Place

Walnut Creek Crossing

Santa Fe National Historic Trail

Quick Facts
Location:
7 miles west of Ellingwood, Kansas; 1/2 mile south of Highway 56
Significance:
A trading post on the Santa Fe Trail
OPEN TO PUBLIC:
No
MANAGED BY:
Private

Six years before the American Civil War, in 1855, William Allison and Francis Boothe established a trading post along the imposing Arkansas River. This crossing came to be known as Walnut Creek Crossing, an important milestone on the Santa Fe Trail. Wagons would often be forced to stop and set up camp along the river banks to wait out flooding. Allison and Boothe saw this site as the perfect spot for a trading post to sell essentials to wagon trains and Native Americans.

This “ranche” was a large building made of logs. It was the first attempt at building by Americans west of Council Grove. The Walnut Creek Crossing had several owners over the years.  

You can still visit the Walnut Creek Crossing, to this day. The site is located in Great Bend (Barton County), south of Highway 56. All that is left today at the site is the foundation of the store.

Site Information

Location (7 miles west of Ellingwood, Kansas; 1/2 mile south of Highway 56)

Safety Considerations

Read more: "The Ranch at Walnut Creek Crossing" - Kansas Historical Society

Read more: The Ranche at Walnut Creek Crossing brochure by the Santa Fe Trail Association

Santa Fe National Historic Trail

Last updated: January 26, 2023