
Alcove Spring
ALCOVE SPRING HISTORY
As emigrants headed west on the Oregon Trail they crossed the Blue Blue River at Independence
Crossing. Many times the river was too swollen to cross, so the travelers had to wait a
few days to make the crossing safer.
Near the crossing the emigrants discovered one of the most beautiful and serene
sites along the Oregon Trail - Alcove Spring. The spring flows from the side of the alcove
into the basin below the falls. Water from a wet-weather creek flows over a rocky outcrop
and falls 10-12 feet into the same pool.
Alcove Spring got its name in 1846 when the Donner-Reed Party was forced to
wait for the Big Blue River to go down, from May 26 to May 31. One of
the members of the party, Edwin Bryant, found and named the Alcove Spring site. "Alcove
Spring" and "JFR 26 May 1846" were engraved in a rock at the top of the falls. They are
still visible today.
The group was saddened on May 29 by the death of Sarah H. Keyes, the mother-in-law
of the party co-leader, James F. Reed. Over the years the original gravesite has been lost,
but in 1950 the Arthur Barrett Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution dedicated a
monument at Alcove Spring in her honor.
Because of the 5 day delay at the Big Blue River and poor judgment in
attempting an untried route across the Great Salt Desert, the Donner-Reed Party reached the
Sierra pass too late. Blocked by snow, the emigrants were stranded. Of the 81
stranded only 45 survived.
ALCOVE SPRING TODAY
Alcove Spring was the first Marshall County property entered on the National Register of Historic
Places. The site was on a privately owned pasture, and had been opened to the public until
the 1970's, when public access was denied. In 1993, the park was reopened. A year
later the Alcove Spring Historical Trust bought 233 acres, which included Alcove Spring.
Another organization, The Alcove Spring Preservation Association, plans events at the site and
is working with the Kansas State Historical Society and the National park Service to preserve
Alcove Spring and interpret the story of the site.
The area is rich in natural beauty and features native grasses, wildflowers,
trees, birds and other animal life. You can hike a short trail from the parking lot,
through a shady woods to the site of the actual falls, or take a longer hike through the hills.
Approximately 5 miles of marked and mowed walking trails take you along streams, hilly trails
with beautiful views of the Blue River Valley, highland pature land that has never seen the plow
and some of the prettiest vistas in Marshall County. Across the road from the parking
lot you will find the Sarah Keyes monument, informative signs, Independence Crossing and
wagon swales still visible today.
Alcove Spring is located 6 miles South of Marysville on the East River Road.
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