Stuff You Should Know - How the Pony Express Worked
Episode Date: July 31, 2018For as long a shadow as it casts across the history of the Old West, the Pony Express was a failed business venture, doomed from the start, that only lasted 18 months. But since the last rider headed ...out with his bag of mail, its legend has only grown. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place
because I'm here to help.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, ya everybody, about my new podcast
and make sure to listen so we'll never, ever have to say.
Bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know
from HowStuffWorks.com.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark.
There's Charles W. Chuck Bryant.
There's Jerry over there.
And we're bringing you all the news, Fast as Lightning,
in this episode on Pony Express.
Hey, you resurrected the Don't Be Dumb Josh for a moment.
Then you're also standing on your head in your chair.
This is like the end of Primal Fear Man,
the Don't Be Dumb Josh never went away.
There's nothing but the Don't Be Dumb Josh.
Whoa.
Mm-hmm.
I hope I didn't ruin that for anybody just now.
Yeah.
I probably did, but come on, that was the 80s.
Yeah, there was a bit of a discussion
about on the Movie Crush Facebook page
about me spoiling things that are old movies.
Like Jaws, like the shark dies?
Like a bunch of people came to my defense.
They were like, you know, there's a limit on spoilers.
Like, if you're talking about a 10-year-old
and older movie, like come on.
Who was it that chose Jaws?
Was it Roman Mars?
Yeah, Roman Mars.
He's got great taste, man.
I watched that movie twice in the last two weeks.
It's so good.
The first time it was on mute
and I was still like engrossed by it.
Then I recently watched it from like start to finish
for the first time in, well over a decade.
And I was like, oh my God, this movie is good.
It is basically perfect, yep, everything about it.
It's just enjoyable, it's beautifully shot.
The characters are great.
It's just wonderful.
Here's to swimming with bow-legged women.
Oh yeah.
Man, he's quite a character.
Robert Shaw is so good in that movie.
And Dreyfus, man.
Yeah.
All of them, it's just so great.
Yeah, even Roy Scheider.
Yeah, my favorite moment in that whole movie, I think.
Well, gosh, there's so many, but.
Don't spoil it.
It's when that real moment,
like Spielberg peppers in these moments,
it just makes it such a richer film.
Like when he's sitting there with his kid
before Dreyfus comes over for dinner that night.
And he just has that moment with his son.
We're asking for a kiss.
And it's just leaving in just little tidbits like that,
make the movie so much more rich.
Yeah. Love it.
That's our Spielberg.
I have a question for you.
Has there ever been more attention paid
to a utter failure of a business
that was only open for about 19 months
than the Pony Express?
Trying to think.
Trying to think.
It's really remarkable.
Yeah, it's like the new coke of mail service.
Cause when you said this topic, I was like,
oh hot diggity dog, this is gonna be great.
And it's an interesting story, but it's like,
wow, the Pony Express was a big fat failure.
Yeah, really?
So one of the articles we're working from
is called the Pony Express colon writers of destiny.
In parentheses, couldn't resist that.
Christopher Corbett.
Christopher Corbett.
And he basically makes the case
that the most interesting thing about the Pony Express
is the fact that we remember it at all.
Yeah.
That that's the real story behind it
because you're absolutely right.
That's a lot of his articles for sure.
It was a big stinking failure business wise.
It was a success as an actual mail service,
but as a business, it was terrible.
The timing was terrible.
The whole structure of it was just a bad idea.
It was just dumb.
But it was, as far as a service goes,
if you're looking at the very definition
of the word service,
it was invaluable for a lot of people.
Yeah, so just to set the table real quick,
if you don't know what we're talking about,
the Pony Express was a delivery, a mail delivery system
when the transcontinental,
well, I guess pre-transcontinental telegram
when it only went, how far east did that go at the time?
St. Joe, Missouri.
Okay, St. Joe, Missouri, and then it went west
as far as...
Sacramento.
Sacramento.
And the idea was to join those two lines.
So you would have a true transcontinental telegram
telegraph service.
Mm-hmm.
But before that happened,
there were three entrepreneurs who said,
we can close this gap because it takes weeks or months
to get mail from east to west these days.
And we can do that.
We wanna be able to do that in like a week to 10 days.
Yeah, which was enormously ambitious
because if you sent mail overland, right,
from between Missouri and California,
maybe 25 days was a good thing to expect
for the mail to get there, right?
Yes, Missouri.
And that's one way, okay?
Yeah.
If you wanted to send it by ship months,
couple months before the person ever got the mail.
Yeah, because you gotta dig a river
for Missouri to Sacramento.
You gotta flood it and then you gotta run the ship
down that channel.
And then when you get to the other side,
you have to drain it and fill it back in
and start over the next time.
It was a terrible idea.
There was this back when America was full
of just complete idiots.
But nowadays we know what we're doing.
