Deadwood Historic DistrictDeadwood Historic District (historical)
Then
Today
Historic Site· The Black Hills

Deadwood Historic District

National Historic Landmark
Good forHistory buffsArts & culture lovers

The settlement that became Deadwood was illegal from the start — built on land the 1868 Treaty of Fort Laramie had guaranteed to the Lakota people, after gold was announced in the Black Hills in 1874. The town reached a population of roughly 25,000 at its peak, drew Wild Bill Hickok, and buried him there. In 1961, the entire town was designated a National Historic Landmark for its preserved collection of late 19th-century frontier architecture. When gambling was legalized here in 1989, the revenue went toward keeping that architecture intact.

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3 historical photographs.
Deadwood Historic District — historical photo
Deadwood Historic District — historical photo
Deadwood Historic District — historical photo

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Editorial content compiled with AI assistance. Place details verified against public records.