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The Pony Express: The Fastest Delivery of a Message across America by Libby Gooch Background: The inauguration of a new service, the Pony Express, on April 3, 1860, promised the fastest communication ever from the Missouri River to California. How long did a Pony Express message take to go from its starting point in St. Joseph, Missouri to Sacramento, California? How many years was the Pony Express in existence? How many riders were employed? What hardships did the riders experience? Finding the answers to these questions and many more like them captivates youngsters, encouraging them to read about, imagine, and romanticize an era of long ago. Pre-Civil War settlers who had already reached California and its promise of gold found themselves cut off from the rest of the world. Butterfield Express was an overland mail route via stagecoach that took twenty-three days for delivery. Most people knew it was a matter of time before the telegraph and railroad would span the continent, but with the Civil War looming in the near future, something was needed now to replace the existing overland route. Elementary students can examine primary documents such as newspaper articles, stories, and letters to understand how important the Pony Express was for settlers seeking east-to-west communication in record time. Aim/Essential Question: Why was the Pony Express
described as an immediate success by Western settlers but a financial
failure for its proprietors? 1. Explain that advertisements were used in the 1860s to influence people
to demand better and faster methods of communication. Objectives: 1. Students will analyze newspaper articles, stories, and letters to
understand the significance of the Pony Express.
Procedures:
3. Discuss the appeal the advertisement and poster had to the public. 4. Divide students into groups of four and assign each group one topic listed below. Distribute copies of all primary documents to each group for analyzation and ask students to prepare presentations for Day Two that address their topic’s questions. Topics Topic C: The Horse Topic D: The Station: Topic E: The Route Topic F: Termination of the Pony Express Day Two: Closure/Discussion: Application: Students will make a timeline showing the progression of technology for communication from the days of the Pony Express to the present. They will write a paragraph explaining the advantages of the most modern forms of communication.
Adams, Samuel Hopkins. The Pony Express. Chicago: Spencer Press, Inc., 1950. Bailey, W.F. “The Pony Express.” Golden West: True Stories
of the Old West. Banning, Captain William, and George Hugh Banning. Six Horses. New York: Century Company, 1930. Barrett, Ivan J. Eph Hanks -- Fearless Mormon Scout. American Fork, UT: Covenant Communications, Inc., 1990. Beck, Warren A, and Ynez D. Haase. Historical Atlas of the American West. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 1992. Benson, Joe. Traveller’s Guide to the Pony Express Trail. Falcon Press, 1995. Biggs, Donald. “The Pony Express: Creation of a Legend.” San Francisco: privately printed document, 1956. Bloss, Roy S. Pony Express: The Great Gamble. Berkeley: Howell-North, 1959. Corbet, Christopher. Orphans Preferred: The Twisted Truth and Lasting Legend of the Pony Express. New York: Broadway Books, 2003. Di Certo, Joseph. The Saga of the Pony Express. Missoula, MT: Mountain Press Publishing Company, 2002. Settle, Raymond W., and Mary Lund Settle. The Story of the Pony
Express. London: W. Foulsham & Co. Ltd., 1955.
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