We've got the internet and Twitter and all that stuff,
right?
Mm-hmm.
So there was this idea where if you were in California,
which by this time was a state
and the reason California was a state
before so much of the other parts of the country
is because of the Gold Rush of 1849
brought a lot of people out west
and they started to build and create these cities
and California was a state.
So you had Americans living in a state
that was geographically isolated
from the rest of the country.
So they wanted news.
They wanted newspapers.
They wanted news of America back east.
They wanted all this stuff.
And again, the telegraph lines weren't connected.
So they set up this mail service to run in between them.
Fast as lightning.
And fast as lightning was about 10 days, like you said.
And the whole route from St. Joseph's, Missouri
to Sacramento took them about 1800 miles.
Yeah.
Which is a really long way.
But the way that they did it, Chuck,
in just 10 days was through a stroke of genius.
Is that where I come in?
I just sit you up.
Yeah, they had about,
and they don't have great records
and we'll get into that.
But as far as we can tell,
and there's a boy,
there's a lot of misinformation out there
from over the years.
And legend and lore and tall tales.
But they had about 80 horseback riders,
young, wiry young men,
who they compared to like a modern day jockey.
These were little guys.
Yeah.
And by all accounts,
they could haul butt on horses though.
They had about 80 of these dudes
and they had about four or 500 horses.
And several dozen, what they called way stations,
or these stations in between,
where you would ride, ride, ride, ride to a station,
either switch riders or switch horses or both.
And get a fresh horse,
or if you were worn out,
you would hand the mail off
and we'll get to how that worked as well.
And then they would go,
and it was just a point to point thing
where you would just move this mail as fast as,
you could ride a horse basically.
Yep.
And so the horses would last for 10 to 15 miles
depending on how rough the terrain was
in between way stations.
And then at the next way station,
the rider would jump from one horse to another horse
with this mail bag called a mochila,
which could hold about 20 pounds of mail
and would ride on to the next way station
and switch horses again.
And so the horses would go 10 to 15 miles
and the riders would go about 75 miles
from what I've seen.
Yeah.
And this whole operation was from a business
called the Central Overland, California,
and Pikes Peak Express Company
that was run by three gentlemen,
Russell's Majors in Waddell,
William Hepburn Russell, Alexander Majors,
and William Bradford Waddell,
who had already been in the freight hauling business
for military outposts,
which you think would be a great money-making venture,
but apparently when they started the Pony Express,
all accounts say that their business
probably wasn't doing very well
when they even started.
Right, so they said, well, let's see,
what is a money pit we can sink our remaining money into?
What makes no sense financially?
They said, oh, the Pony Express.
Yeah, because you said,
I mean, there's a lot of reasons why it failed,
which we'll get to,
but you said that they held up to 20 pounds of mail
in these saddlebags.
Yeah.
Again, by all accounts,
they rarely had that much mail.
Sometimes they would have eight or 10 letters,
and that's just not, you know,
if you're in the shipping business,
you're not maximizing your load.
No, I did some, a little bit of math.
It wasn't hard, but I'm still proud of it.
Okay.
So they charged $5 per half gram.
Yeah, at first.
And so the Mochilla could hold 20 pounds.
So 20 pounds times 32 is $640,
or times $5, is $640.
And in today's money, that's about $16,640.
That's not bad.
It's not too bad,
but apparently it was way more to maintain this line
than that.
And like you said,
plenty of these things only had a couple dozen letters
in them at any given time.
And the people who would use the Pony Express
would write these letters on tissue paper
to cut down on costs
because, you know, they charged by the half gram.
Yeah, and it was generally not just regular American people,
like apparently it was mostly like government and military.
And, you know, you couldn't,
just generally people couldn't afford
to send a letter by Pony Express.
Right, right.
So newspapers would send cables to other newspapers,
or yeah, like you said, government.
Although the government never officially granted a contract
to the central overland,
they would use them,
but there was no official contract.
And I get the impression
that had they ever landed a government contract,
they might have actually made money,
although I don't think it would ultimately
kept them from their fate.
But the fact that they didn't have a wide customer base,
they didn't have a government contract.
And then this was just such an expensive venture,
and they couldn't possibly make their money back from it.
It was, I don't know if we've gotten the point
across yet or not.
This is a terrible business venture.
Yeah, and what made matters worse?
I mean, they were likely doomed.
Maybe we should hold off the final nail
in the coffin till later.
Okay.
Even though it's pretty obvious
if you're paying attention.
But one thing that hurt him along the way for sure
was the Pyramid Lake War.
Yeah.
Or the Paiute War.
Yeah, I even looked it up.
That's what Emma Sayings says it was.
That was in Nevada and Utah, mainly.
And that was a war that took a great toll
on especially these way stations.
And if you were a way station dude,
you fared much worse than pony express riders
as far as activity and attack from Native Americans.
