the rest of us, and they had differing points of view about how to achieve suffrage and, as you know, it was a long and very painful fight. And so, the women had plenty of opportunity to disagree about how to go about it. And for Bones, she was a very opinionated woman, I think, would be safe to say she, she knew and thought she knew how it should be done. She had allied, she thought with Susan B. Anthony, to get this done, she was a part of the national temperance organization, the WCTU, and she had allied with Francis Willard.
And then, in 1890, the politics of both the WCTU and the National Women's Suffrage Association, they changed. They decided it was time to try different approaches and soon, or not soon in the end, but Marietta Bones simply and profoundly disagreed with the change in approach. And it became really personal between her and Susan B. Anthony, because Anthony who was in charge of the national movement at that time, pretty much said, "Get lost. We don't need you. Your work is over." And the WCTU ... In many ways Bones went and became a part of the shadow organization of that, which was called the nonpartisan WCTU.
And that was in opposition to what the people in Webster wanted and were doing, and so they drummed her out of the local organization, and so, suddenly she was without a home. And at that point in time too, there was a lot of speculation that Anthony was embezzling money and doing different things that were not helping the cause. And so, what Marietta Bone says is, "This just isn't working. Neither one of these organizations are making suffrage happen and until we get better management, I am not going to be a part of these movements." And she held to that for the rest of her life.
Lori Walsh: She was decisive to her word, when she decided to be. So fascinating. I look forward to so many more of these conversations throughout the summer. Nancy Tystad Koupal is the director of South Dakota Historical Society Press in Pierre and we've been talking about Marietta Bones. Nancy, thank you so much for being here.
Nancy Tystad-Koupal: Well, you're welcome. Thanks for having me.
South Dakota Home Garden: Shade Plants
By: Bradley Van Osdel
Videographer/Editor: Kyle Mork
Shade plants can be a great option for your yard or garden in areas that don’t get enough sunlight to grow even grass. Shade plants can grow with less than three hours of sunlight per day. Erik Helland has tips for selecting the right shade plants. “ So there's lots of different kinds of hostas.. “They're going to be the ones that have the green with the white margin. They're going to be just ones with solid green. There's going to be ones that have a blue hue to them. There's ones that have a dark green on the outside and more of a yellow in the middle. But there's so many different varieties”
Hostas keeps spreading every year, so each spring you have more plants that you can transplant. It is also a great plant to share with neighbors and family members. Erik says also remember hosta do not re-leaf so if they are damaged by pets, kids or hail they will not generate new leaves.
Helland says there are many choices for other shade plants;
“ Ferns are great. Now the thing with ferns is remember is ferns, shoot off with a rhizome. So a rhizome it'll be a runner that goes underground and another one's going to pop up. All of a sudden you're going to have a bunch and then pretty soon It will become completely filled..
“Astilbe is a really interesting plant. It's kind of particular about the soil, It likes to have loose soil to where the soil can drain. Not full sun, so like I always say, east side, morning sun. Those are all great for the shade plant material. Another one is a huechera or a huechera (Coral Bells). It's basically all in the purple family. In the purple is this absolutely amazing.”
Lily of the Valley is an old favorite, but only in an area that has a lot of room to spread with rhizomes as it can it quickly take over an area.
Shade is not really about the flowers. Yes, a lot of shade plants have flowers, but shade plants are about colors and textures in the foliage. The last thing to remember is to check the label on any plants you purchase, especially with hostas. Hostas all look about the same size in pots at a greenhouse, but can vary in spread and size from a few inches high and a spread of 18 inches, to the larger hostas that can have a spread of five to six feet. If you have questions for Erik send them to: IntheMoment@sdpb.org. He may answer your question on-the-air during the South Dakota Home Garden segment, Wednesdays on SDPB Radio's "In the Moment."
Credits:
Photography by: Bradley Van Osdel