Arnegard is a city in McKenzie County, North Dakota, United States.
It was so named because most of the people who founded Arnegard came from Spring Grove, Minnesota, where they belonged to the Old Wilmington Lutheran Church.
The town was incorporated in 1913 when the Great Northern Railroad extended its line past Watford City to Arnegard.
Included were four more classrooms and a library on the second floor, and a gym and principal's office in the rear.
McKenzie County donated the building to the city of Arnegard shortly thereafter, and it was used as a roller skating rink, town library, and meeting hall.
In 1998, local man Milton Hanson purchased the structure and completely renovated it.
It was then operated as the "Old School Bed & Breakfast", and has been featured on HGTV's "If Walls Could Talk" and Prairie Public TV's "Old to New: Remodel, Restore, Revitalize".
Arnegard was founded with about 100 people living there, and it reached its peak population of 254 in 1930.
Arnegard has seen a small uptick in population in the 2000s attributable to the North Dakota Oil Boom.
The officers had recently filed a grievance citing hostile work environment.
According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 0.25 square miles (0.65 km2), all land.
Media related to Arnegard, North Dakota at Wikimedia Commons