Because you were a sitting duck basically
in a station that seems to be no more
than just like four walls and a dirt floor
and maybe a horse corral and a thing to put water in.
Yeah, on the open prairie.
Yeah, you're sitting out there.
Yeah, and during the Pyramid Lake War,
hostilities between the Paiute and Shoshonees
who'd banded together with the Pyramid Lake tribe.
Those three groups rose up together
against these settlers, the Euro-American settlers
who've been coming out there
and just basically encroaching on their land.
The thing that the straw that broke the camel's back
was a pair of brothers, Euro-American brothers
kidnapped a couple of Paiute, I think 12 year old girls
and raped them and kept them hidden
at one of these little towns,
these little frontier towns.
And the Paiute Indians got wind of this
and went and found them,
killed a couple of the people, burned the town down
and then started going from town to town,
but also way station to way station.
Just like massacring people there,
burning down way stations,
just basically like torching all these places, right?
And at first the cavalry was called in
and grossly underestimated what the Paiute and Shoshone
and Pyramid group was capable of
and just got whooped basically.
And then the further reinforcements that got called in
were basically able to bring it to a standoff,
but this whole thing just raised tensions
from simmering below the surface
to an outright what you would call a war
between these tribes and the Americans
who were pressing into their land.
So from that moment on,
it got way more difficult and scarier
to be a Pony Express rider.
And as per Pony Express history,
this happened like 10 weeks
after the first rider disembarked.
Yeah, so they, I mean, not only did it cost them men,
but it cost them about 75 grand
and this is an $1860.
It's like two something million today.
Yeah, I mean, that was a huge loss.
So they started, they ramped up their operation
to try and make up for that.
And all of a sudden they were delivering twice a week
instead of once a week.
And they eventually tried to lower their prices too,
but it just, none of it worked.
And financially it was a mess.
Like I said earlier,
they didn't really keep a lot of records.
They either didn't keep them
or they may have destroyed them.
That's what I think.
To avoid creditors.
Cause these guys were not the greatest,
well, I don't know if they weren't the greatest businessmen,
but they surely didn't fare well in this case.
Well, one of them was supposedly an outright comm man, Russell.
Oh yeah?
Yeah, he was supposedly,
he was the spokesperson for this business venture.
And he was good at that,
but he was not a great standup guy
as far as business is concerned.
So the image that you get in your head of Pony Express
are these guys riding full bore on these horses,
being chased by Native Americans and Desperados.
And apparently all the, you know,
many of the books over the years,
even ones that sound super official.
A lot of times we're just made up stories.
And we'll talk a little bit about
who finally got in touch with a lot of these writers.
But apparently when they were officially on record,
they didn't talk a lot about fighting
the Native Americans or anyone.
They talked about the weather stinking,
about being ripped off and not being paid.
Sort of like normal business complaints.
And it wasn't like the thing that you see
at the Wells Fargo Bank.
Like, yeah, we rode horses fast, but it kind of sucked.
Right.
But the thing is, is like this was a legend
in its own time is how I've seen it put.
We'll talk about that after a break.
How about that?
Yeah, let's do it.
Okay.
Ba da da da da da da da
Stuff you should know.
On the podcast,
Hey Dude, the 90s called David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews,
co-stars, friends, and non-stop references
to the best decade ever.
Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting Frosted Tips?
Was that a cereal?
No, it was hair.
Do you remember AOL Instant Messenger
and the dial-up sound like poltergeist?
So leave a code on your best friend's beeper,
because you'll want to be there
when the nostalgia starts flowing.
Each episode will rival the feeling
of taking out the cartridge from your Game Boy,
blowing on it and popping it back in
as we take you back to the 90s.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to
when questions arise or times get tough,
or you're at the end of the road.
Ah, okay, I see what you're doing.
Do you ever think to yourself,
what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place
because I'm here to help.
This, I promise you.
Oh, God.
Seriously, I swear.
And you won't have to send an SOS
because I'll be there for you.
Oh, man.
And so will my husband, Michael.
Um, hey, that's me.
Yep, we know that, Michael.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life, step by step.
Oh, not another one.
Kids, relationships, life in general can get messy.
You may be thinking, this is the story of my life.
Just stop now.
If so, tell everybody, yeah, everybody,
about my new podcast and make sure to listen
so we'll never, ever have to say bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
["Pomp and Circumstance"]
So Chuck, we said that like the Pony Express
was a legend in some time, and that is absolutely true.
Like, there was, again, in part of William Russell's
Superior Spokesperson ship, I think is a word.
They, like, newspapers wrote about it.
In Sacramento, they called it,
they're our friend, the Pony.
Yeah.
I think they weren't referring to drugs.
I think they were talking about the Pony Express.
Yeah.
But, like, people love the Pony Express.
It was just hugely innovative.
