Badlands National Park

We are relatively certain that every kid growing up in America has heard about “The Badlands” at one point or another.

Whether it was during a school lesson on it being the hideout during the Wild West, or some other lesson, the name Badlands National Park is familiar to most, even those who haven’t made the trip to South Daokta.

Web Campaign

The Badlands is arguably the most significant national park in the United States roster of national monuments, because of Teddy Roosevelt. Before his presidency, Roosevelt journeyed to the Badlands in September of 1883 in an attempt to hunt the big game of North America before they all disappeared. Always a hunter and a conversationalist, Roosevelt lamented in his writings over the loss of the fauna and habitat of the region. The near extermination of bison, elk, bighorn sheep and other animals was a what Roosevelt felt as a monumental loss to the region, and spelled out societies perception of natural resources as inexhaustible.

On this trip to the Badlands, Roosevelt would write,

Web Campaign

We have become great because of hotel lavish use of our resources. But the time has come to inquire seriously what will happen when our forests are gone, when the coal, the iron, the oil and the gas are exhausted, when the soils have still further impoverished and washed into the streams, polluting the rivers, denuding the fields and obstructing navigation.

Upon his return from the Badlands, and the loss of his ranches due to overgrazing, Roosevelt continued to write memoirs and books that fueled his eventual catapult into the U.S. presidency, and the formation of the National Forest Service in 1905. With it came the designation of 230 million acres as National Parks and Forests, and the Antiquities act of 1906, which gave the president the power to declare by public proclamation historical landmarks and those areas of scientific interest to be national monuments of the United States.

Badlands National Park is a 380-square-mile monument located in southwestern South Dakota  and consists of sharply eroded buttes and pinnacles along with the largest, undisturbed mixed grass prairie in the United States. It is co-managed by the NPS and the Oglala Lakota native tribe.


Editor’s Note: A version of this story previously appeared on treademagazine.com in August 2018.

Web Campaign

You May Also Like

Off-Road Wheel Showcase: Black Rhino, KMC, Dirty Life, Mayhem Wheels

Put your best foot forward Black Rhino / Fuji The Black Rhino Fuji monoblock wheel is inspired by the off-road wheels on Dakar Rally support […]

Forging a Lifelong Bond: The Journey with a 1992 Toyota Land Cruiser

Last updated: July 18, 2025 Keep On Running Becoming an “automotive enthusiast” is different for everyone; some of us are enraptured by vehicles from movies […]

100 Series Upgrade: Toyo Tires Trailpass Lexus LX470

Tread Editor’s Choice Award Winner: Next Level Lexus LX470 This beautiful 2005 Lexus LX470 overland build showed up on our radar at the first-ever Toyo […]

Sack Time: 14 Sleeping Bags to Stave off Nature's Chill

You’ve never had such a good night’s sleep as the one experienced in the wilderness a few thousand feet above sea level. The oxygen is […]