Wild West

THE STABLES OF ST. JOE

Dating from 1858, the redbrick building at 914 Penn St. in St. Joseph, Missouri, is listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places—and for good reason. It once housed horses at the starting point of the legendary Pony Express mail service. Though short in tenure, “the Pony’s” accomplishments and romance continue to capture the American imagination.

The original structure, known alternately as the Pony Express Stables or Pike’s Peak Stables, was a one-story, 60-by-125-foot wood-frame barn].

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Wild West

Wild West1 min read
‘The Dusky Demon’
William M. “Bill” Pickett, was born on Dec. 5, 1870, in Jenks Branch, a freedmen’s town in Williamson County, Texas. He was the second of 13 children born to former slaves Thomas Jefferson Pickett and Mary “Janie” Gilbert. The family heritage include
Wild West3 min read
Friends To The Death
It’s said you can judge a person’s character by the company he keeps. Wyatt Earp’s pallbearers [at his Jan. 16, 1929, funeral in Los Angeles, mentioned in “Earp Fellow Sophisticates,” by Don Chaput and David D. de Haas, online at HistoryNet.com] incl
Wild West3 min read
Golden, Oregon
By the early 1850s gold fever had spread across the American West. Southwestern Oregon Territory was no exception, as placer miners had descended on Coyote Creek in what today is Josephine County. Camps sprang up, and the goldfields remained a beehiv

Related Books & Audiobooks