And the idea that, like, these guys were out there
riding as fast as they can for scores of miles
with bandits on their tails just to bring us the mail,
people fell in love with this thing.
Even though, at the end of the day,
the thing lasted, like, 18 months.
Like, the Pony Express, it was a huge legend
that we think of.
It was an 18-month business venture
that ultimately failed, right?
Yeah.
But it was a legend.
And one of the reasons it was a legend
is because there were a, I mean,
there were real deal exploits going on on the trail.
There were some riders who were just amazing.
Like, one guy was called, what was Pony Bob's last name?
Haslam.
Yeah.
Right?
Pony Bob Haslam.
He was one of the riders for the Pony Express
who, ironically, wasn't as legendary as he should have been
because he was the actual real deal,
but he ended up being forgotten
because I get the impression he wasn't
much of a self-promoter.
Yeah, he made a legendary documented journey
of 380 miles without relief at one point
where he basically rode to, rode and rode and rode,
went to his station to switch riders.
And the guy there was like, well, I'm not going.
Like, there's Indians out there trying to kill me.
And so he was like, all right, I'm gonna keep going.
And he kept going and delivered the mail
and eventually made his way back
and ended up being a 380-mile round trip.
And he's, like I said, there's not a lot of great documentation,
but even though he's been lost to history,
he was very well documented as an expert rider.
Yeah, he definitely was.
There was another one called Billy Fisher
who had a pretty interesting claim to fame.
He was out riding on the trail
and it was during a snowstorm.
So this is another thing too.
You said that the riders complained about things
like the terrible weather.
Sure.
They were carrying mail from, let's see, Missouri
to Kansas, Nebraska, Wyoming, Utah, Nevada, California.
That's some tough weather.
Especially say like in January,
you're gonna run into some terrible snowstorms, right?
And Billy Fisher found himself in one of these snowstorms
and he just dismounted.
He's like, I just gotta go over here
and go to sleep for a little while in a blizzard.
And he started to fall asleep
and he woke up to something licking his face.
And it was a jackrabbit who had basically licked
his face till he woke up.
I didn't know they licked.
I think this may have been his spirit animal actually.
And the rabbit like startled Billy Fisher
and Billy Fisher startled the rabbit
and the rabbit ran off, but it woke Billy Fisher up.
And he said, if that rabbit hadn't licked my face
and woke me up, I never would have woken up.
I would have just frozen to death out there in this blizzard.
But he was woken up enough and realized the gravity
of the situation enough that he got back on his horse
and kept rioting to safety.
Sounds like legend.
Yeah, and to top it off, his great-great-grandson
is William Fisher, who was one of the US astronauts
who flew the space shuttle.
How about that?
So legend.
And these stories are like going around
and like being circulated in newspapers and among people
while the Pony Express is going on.
Yeah, I mean, there were some very bad, not exploitive,
sensationalist books written over the years.
And then there was also a couple of real legitimate dudes,
Captain Sir Richard Burton, the famous British explorer
and one Samuel Clemens, 25-year-old future Mark Twain.
They both individually kind of spent some time
out there documenting the Pony Express.
And it seems like Burton didn't have a good time out there.
He didn't like the West.
No, he didn't.
He always complained about the flies and the fleas
and just the filth and just the people.
He just was not a fan.
But he still gave a fairly accurate account
of like the day-to-day of a Pony Express rider.
Clemens, Mr. Future Mark Twain, seemed to have a good time.
And in his true fashion wrote some of the,
some really flowery eyewitness testimony
about seeing these horsemen coming across the tundra
and the planes, it's pretty cool.
You're gonna read that?
No, it's too long.
Okay.
Well, everybody go read that.
It's in Roughing It, which is his book
about traveling the US and he surfs in it.
Did you know that?
I didn't.
He goes to Hawaii and tries surfing
when they used to surf on like 10-foot-long wooden boards.
That's just your head clean off.
Go read that quote in your best Hal Holbrook impression.
That's nice.
Really?
Good way to do it.
I'm more a Val Kilmer Mark Twain guy.
Oh my God, that's right.
I forgot he did that.
Everyone did, Chuck.
Man.
So you had Mark Twain and Captain Sir Richard Burton
providing like contemporary accounts.
But that's like, that is virtually it, right?
There were, again, this is a failed business venture.
Let's go ahead and tell them what happened,
why it was a failed business venture, Chuck.
Why it ultimately died?
Well, they finally hooked up the tooth.
They finally closed that gap on the telegraph.
They're like, well, we can go coast to coast now.
So you're sort of immediately,
literally immediately out of business.
Yeah, the first-
Like two days later, they closed.
The first rider headed out on April 3rd, 1860.
And it was October 26th of 1861
where the last one headed out from St. Joe's.
And some people will say, well,
it didn't actually stop in October.
It was actually November
because those Mochillas didn't end up
in Sacramento until November.
