Skip to content
Dining room inside the 1937 Maness Schoolhouse at StoneHouse, Chaffee Crossing, Fort Smith

StoneHouse

New American steakhouse · Chaffee Crossing, Fort Smith · mains $25–$95
AY Magazine feature New American Steakhouse $$$ Chaffee Crossing AY Magazine feature, 2024

"A prime dry-aged tomahawk in a 1937 schoolhouse — Rachel Cannon's StoneHouse is the Fort Smith room for a milestone dinner."

8Food
8Ambience
7Value

About StoneHouse

StoneHouse sits at the edge of Fort Smith in Chaffee Crossing, in the 1937 Maness Schoolhouse — the only building left standing when Camp Chaffee was carved out around it, its rear patio laid by German prisoners of war in 1943. It opened in December 2015 as a chef-driven New American steakhouse, and the steak program is the point: primal cuts of prime beef, headlined by a dry-aged Prime Tomahawk at $95. AY Magazine profiled the room and its kitchen in 2024. For the criteria we judge it against, see our seven signs of a great restaurant.

The Kitchen

Rachel Cannon runs the kitchen as executive chef and director of operations, returning to her hometown in 2023 after two decades with restaurant groups, television cooking appearances, and a stint studying under James Beard–awarded chef Lorenzo Polegri in Orvieto, Italy. She brought Joshua Torres in to anchor service, and he climbed to executive chef on the strength of it.

The brief is a serious steakhouse with a modern New American hand. The centrepiece is the Prime Tomahawk — a 36-to-40-ounce bone-in ribeye dry-aged on the bone, carved tableside, at $95. Below it the menu reads like a proper chophouse: a 14-ounce ribeye at $34, filet mignon from $38, and a hog chop at $25 dressed with maple-pecan bacon jam and apples. Cuts are prime, the aging is done in-house, and the kitchen plates them with the eclectic sides and sauces that earned the 2024 AY Magazine write-up. It is the rare Fort Smith room cooking at this level on a daily menu rather than for a special occasion.

The Room

The schoolhouse does the heavy lifting: thick stone walls, tall windows, and a sense of age you cannot fake, with a patio out back that German POWs built during the war. Inside, the mood is warm and low-lit rather than clubby — white tablecloths without stiffness, a bar that fills early, and enough space between tables for a private conversation. Smart-casual is right; you will see neat denim and you will see jackets, and neither looks out of place. Book the dining room rather than the bar for a milestone night.

Best for a Milestone Dinner

Book StoneHouse for an anniversary or a birthday because the historic schoolhouse gives the night a sense of occasion that a strip-mall steakhouse never will, and the dry-aged tomahawk is the kind of plate a table remembers. The room is comfortable enough for a long dinner and polished enough to mark something. See the best restaurants for an anniversary, the best birthday tables, and our best steakhouses worldwide for the wider field.

Not for

Not for a quick weeknight bite — this is a sit-down steak dinner with tableside carving and prime-cut prices, not a fast casual stop on the way home.

Frequently Asked

Is StoneHouse worth it?

Yes — for a milestone dinner in Fort Smith it is the strongest room in town, cooking prime dry-aged beef in a genuinely historic schoolhouse. The Prime Tomahawk runs $95 and a la carte steaks land between $25 and $38, so it is a special-occasion spend rather than a casual one. AY Magazine featured chef Rachel Cannon's kitchen in 2024. See the Fort Smith dining guide for alternatives.

What should I order at StoneHouse?

The signature is the dry-aged Prime Tomahawk — a 36-to-40-ounce bone-in ribeye carved tableside at $95, ideal to share. If you are dining solo, the 14-ounce ribeye at $34 or the filet mignon from $38 are the move, and the hog chop at $25 with maple-pecan bacon jam is the sleeper. The steak program is the reason to come.

Where is StoneHouse in Fort Smith?

StoneHouse is at 8801 Wells Lake Road in Chaffee Crossing, on the eastern edge of Fort Smith, in the 1937 Maness Schoolhouse — the only building left when Camp Chaffee was built around it. It is a short drive from downtown and has its own parking, with a historic rear patio laid by German prisoners of war in 1943.

Do you need a reservation at StoneHouse?

For a weekend dinner or any milestone night, yes — book ahead, and ask for the dining room rather than the bar. StoneHouse takes reservations by phone and through OpenTable, and the kitchen is busiest Friday and Saturday. Weeknights are easier, but the better tables still go to those who call first.

Who is the chef at StoneHouse?

Rachel Cannon is executive chef and director of operations, having returned to her hometown of Fort Smith in 2023 after twenty years with restaurant groups, TV cooking appearances, and study under James Beard–awarded chef Lorenzo Polegri in Italy. Joshua Torres, whom she brought on, has risen to executive chef alongside her.

Reserve a Table
Reserve at StoneHouse

Via OpenTable · or call 479-242-3221

Affiliate disclosure: Restaurants for Kings may earn a commission when you book through our reservation links, at no cost to you. Our scores are editorial and never paid for.

Practical Information
Address8801 Wells Lake Road, Fort Smith, AR 72916
NeighbourhoodChaffee Crossing
CuisineNew American steakhouse
Signature dishPrime dry-aged Tomahawk ($95)
Mains$25–$95
Dress codeSmart-casual
ReservationOpenTable / phone
Executive chefRachel Cannon (since 2023)
RecognitionAY Magazine feature, 2024