Early-Day Transportation in West Texas!

Original Vintage Card
  
Sale Price: $4.95
Original Price: $5.95

Stock #:212031
Type: Postcard
Era: Linen
State: Texas (TX)
Publisher: Curt Teich & Co.
Size: 3.5" x 5.5" (9 x 14 cm)
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Additional Details:
Oxen-drawn covered wagon, typical of hundreds used to cross dangerous Indian country and buffalo prairies to settle virgin ranges of West Texas. Note bull-wacker with guide rope and long whip. West Texas four-horse stage-coach, driver and guard. Frequent relays of horses made possible surprising speed over rough, highwaymen-infested trails. Passengers arrived dusty, bruised and weary. Pony express rider--actually a thin paper, fast-message courier who raced at break-neck speed against time. Rider-stations were about 80 miles apart with two pony-change points en route. Buffalo Bill once made a two-station run and return, 320 miles, in 21 2/3 hours, exhausting 12 ponies. Equal to Maine, N. Y., and Penna. in area, the 1890 population of the 95 counties of West Texas multiplied ten times to 981,351 by 1930 and 1,019,525 by 1940--America's last frontier and land of the modern pioneer!

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