That's fine, whatever.
It was like 18 months, 70-something weeks of operation.
And people loved it at the time,
but as with most things,
once the new, better, greater thing came along the telegram,
they forgot about it pretty quick.
And we really honestly would not have any recollection
of the Pony Express.
It would be a footnote to a footnote in history
if it weren't for one guy named Buffalo Bill Cody,
who actually is the reason why
we all remember the Pony Express.
He had a soft spot in his heart
for not just the Pony Express itself,
but one of the founders,
I think it was Alexander Majors, right?
Yeah, I think so.
Who he gave him a job when he was a kid.
Gave him a job when he was a kid.
And while Bill would go on,
or Buffalo Bill would go on to say,
well, I was actually a Pony Express writer,
all historical evidence suggests
that that is not actually the case,
but he definitely did work for Alexander Majors
who was one of the owners of the Pony Express.
As a horseback messenger,
just not a Pony Express writer,
which if you're talking about Pony Express legend,
that's a major distinction.
Yeah, and Buffalo Bill would also go on to say,
she's a great big fat girl.
Sorry.
Is he called Buffalo Bill?
Yeah.
Okay.
I always, for some reason,
I thought it was like a playoff of Buffalo Bill,
like Buffalo Bob or something like that.
No, it was Buffalo Bill because he skinned his victims.
I remember.
Should we take a break?
Geez, okay, sure.
All right, let's take a break
and we'll talk a little bit more
about Buffalo Bill right after this.
Ba da da da da da da da
Stop you shoulda known.
On the podcast,
Hey Dude, the 90s called
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews, co-stars,
friends and non-stop references to the best decade ever.
Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting frosted tips?
Was that a cereal?
No, it was hair.
Do you remember AOL instant messenger
and the dial-up sound like poltergeist?
So leave a code on your best friend's beeper
because you'll want to be there
when the nostalgia starts flowing.
Each episode will rival the feeling
of taking out the cartridge from your Game Boy,
blowing on it and popping it back in
as we take you back to the 90s.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to
when questions arise or times get tough
or you're at the end of the road.
Ah, okay, I see what you're doing.
Do you ever think to yourself,
what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place
because I'm here to help.
This, I promise you.
Oh, God.
Seriously, I swear.
And you won't have to send an SOS
because I'll be there for you.
Oh, man.
And so will my husband, Michael.
Um, hey, that's me.
Yep, we know that, Michael.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life, step by step.
Oh, not another one.
Kids, relationships, life in general can get messy.
You may be thinking, this is the story of my life.
Just stop now.
If so, tell everybody, yeah, everybody
about my new podcast and make sure to listen
so we'll never, ever have to say bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
All right, so Buffalo Bill's Wild West,
I want to always want to say Wild West extravaganza.
You can call it that.
But it was really Buffalo Bill's Wild West.
That was a name of his big show
that he took all over the country,
delighting people with sharpshooting
and horseback riding and all sorts of cool stuff,
enchanting America with the Old West.
Not just America, the world.
Well, yeah, and that's a solid point.
I mean, he went all over Europe
and that's why, and this article points out,
that's why to this day, you can go to like
a Pony Express themed club in Germany
because back then he performed in front of Queen Victoria
and Kaiser Wilhelm and the Pope in Rome.
And basically kind of, he always seemed to have
at least one reported or purported
Pony Express rider in the show.
It was like one of the main segments of his show.
Yeah, so at one point he did have, who was the good rider?
Bronco Charlie Miller?
No, no, no, well he had him.
Oh, Pony Bob Haslam.
Yeah, Pony Bob worked for him for a little while
and he is a definite legit rider.
The other guy, what's his name, Bronco Billy?
Bronco Charlie Miller.
Oh no, that was Clint Eastwood.
Bronco Charlie Miller claimed to have been
a Pony Express rider.
A lot of men claimed to have been
over the years that were not.
And they traced his timeline back
and he would have been 10 or 11,
which is really stretching it.
Like it's possible.
It is.
It's possible because they did go as low as like 13 and 14
but it was never super confirmed
that this guy actually rode for the Pony Express
but it kind of doesn't matter
because apparently everyone loved him.
Yeah, and so the reason why it's stretching it
but still in the realm of possibility
is because so like when William Russell
would talk about the Pony Express and his company
he would say like these men have to take an oath
not to drink or fight.
Which still happened of course.
Yeah, we have like 80 people in the saddle
and in reality, yeah, they were all drunk around
like at all the way stations and on the trail.
And the impression is that if you needed a rider
and there was somebody who said, I'll go,
you were a Pony Express rider right then.
So the idea that an 11 year old kid said, I'll go
and they said, all right, fine, go.
That could have possibly happened.
So it's possible Bronco Charlie Miller did ride
but like you said, he was just such a great
like old West archetype.
He's like a relic, yeah.
