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The
Pony Express |
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A plume of alkali dust races toward you |
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across the barren, sun-baked flat. |
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Quickly, the pounding of
hoof beats |
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grows more powerful beneath your feet. |
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The wind carries the blare from a horn
across the sand |
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and the fresh, half-breed mustang that you
hold |
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begins to prance, eager to go. |
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A rider, crouched over a lathered horse,
suddenly sprints |
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around a low dune, trumpets his arrival once more, |
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and reins in beside the station's corral. |
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Before you can grab his horse's bridle he
has already |
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jerked the mail pouch, or mochila, |
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from his saddle and dismounted, Within
moments |
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he throws it onto the fresh horse, |
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lifts himself into the saddle |
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and is gone, dashing east toward Sand Pass. |
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Yesterday......
The Pony Express holds a special place in the imagination
and folklore of America. The "Pony" lasted only 19 months, from April
1860 to November 1861, but it quickly became a legend. At a time before there were
airplanes, telephones, railroads or even a telegraph, the Pony carried the mail 2,000
miles in just 12 days in the summer and 14 days in the winter. As the Civil War
loomed, it provided the Union with a vital link to its far-flung Western territories,
including the silver mines of the Comstock and the gold fields of California. Racing
against time, the Pony had to overcome vast distances, hostile Indians and a harsh
climate. But it could not overcome progress. When the transcontinental
telegraph was completed on October 24, 1861, messages could be sent from coast to coast in
just minutes. The Pony was doomed and it died only twenty-seven days later.
When we think of the Pony Express we tend to think of the
riders, lone figures on horseback galloping from station to station. They are the
romantic vision that keeps the legend alive. Yet they never could have done it
without the stationmasters and attendants. Like the riders, these men were lonely
and often in danger. There was little excitement in their lives and boredom was
constant. Living conditions were bad at every station, but some were worse than
others. Sir Richard Burton, British scholar and explorer, visited Sand Springs
Station on October 17, 1860, and described it in his diary this way:
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The water near this vile hole was thick and
stale with |
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sulphury salts: it blistered even the
hands. The |
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station house was no unfit object in such a
scene, |
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roofless and chairless, filthy and squalid,
with a smoky
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fire in one corner, and a table in the
center of an impure floor, the |
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walls open to every wind and the interior
full of dust. |
Although every Pony Express employee had to swear
"...that I will drink no intoxicating liquors...", the most common items found
during excavation of the station were fragments of liquor bottles. Even solemn oaths were
hard to keep when faced with constant loneliness, boredom and isolation.
Today...
Covered by sand for over a hundred years, Sand Springs
Station lay undisturbed until 1976. It was rediscovered by a team of Archaeologists,
then excavated and stabilized in 1977. An interpretive sign has been placed in each
room within the station to explain its function. You are invited to explore this
National Historic Site at your own pace, but please, leave only footprints and take only
photographs.
Sand Springs Desert Study Area
In 1860, the Pony Express trail was just a scratch
on the surface of the Great Basin desert. Much of Nevada is still wild, untamed
country. But as the state has grown, non-native plants have invaded many of the
areas where mining, ranching and recreational activities occur. Here at Sand
Mountain uncontrolled Off-Highway-Vehicle use in the past has destroyed much of the
vegetation. Some animals which used to be common, such as the kit fox, now are
seldom seen.
The Sand Springs Desert Study Area is a fenced 40
acre tract that preserves a remnant of the land the way it was during the days of the Pony
Express. There is a one-half mile self-guiding interpretive loop trail that winds
through the study area and past the Pony Express Station. Along this trail you will
find more than a dozen signs which provide information on the wildlife, plants, history
and geology of the Sand Mountain area. If you are very quiet as you tour the area
you might be lucky enough to see some of the residents.
The Sand Springs Pony Express Station and The
Desert Study Area are preserved for your use and enjoyment. Desert vegetation is
very fragile though and the walls of the Pony Express Station can be easily damaged if
people climb or walk on them. Please treat them with respect.
Stay on the trail. Straying off of it
destroys vegetation and may disturb a resting scorpion or snake.
This is a National Historic Site and belongs to all
citizens of the United States. The use of metal detectors and the collection of
artifacts is prohibited.
The area around Sand Springs has been closed to
motor vehicles. This will protect the vegetation in the area and allow disturbed
sites to recover. It also gives visitors the chance to better experience the natural
setting of the Pony Express Station. Please respect this closure and stay on
designated roads. And as always, a reminder, "If you pack it in, pack it
out".
Some Pony
Express Links
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Bureau of Land Management
Carson City Field Office
5665 Morgan Mill Road
Carson City, Nevada 89701
775-885-6000
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