North Dakota
7 Breathtaking Towns to Visit in North Dakota
North Dakota is a sparsely populated state; the 70,000-square-mile region claims fewer than 800,000 residents, yet some of its secluded towns are so extraordinary travelers often wonder why there aren’t more people here! With a giant amphitheater, an Indigenous village, peace gardens and more, North Dakota offers up some of the most breathtaking landscapes and attractions. From quaint Medora to the historic Fort Ransom, the following ND communities are liable to take your breath away.
Medora
Home to about 120 people, Medora attracts thousands of tourists via Theodore Roosevelt National Park within the Little Missouri National Grassland. This million-acre expanse of badlands, grasslands, and petrified woods engulfs the community and fuels its economy, although Medora has several of its own spectacular attractions. These include the North Dakota Cowboy Hall of Fame, Chateau de Mores State Historic Site, Rushmore Mountain Taffy Shop, and Pitchfork Steak Fondue. The last of those is a “badlands barbecue” consisting of New York strip steaks impaled on pitchforks and dunked in barrels of oil. But the most breathtaking attraction in Medora (aside from the literally breathtaking terrain of Theodore Roosevelt National Park) is the Medora Musical, a lovely musical revue at the open-air, 2,800-plus-seat Burning Hills Amphitheater. It is called “The Greatest Show in the West” and we can understand why.
Stanton
Stanton straddles a tributary of the Missouri River called the Knife River, which is famous for the Knife River Indian Villages National Historic Site. Sitting a half-mile north of town, it is a preserve of Hidatsa tribal grounds, complete with remnants of centuries-old villages enmeshed in beautiful riverside scenery. The highlight is a reconstructed 40-foot earth lodge with a seating area, cache pit, fire pit, corral, shrine, and platform beds. From the Indian Villages, tourists can recharge with food and drink at The River Run, Inc. or a nap at the Sakakawea Park Campground before heading north to Lake Sakakawea and its namesake park or east to Washburn and its heritage haunts. The Fort Clark State Historic Site, Fort Mandan State Historic Site, and Lewis and Clark Interpretive Center surround Stanton’s slightly larger neighbor.
Jamestown
Jamestown is the ninth-largest community in North Dakota despite equating to roughly 15,000 people! A non-misleading Jamestown superlative is that it has the World’s Largest Buffalo Monument, which is 26 feet tall, 46 feet long, and weighs 60 tons. If your jaw will not drop for a concrete bison, perhaps it will for real bison – specifically, white bison. The North American Bison Discovery Center has a bison herd and museum, which displays the taxidermized body of Mahpiya Ska (AKA White Cloud), an extremely rare albino that headlined the herd for almost two decades. White Cloud had a white calf named Dakota Miracle, who also passed away. Another white bison, Dakota Legend, is presumably still alive and roaming the preserve.
Take that gaped mouth over to Jonny B’s Brickhouse for wood-fired pizza. Sufficiently stuffed, you can tour historic downtown buildings like the Stutsman County Memorial Museum, Stutsman County Courthouse State Historic Site, and St. James Basilica, a Vatican-worthy church in the middle of North Dakota.
Rugby
Rugby has a scrum of attractions. This 2,500ish-person “city,” named after the town of Rugby, England, is considered the geographical center of North America and has a 21-foot stone obelisk in commemoration. But it is just a quarter of the size of another Rugby sculpture, the Northern Lights Tower, which stands more than 88 feet and is dedicated to the aurora borealis.
After rounding out your Rugby tour at the Prairie Village & Museum, drive north to Bottineau to see 30-foot Tommy the Turtle at the gateway to the Turtle Mountains and then to the Canadian border for one of ND’s top attractions, the International Peace Garden. It spans nearly 2,400 acres of indoor and outdoor gardens and is so iconic that ND’s official nickname is the Peace Garden State.
Fort Ransom
Claim Fort Ransom for a scenic ND vacation. Among its luxuriant loot are Fort Ransom State Park, a 950-acre nature preserve along the Sheyenne River; Pyramid Hill, a mysterious earthen mound topped with a 25-foot Viking statue; and the Sheyenne River State Forest, which contains North Dakota’s only registered waterfall. Other scenic spoils in the area include the Sheyenne National Grassland, Fort Ransom State Historic Site, and Thor’s and The Old Mill Grill. Fort Ransom has only about 100 residents but deep Norwegian roots, which explains the Viking statue and Thor-themed pub. Some believe that Vikings sailed up the Sheyenne River, but this is pseudohistorical.