They were like, whatever, we'll believe anything you say.
Yeah, so through the years, like we said,
a lot of bad information, a lot of legend,
everything from movies like in 1953,
a Paramount film called the Pony Express.
Charlton Heston is Buffalo Bill.
In the movie, Buffalo Bill teams up with Wild Bill Hickock
to start the Pony Express.
And as this author said, there is not a shard of fact
in the entire film.
I don't know if he meant shred.
Shard, shard.
All right, he could have said shred though.
It works.
And then this, if you read this, it sounds super cool.
Like a notice in the St. Louis and San Francisco newspaper
that said, wanted young skinny,
wiry fellows, not over 18, must be expert riders
willing to risk death daily.
Orphans preferred, wages $25 per week.
And that seems like, man, what a great job listing
for the Pony Express.
Orphans preferred.
That was written in the 20th century by a journalist
in the Sunset Magazine.
So that probably wasn't even true.
No, no, that's so like, again, there was, it was forgotten.
Like I think Alexander Majors wrote his memoirs.
Remember, he was one of the three guys
who owned the Pony Express.
He wrote his memoirs like 30, 40 years
after the Pony Express's last ride.
So, and by this time, most people had forgotten it.
And again, it was Buffalo Bill, who came along,
actually paid a visit to Alexander Majors
and found him in a fairly sorry state.
He was very broke.
He was in poor health and said,
you gave me my first job when I was 11,
after my father died.
And I want to repay you by taking care of you.
So he put him in a show,
he let him stay at his old Scouts Ranch in Nebraska,
just basically took care of him.
But he also was like, we've got to publish this book.
So he got Rand McNally to actually publish this book
about his life as a freight,
old West freight legend guy, including the Pony Express.
And that was some of the earliest documentation about it,
but it also kicked off like this history
of terrible documentation,
of just surrounding the whole thing
with tall tales and embellishments.
And it just very quickly became,
it's very tough to root fact from fiction, even today,
even at some of these places that are like,
this is actually, this museum is a Pony Express way station.
Yeah.
It may not be the case.
They're not entirely certain
what the trail was any longer.
They think that there's some pristine segments
that aren't covered over by tracks of some sort,
that they're actually like,
this is the course that the Pony Express took,
but they're not 100% sure.
It just got lost in time.
Yeah, I don't even think we mentioned that Buffalo Bill,
that job he got was as a horseback delivery rider
for the initial freight company,
but he never rode for the Pony Express,
though he, did he outright claim to
or just kind of let people listen to that?
No, in the notes for the Buffalo Bill's Wild West show,
it talked about how he was,
and then it would say you should buy his autobiography.
It shows even more.
And then they would talk in depth
about how he rode for the Pony Express for sure.
If you were from the old West at this time,
you were basically expected to just lie constantly
about some of the things you've done.
And same, not just with Buffalo Bill,
Wild Bill Hickok said the same thing.
He said he worked for the Pony Express too,
and he did, but he was one of those guys
who ran a way station and tended to the horses.
Lame.
Well, he was bigger and older, so he couldn't ride.
You know, it wasn't his fault.
He's a victim of circumstances.
Yeah, there were also a bunch of,
there was a series of last living Pony Express riders
throughout the years.
Various newspapers, even sometimes multiple times
in the same newspaper over the years,
would print articles claiming
that the last Pony Express rider has just died.
So we don't know if any of them were or not,
or if they were the last or not.
And it finally took a woman named a poet,
apparently not a very good one,
named Mabel Loving, who said,
why don't, you know,
why doesn't someone actually write letters
and get in touch with some of these people
and get the true dirt?
And she did that.
She apparently wrote letters and had some correspondence
with the surviving Pony Express riders as an amateur poet,
and said this is right before World War I.
And apparently that is some of the only
like real documentation we have from some of the real riders
that she eventually published in something called
the Pony Express Rides On exclamation point,
which apparently can still buy if you have a lot of money.
Yeah.
It's like a collectible, I'm sure.
Yeah, I think.
And supposedly the printers lost a couple of the chapters.
So like even if you buy a copy,
it's not in its intact form
because nobody took it very seriously, I think.
Probably because of the exclamation point.
It's never a good idea.
No.
You got anything else?
Well, I mean, I guess the post script is
after this telegraph, like I said,
two days after it was hooked up,
they realized that they were done for
because they were already in bad financial straits.
So Waddell went home to Missouri.
He was broke and in debt.
He sold his home to his son for a dollar and still live there.
And apparently he died in April of 1872, never worked again.
Russell, who was only 48, went to New York.
Failed as a stockbroker.
Apparently no one trusted him.
He filed for bankruptcy in 1865.
And this was what, just five years after it shut down.
Sold off his assets to pay his creditors.
Went back to Missouri finally
because of poor health and died in 1872.
And then majors lived the longest.
