The Neff Tavern Smokehouse is the only surviving structure from Neff Tavern, which offered shelter to travelers on the northern Santa Fe Trail close to Arrow Rock, Missouri.
The tavern was set at one of the trailheads of the Santa Fe Trail in central Missouri.
Isaac Neff (1798–early 19th century),
The Neff family’s tavern was ideally positioned profit from traffic along the Santa Fe Trail.
Isaac Neff was a descendent of German immigrants, who probably came to the U.S. in the beginning of the eighteenth century and settled in present-day Tennessee.
Isaac’s generation epitomized many themes of American history, like westward migration and immigration from Europe. The following generation of the Neff family, like Isaac’s son Abram (1839 – 1924[^Number1]), took part in another important chapter of American history: the Civil War.
Although Missouri was split between Confederates and Unionists, most citizens tended towards anti-slavery beliefs.
As the only remaining part of the tavern, the smokehouse serves as an important link to Missouri’s economic history and the heyday of the Santa Fe Trail. The smokehouse also offers a reminder of other broader themes in American (and European) history.
The Neff Tavern is located on an unmarked street, west from the Missouri Highway 41 (half a mile) and Arrow Rock (6 miles).
Gerteis, Louis S. The Civil War in Missouri: A Military History. Columbia, Mo.: University of Missouri Press, 2012.
Gregg, Josiah. Commerce of the Prairies : or, the Journal of a Santa Fé Trader, during eight expeditions across the great western prairies, and a residence of nearly nine years in Northern Mexico. New York: J. & H.G. Langley, 1845.
Gregg, Kate. “The Boonslick Road in St. Charles County“. Missouri Historical Review, October 1933.
O’Brien, William Patrick. Merchants of Independence: International Trade on the Santa Fe Trail, 1827-1860. Kirksville, Mo.: Truman State University Press, 2013.
Parker, Lewis K. Why German Immigrants Came to America. Barrington, Ill.: Rigby, 2002.
Soren, Noelle. “Neff Tavern Smokehouse.” National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination Form. Jefferson City, Mo.: Office of Historic Preservation, 1978,
Turner, Frederick Jackson. “The Significance of the Frontier in American History.“ Annual Report of the American Historical Association, 1894, 197–227.
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