Richardton
If you thought Jamestown’s basilica was the only out-of-place shrine in North Dakota, check out Richardton’s St. Mary’s Church/Assumption Abbey, which looks like it came from Medieval Europe. Sure enough, the abbey was founded by a monk from Switzerland’s Benedictine Order, which dates to the Middle Ages. The present building was completed in 1910 and is still run by Benedictine monks.
After getting your Assumption on, you can get your consumption on at El Noa Noa Bar and Grill before heading east to see the 50-foot-long fiberglass cow in New Salem and then continuing on to Mandan for sights at Fort Abraham Lincoln State Park and bites at Frieds Family Restaurant. Try a fleischkuechle, the unofficial state sandwich and a symbol of ND’s German culinary influence.
Regent
Instead of traveling east of Richardton, you can go 15 miles west to Gladstone and then head south to Regent. Make sure to take your time, because the 32-mile road between Gladstone and Regent is called the Enchanted Highway and is lined with massive, magical sculptures. There are nine, including Teddy Roosevelt Rides Again, Sir Albert and the Dragon (in progress), and Geese in Flight, the last of which is 110 feet tall, 154 feet wide, weighs almost 80 tons and was declared the “largest scrap-metal sculpture” by the Guinness Book of World Records. Regent-born Gary Greff built these sculptures to help keep his tiny town alive. It worked since Regent boasts the Enchanted Highway Gift Shop and Enchanted Castle Hotel with the Excalibur Steakhouse.
Do not think that North Dakota is north of anything interesting. The state centers several small communities containing breathtaking attractions, such as Medora and its musical, Stanton and its earth lodge, Jamestown and its buffalo, Rugby and its obelisk, Fort Ransom and its pyramid, Richardton and its abbey, and Regent and its highway. Suffice it to say, do not let this upper Midwestern state pass you by!
North Dakota
$2 million anonymous donor to Grand Forks Children’s Museum is revealed
GRAND FORKS — The Grand Forks Children’s Museum has revealed the anonymous donor of the $2 million in matching funds that prompted others to step forward and bring the fundraising campaign closer to its goal of $35 million.
“It is with deep gratitude that the Grand Forks Children’s Museum now shares the name behind that bold vision,” said Katie Mayer, executive director of the museum, in naming Pam Laffen of Grand Forks as the anonymous donor.
With this gift and other major contributions, the fundraising campaign “stands at just $1.75 million remaining, bringing the finish line clearly into view,” Mayer said.
The museum “reflects Pam’s passion for learning and her belief in creating meaningful opportunities for children which have guided her life’s work and are deeply reflected in this gift,” she said.
Laffen said, “I am honored to be part of a community that supports a project dedicated to encouraging growth in education and service for future generations.”
Recognizing the impact of Laffen’s gift, Mayer said, “Pam and her late husband, Lonnie, shared a deep appreciation for this community. Being raised in a rural area in North Dakota taught them to be actively engaged in their immediate and surrounding communities across the state.”
Contributed / Grand Forks Children’s Museum
At the start of the “Unlocking Tomorrow, Together Challenge,” the $2 million would be released, or “unlocked,” with the receipt of each of eight $250,000 donations. The challenge actually resulted in “securing nearly 10 leadership-level commitments and accelerating the campaign even further,” Mayer said.
A leadership gift of $250,000 from the Pancratz Family Foundation, based with the Fargo-Moorhead Area Foundation, has helped to “unlock one of the final keys in the challenge,” according to an announcement from the museum. The gift has added “meaningful momentum at a pivotal time in the campaign.”
The foundation’s commitment to the museum “reflects a strong belief in expanding opportunity for children and families, and helped carry the challenge to completion.”
The final keys to the $2 million matching grant were “propelled by an extraordinary wave of generosity from families and businesses across our community,” Mayer said.
A vertical climber, to be named for Pam Laffen, is designed to physically and symbolically connect the land and sky levels of the museum, Mayer said. It will span two stories and include a slide. Designed to face 42nd Street, it will be visible from the road, serving as a signature feature of the building.
The climber will reflect the guiding phrase “In land, we root. Through sky, we rise. Together, we grow.”
“The words echo both the spirit of the community and the belief that learning, curiosity, exploration and opportunity are built step-by-step, grounded in place and lifted by possibility,” Mayer said.
North Dakota
Broncos won’t repeat as NCHC hockey champs, lose to N. Dakota: ‘We broke down’
Kalamazoo — There’ll be a new champion in the NCHC.
Will Zellers scored the game-winning goal in the third period as No. 3 North Dakota downed No. 4 Western Michigan, 5-3, Friday night at Lawson Arena. The Broncos never led and trailed all of the third period, though a late push nearly tied the game with the net empty.