And we know his story.
Like you said, Buffalo Bill helped him publish his book.
Right.
And if Bronco Charlie Miller really was
a Pony Express writer,
he definitely by far was the last one to die.
He died at 105 in 1955.
And years before that, at age 82,
he rode from New York to California on horseback
to bring attention back to the Pony Express
and the glory of it.
Wow.
Pony Express.
So final facts, they ended up losing about 200 grand
in that day's money, which is millions of dollars now.
Right.
The personal best delivery time,
apparently was when they carried
Abraham Lincoln's inaugural address.
They got it to California in seven days, 17 hours.
Not bad.
And in the end, they delivered about 35,000 pieces of mail
over that 18 or 19 months.
And I think it wasn't only one mail shipment,
didn't only one fail to make it.
That's what I understand, yeah.
It's pretty good track record for a failed business.
It's not bad at all.
They all, they wrote a combined half a million miles
in that time.
Pretty great.
And again, that's the Pony Express,
totally different than what you thought about, huh?
But also sort of the same.
I just didn't know that it was such a flop.
Gotcha.
Just bad timing.
Terrible timing, man.
Well, if you want to know more about the Pony Express,
well, get on out there on the trail,
you varmint and check it out yourself.
And since I said varmint, it's time for listener mail.
Oh, no, it's not.
Oh boy.
It's time for...
Administrative detail.
All right.
Okay, for the uninitiated, this is where Josh and I
and Jerry, by way of our voices, thank you
for the nice things that you have sent us in the mail.
Thank you.
Gifts, tokens, crafts, books, postcards, letters.
Yep.
By the way, I didn't log all the postcards and letters.
That can be tough.
It can be tough.
How about a blanket, thank you to everyone
who sent us postcards and letters.
Agreed.
Thank you.
All right, Dan Kent, thank you big time
for sending us Pliny the Elder beer and t-shirts.
Yes, thanks to the Bar Fight Supply Company
for all the awesome leather goods,
including the moleskin holder, which I use a lot.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
The business card holders, all that jam.
Thank you very much, guys.
Kelly Somsky of Two Little Ells, she sent us a,
or sent me a painted rock in memory of the wizard
my cat who passed.
That is very sweet.
That was very sweet and very sad to get,
but in a good way.
Yeah.
Bittersweet.
Chris Walzak sent us beer from Hamburg, New York
and IPA, thank you, Chris.
Mandy Kruger, you sent me a ween t-shirt
that I wear all the time,
including on stage in Atlanta.
I saw it myself.
Yep.
Anodyne Coffee, they sent us some coffee from Milwaukee.
Thanks, Anodyne.
Jeremiah and Mason Brandrick, oh, I remember this.
They sent us the F5 IPA, which is a beer I had
when I spent some time in Tulsa.
So it's, I think it's Tulsa beer.
And some beer in Stein, bear shirts.
Right.
Soaked in cologne.
It seemingly soaked in cologne.
They're like here.
Huh?
You look like you smell.
We're gonna make you pretty.
It was interesting.
Julie sent us handmade personalized Christmas ornaments,
which it's been a while since we did this.
Sure.
For Jerry, Yumi, Emily and the kids.
Yeah, yeah.
Very nice, those are great, actually.
Yeah.
That was on my tree.
Kaylee Hamar sent my dog, Nico, some pet treats.
Nice.
Pet treater.
Very nice.
Lindsay Lundstrom sent us some wonderful bottle key cap
or bottle cap key chains.
Oh, those are awesome.
Yeah, there was a SYSK one, a Don't Be Dumb one,
Last Chance Garage, Mamas, Jerry, Red Dragon.
And she's out of Etsy and Facebook, Red Dragon Handcrafts.
Check them out, you're gonna love them.
Yeah, it's good stuff.
Becca sent me a library copy of a book,
my children's book that I was so fond of as a kid,
The Great Christmas Kidnapping Caper.
I'm really excited to read this to my daughter, Becca.
So thank you so much for sending that.
Kelly Butler Olson sent Murder by Death,
a copy of Murder by Death,
arguably one of the greatest spoof movies of all time,
one of my favorites.
So thank you, Kelly.
KBO, Taylor Stonehawker sent a lovely Christmas card
and handmade caramels, which were delish.
And Nick Stiglich sent us some Stroopwafels,
those amazing things that you put over your coffee
to heat up.
Yeah, we've got more than one Stroopwafel,
so if you also sent Stroopwafels, many thanks.
And just send them again.
Nathan Furlazo, he's actually Australian,
he's an artist and he sent us,
oh, these are great, a variety of bookmarks,
magnets, coloring books, all that are animals
with their bodies made of flowers and plants.
Yeah, it's amazing.
It's really nice, so you should check this out.
