Carpenter, South Dakota
Carpenter is a town in Clark County, South Dakota, United States.
Located west of Willow Lake on the GNR, it was founded in 1899, and had an estimated population of 85 in 1921.
It was named by its first postmaster John C. Opsahl for his recently deceased friend, G. W. Carpenter, a land office agent in nearby Watertown.
It had a lumberyard, the Carpenter Lumber Company, whose building stood for many years in the mid-20th-century before being finally demolished in the 1990s.
It had a general store, C. W. Chambers General Merchandise.
It also had three churches, Methodist, Lutheran, and Congregational; a bank; a hotel; and a feed mill.
In the 1970s, the Farmers Union Oil Company ran a fertilizer plant there.
Celebrated residents at the turn of the 20th century included Canton Hobit, who reportedly weighed and had to slide off his buggy with the use of a board.
One Dr Leach, the local physician who had moved there in 1907, drove its first automobile there in 1909.