“Overall in the game, I thought it was a pretty tightly contested effort. I thought they just scored too easy,” Western Michigan coach Pat Ferschweiler said. “You know, for us, we had a couple breakdowns, and they’re so talented, so good, they took advantage when we broke down.”
The teams finish the regular season Saturday night. Western Michigan came into Friday’s game tied with Denver in standings points and five points behind North Dakota, needing that many to get a share of the Penrose Cup it won last season en route to an NCAA championship, too.
As far as regular season results go, the Broncos will play for second seed in the NCHC Tournament, needing to outpace Denver, which plays Arizona State this weekend.
Western Michigan (23-9-1, 15-7-1 NCHC) goaltender Hampton Slukynsky made 16 saves on 20 shots in the loss while North Dakota’s Jan Spunar stopped 22 of 25 shots. It was a battle of two of the NCHC’s top netminders, and each made key stops in a tight-checking, physical game.
Zellers put North Dakota (25-7-1, 17-5-1) up 4-2 4:42 into the third period off an assist from Detroit Red Wings draft choice Dylan James.
“He kind of made a play out of nothing there,” said North Dakota coach Dane Jackson, who is in his first season as head coach after being on the coaching staff since 2006. “And that was a really nice kind of moment where you go OK, we got a little got a little leeway here, and we can just kind of play a little bit more free.”
North Dakota took a 3-2 lead into the third period with goals from defenseman Sam Laurila alongside forwards Ollie Josephson and Josh Zakreski. Defenseman Zach Bookman and forward Liam Valente scored for Western Michigan.
One too many times in the second frame, Western Michigan’s blue line let a North Dakota forward in all alone to face Slukynsky, who stopped a couple of rushes in the opening minutes of the period.
With four minutes until the intermission, the Broncos finally got burned. On a feed from linemate Anthony Menghini, Lakreski cut to the glove side of a sprawling Slukynsky and beat him with the backhand. The goal gave North Dakota the 3-2 lead, after a seeing-eye shot from Bookman along the right wall had tied it up two apiece 8:10 into the period.
“I actually thought the second period was our best period,” Ferschweiler said. “… We started to take over. We got the goal, tied 2-2, and are kind of just humming along. Four minutes left, we just hand them a goal. Blown coverage. That was inexcusable, honestly, with some of our better players on the ice.”
The opening period played out as a back and forth track meet through the neutral zone as each side settled in. Laurila put North Dakota up 1-0 with his first career goal. After Slukynsky denied him on a trio of tries earlier in the shift, he fired a shot to beat the Western Michigan netminder 4:40 into the game.
It took just a minute and 34 seconds after Laurila’s opener for Western Michigan’s top line to get it right back. A blue-collar shift from captain Owen Michaels fed linemate Will Whitelaw along the left boards, and he sprung Valente for a breakaway goal that evened up the score.
“I thought we gave it to them too easy a couple times tonight,” Whitelaw said. “And I think when you’re playing a team like that, obviously they’re gonna put it in your net. But I think it’ll be a big lesson for our group going forward.”
For the better part of the first period, the Lawson Lunatics peppered North Dakota defenseman Jake Livanavage with jeers, but he got his own licks in with 7:48 left in the first period as he fed Josephson right at the net for the 2-1 goal. That score held through the first period.
With 2:02 remaining and Slukynsky pulled, forward Zaccharya Wisdom pulled Western Michigan within one. He nearly had the equalizer with 40 seconds on the clock on a backdoor try, but he mistimed the shot. Mac Swanson scored an empty-netter with 20.7 seconds on the clock to clinch the win, and with it the Penrose Cup, presented to North Dakota in the locker room and then paraded around the ice.
“It’s the hardest regular season championship to win, in my opinion,” North Dakota forward Ben Strinden said. “So it’s awesome. Obviously, it’s not our end goal, but we’re going to enjoy it for sure.”
cearegood@detroitnews.com
@ConnorEaregood
North Dakota
Morton County did not violate North Dakota’s open records law when the County Auditor, within a reasonable time, informed the requester that the requested records were not in the County’s possession.. – North Dakota Attorney General
27 Feb Morton County did not violate North Dakota’s open records law when the County Auditor, within a reasonable time, informed the requester that the requested records were not in the County’s possession..
in Opinions
February 27, 2026
Media Contact: Suzie Weigel, 701.328.2210
BISMARCK, ND – Karen Jordan requested an opinion from this office under N.D.C.C. § 44-04-21.1 asking whether Morton County violated N.D.C.C. § 44-04-18 by failing or refusing to provide records.
Conclusion: It is my opinion that Morton County’s response was in compliance with N.D.C.C. § 44-04-18.
Link to opinion 2026-O-06
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