It's online at mariniferlazo.au, M-A-R-I-N-I-F-E-R-L-A-Z-Z-O.au
M-A-R-I-N-I-F-E-R-L-A-Z-Z-O.au.
And a portion of these sales go to Wildlife Conservation,
so gorgeous and well-funded.
Speaking of gorgeous, Aidan Dale sent us
metal sculpture orchids, and you can find them
at Aidan-A-I-D-E-N Dale-D-A-L-E dot com.
Thank you, Aidan.
Just a few more here, folks.
Elias Pagerco sent honey from their three colony apiary.
That's pretty great, thanks, Elias.
Elias, that was awesome.
Robin sent us beer and mead from Wisconsin,
and it was well-appreciated,
and didn't last very long, Robin.
Thank you.
We did not drink Wisconsin-bly.
Robin, that was great.
That's a T-shirt I didn't make it up.
Bonnie Bowden sent us Mulderamas guitars,
which I think got from Third Man Records in Nashville.
And I think she also sent the Willis Tower one,
which I was like, what the heck is the Willis Tower?
And I was like, oh, that's the Sears Tower.
Well, and we got actually more than one person
sent us Mulderamas.
Yeah, like Luke and David Shursko, father and son,
they sent us elephant Mulderamas from Warechuck.
Toledo Zoo.
Bam, which has probably the largest selection
of Mulderamas outside of the Chicagoland area.
That's right, you grew up right there in the Gorilla Cage.
That's right.
Nathan sent us his band CD, EP, Missouri Loves Company.
Or Missouri, or Missouri.
Missouri Loves Company.
Philip La Palme, great name,
sent Robert Shaw Jaws Christmas card to Chuck.
That's right.
And then finally, just a couple of weeks ago,
I got sent some guitar picks from Forever Pick.
And apparently these picks have better sustain
and better performance.
And I have not yet plucked with them,
but I can't wait to use my Forever Picks.
That is fantastic.
Do you have some more?
Yeah, we've got just a couple more, Chuck,
if you'll bear with me.
Take us home, brother.
Josh Jones sent us Catfish Head Vodka.
Oh, yeah.
Thanks a lot, Josh.
Doug sent us an amazing poster congratulating us
for a thousand episodes.
And Olaf and Millie, the shop dog,
sent us the amazing Railroad Spike Bottle Openers.
Remember those?
Oh, yeah.
You can go to churchmouseforge.com.
And dude, I wanna say, Ian Newton,
who founded the Baltimore Whiskey Company.
Ian has been sending us stuff like the Shot Tower Gents,
kind of like a malty gin that I love.
Oh, yeah.
Sent that bourbon that you love.
Just has been sending us some pretty great stuff.
So first of all, Ian, thank you.
Second of all, Ian, keep it coming.
And third, everybody else who's not Ian,
go check out Baltimore Whiskey Company's stuff,
the Baltimore Spirits Company.
They have just amazing booze that's locally made,
in Baltimore.
And you can tell it's like craft distilled stuff.
You're gonna love it.
Delish.
So thank you to everybody who sent us anything ever.
And if you sent us something in between
the last administrative details in this one,
and we didn't say your name,
first of all, we apologize.
Secondly, get in touch with us and let us know,
because we do wanna thank you.
And it's just an oversight.
We're not actually mad at you, okay?
Please do.
And I have even more.
I want to thank Doug Sashary.
I know how to pronounce the name now.
I don't know if you guys remember or not,
but I mispronounced Tony Cachery's seasoning,
Creole seasoning.
It turns out it's Tony Sashary's.
And Doug, let me know by sending me tons
of Tony Sashary's products, and they're awesome.
So thank you, Doug.
I also wanna thank another Doug,
Doug Dixon, the CEO of Jolt Cola,
who sent us some Jolt Cola care packages.
And then every once in a while,
people bring us stuff to our live shows.
So thank you to Ron from Dundee, Michigan,
for giving me the complete DVD set
of Thundar the Barbarian,
which I'd never seen all the way through
because of swimming lessons.
And a very nice person gave us gooey cakes
at the St. Louis show.
Our friend Dale from Australia
sent us a care package of Australian candy
to acclimate us to Australian candy
for our Australia tour.
And then John from Capistrano Beach,
who sent us a giant puzzle wheel
that I've yet to begin to even try to figure out.
So thank you, John, for this madness.
If you want to get in touch with us,
whether to send us something or just to say hi,
you can go on to our website,
StuffPodcast at HowStuffWorks.com.
Check out our T-shirt store at te-public-t-e-public.com
slash stuff you should know.
And you can just send us a good old-fashioned email
to StuffPodcast at HowStuffWorks.com.
["HowStuffWorks.com"]
For more on this and thousands of other topics,
visit HowStuffWorks.com.
["HowStuffWorks.com"]
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place
because I'm here to help.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, ya everybody,
about my new podcast and make sure to listen,
so we'll never, ever have to say bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.