
Santa Fe Trail - Tabo - Lafayette County, MO
Posted by:
YoSam.
N 39° 11.395 W 093° 43.838
15S E 436901 N 4338106
Near Tabo Creek, was a ferry near by to aid the travelers
Waymark Code: WMM307
Location: Missouri, United States
Date Posted: 07/12/2014
Views: 2
County of marker: Lafayette County
Location of marker: old US 24 & US 24, E. of Tabo Creek, 2½ miles W. of Dover
Marker erected by: Daughters of the American Revolution and the Stte of Missouri
Date marker erected: 1909
Marker text:
SANTA FE TRAIL
1821 - 1872
TABO
"In September 1821 William Becknell of Franklin probably followed the Osage Trace west from Arrow Rock through Grand Pass to Mount Vernon on Tabo Creek. Mount Vernon, which no longer exists, was the county seat of Lillard (later Lafayette) County, which included all of western Missouri at that time. In April 1821 the county court licensed Adam Lightner to operate a ferry across Tabo and appointed overseers to maintain the Trace from the eastern boundary of the county to Fort Osage. Becknell probably used the ferry at Tabo and then took the Trace to Fort Osage, skirting Lexington by a few miles to the south, before heading for Santa Fe.
"The Lexington settlers had successfully petitioned the county court to open a road from Jack's Ferry to Mount Vernon by July 1821. Referred to later as the "old Santa Fe Trail" or the "old Dover Road" (after an early settlement east of Mt. Vernon), this route was settled as early as 1818 by Christopher Catron, who is said to have broken the first prairie sod in the county. " ~ Lexington Missouri and The Santa Fe Trail