Tri-State Boundary Marker - Southwest City, MO
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member YoSam.
N 36° 29.977 W 094° 37.069
15S E 355109 N 4040582
Actually the state is Arkansas - Missouri - & Oklahoma since it sits on the point where all three meet.
Waymark Code: WMN71M
Location: Missouri, United States
Date Posted: 01/08/2015
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Raine
Views: 8

County of Mark: Benton in AR; Delaware in OK; McDonald in MO
Location of mark: MO-43, AR 43 & OK 20, just S. of Southwest City in MO & N. of Maysville, AR
Marker erected by: Original surveyed for statehood MIS. 1821; Second (center section: Ozark Culture Club in 1915; restored and new base and concrete state lines- Lions Club 1955

The story I was told in Southwest City's city hall was that sometime after 1950, a tractor-trailer accident knocked the monument over and threw it into a ditch. The Lions Club had the spot re-surveyed, poured the pad with state line markings, and a new base, and re installed the original two other efforts on top of each other. This was done in 1955 as the bottom base states

"Stacked one on top of the other are state-line markers erected between 1821 and the 1960s. on top, shaped like a headstone, is the original marker with "Mis. 1821" (the date of statehood) on the north side and "Ark. (no date; it was still a territory) on the south. Oklahoma, at the time, was Indian Territory. this stone is reportedly the western survey for the 1820 Missouri Compromise. Below it, a marble pedestal erected by the Ozark Culture Club in 1915 identifies all three states along with their dates of admission to the Union (Ark., 1836; Mo.,1821; Okla., 1907). At the bottom is a 10-foot cement circle with three bronze lines erected by the Lions Club in the 1960s." ~ Missouri Roadsides: The Traveler's Companion By Bill Earngey also on a waymark by Silverquill

Marker Text:

MISSOURI 1821
ARKANSAS 1836
OKLAHOMA 1907

[This marker is the point where the 3 states borders meet.
The top stone is from 1830's and original.
The middle sections was placed in 1915.
The base and divided circle foundation were placed as part of the restoration in 1955.
This point is also the western end of the Mason-Dixon Line.]


History about the Mason-Dixon Line:
Although the Mason-Dixon line is most commonly associated with the division between the northern and southern (free and slave, respectively) states during the 1800s and American Civil War-era, the line was delineated in the mid-1700s to settle a property dispute. The two surveyors who mapped the line, Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon, will always be known for their famous boundary.

In 1632, King Charles I of England gave the first Lord Baltimore, George Calvert, the colony of Maryland. Fifty years later, in 1682, King Charles II gave William Penn the territory to the north, which later became Pennsylvania. A year later, Charles II gave Penn land on the Delmarva Peninsula (the peninsula that includes the eastern portion of modern Maryland and all of Delaware).

The description of the boundaries in the grants to Calvert and Penn did not match and there was a great deal of confusion as to where the boundary (supposedly along 40 degrees north) lay. The Calvert and Penn families took the matter to the British court and England's chief justice declared in 1750 that the boundary between southern Pennsylvania and northern Maryland should lie 15 miles south of Philadelphia. A decade later, the two families agreed on the compromise and set out to have the new boundary surveyed. Unfortunately, colonial surveyors were no match for the difficult job and two experts from England had to be recruited.

Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon arrived in Philadelphia in November 1763. Mason was an astronomer who had worked at the Royal Observatory at Greenwich and Dixon was a renowned surveyor. The two had worked together as a team prior to their assignment to the colonies.

After arriving in Philadelphia, their first task was to determine the exact absolute location of Philadelphia. From there, they began to survey the north-south line that divided the Delmarva Peninsula into the Calvert and Penn properties. Only after the Delmarva portion of the line had been completed did the duo move to mark the east-west running line between Pennsylvania and Maryland.

They precisely established the point fifteen miles south of Philadelphia and since the beginning of their line was west of Philadelphia, they had to begin their measurement to the east of the beginning of their line. They erected a limestone benchmark at their point of origin.

Over fifty years later, the boundary between the two states along the Mason-Dixon line came into the spotlight with the Missouri Compromise of 1820. This is the first time the title "Mason-Dixon Line was used in hisory. The Compromise established a boundary between the slave states of the south and the free states of the north (however its separation of Maryland and Delaware is a bit confusing since Delaware was a slave state that stayed in the Union).

This boundary became referred to as the Mason-Dixon line because it began in the east along the Mason-Dixon line and headed westward to the Ohio River and along the Ohio to its mouth at the Mississippi River and then west along 36 degrees 30 minutes North. This is todays AR-MO southern border, leading to this point.

Street Address (if known):
MO 43; OK 20; AR 43
Southwest City, MO USA


Condition?: Excellent

Visit Instructions:
1) Please provide a photo you have taken of the Friendship Arch, Monument or Plaque.

2) If known, please indicate the operating Lions Club responsible for the placement of the Friendship Arch, Monument or Plaque.

3) Any other information regarding your visit would be greatly appreciated.

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