
Marthasville to Dutzow - Warren County, MO
Posted by:
YoSam.
N 38° 37.629 W 091° 03.638
15S E 668818 N 4277186
One of the shortest distances between trailheads on the Katy Trail. Please see photo gallery for text with photos of that spread.
Waymark Code: WMNYE5
Location: Missouri, United States
Date Posted: 05/24/2015
Views: 1
County of marker: Warren County
Location of marker: One St., Katy Trail State Park trailhead, Marthasville
Marker erected 2000
Marker erected by: Missouri Department of Natural Resources
Marker text:
One of the shortest distances between Katy Trail State Park trailheads is 3.7 miles from Marthasville to Dutzow. Shortly after leaving Marthasville, trail users cross Tuque Creek on a 190-foot-long through-truss bridge.
The Tuque Creek bridge is one of eight that the Katy Railroad rebuilt between New Franklin and Machens after giving up its Moberly-Hannibal line in 1923. From then on, the Katy depended entirely on this Missouri River route to reach St. Louis and Chicago.
To visit the Daniel Boone Monument -- including Boone's former gravesite -- go left on Boone Monument Rd. at milepost 75.8 to Bluff Rd. Turn left (west) on Bluff Rd. and go about four-tenths of a mile. The Boone monument is located on a hill to your right. Though open to the public, the Boone monument is on private land, so please treat it with respect. From the monument, you can return to the Katy Trail by backtracking.
Offered Spanish Land grants, the Boone family moved from Kentucky to what is now Missouri in 1799. Daniel Boone was buried here in 1820; his wife, Rebecca, had died in 1813. Their bodies were removed to Frankfort, Ky., in 1845, though local folklore suggests Kentucky received the wrong bodies. Other Boone family members and slaves are buried at the Boone monument. [Actually this is the Bryan Family Cemetery, Rebecca's Parents family farm]
After two more miles on the Katy, Dutzow appears in a large gap in the line of Missouri River bluffs. To the right of the trail is wide agricultural floodplain made p of former islands -- Boeuf, Miller, Watkins -- now mostly pieced together and filled in.