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Butterfield Overland Mail

Butterfield Overland Mail (officially the Overland Mail Company)[1] was a stagecoach service in the United States operating from 1858 to 1861. It carried passengers and U.S. Mail from two eastern termini, Memphis, Tennessee, and St. Louis, Missouri, to San Francisco, California. The routes from each eastern terminus met at Fort Smith, Arkansas, and then continued through Indian Territory (Oklahoma), Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, Mexico, and California ending in San Francisco.[2] On March 3, 1857, Congress authorized the U.S. postmaster general, at that time Aaron V. Brown, to contract for delivery of the U.S. mail from St. Louis to San Francisco.[3] Prior to this, U.S. Mail bound for the Far West had been delivered by the San Antonio and San Diego Mail Line (Jackass Mail) since June 1857.[4]

Butterfield Overland Mail
IndustryPostal service
Headquarters
United States
"The Overland Mail Coach," illustration from Arizona, As It Is (1877)

The route was designated a national historic trail in 2023.[5]

Origins edit

John Butterfield: president of Overland Mail Company edit

 
Butterfield and signature

John Butterfield was a descendant of Benjamin Butterfield, who brought his family from England to the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1638. His father, Daniel Butterfield, lived at Berne, in the Helderberg, near Albany, N.Y., where John was born. He attended schools near his boyhood home, but his education was meager.[6]

John's early involvement with stage lines started about 1820.

"John Butterfield was borne at Berne, in the Helderberg, near Albany, November 18, 1801. In early life we find him in the employment of Thorpe & Sprague, of that city, as a driver, and through the solicitation of Mr. Theodore S. Faxton came to Utica [NY], where he for a time was employed in picking up passengers from the taverns and boats for Parker's stages. After a time he started a livery [1827] with but small accommodations…[7] His connection to Parker & Co. continued so long as they were still in business, and was succeeded by lines of his own, wherein he was a leading manager in the State until staging was superseded by railroads."[8]

After his employment with other stage lines, John decided to use this experience for running his own stage lines in Upstate New York.

"Mr. Butterfield devoted his attention largely to lines running North and South. At the height of stage coaching he had forty lines running from Utica as headquarters to Ogdensburg and Sacketts Harbor on the North, and South to the Pennsylvania line, and through Chemung and Susquehanna valleys."[9]

By 1857, when John was awarded the Overland Mail Company contract, he had had 37 years of experience working for and running stage lines. This was one of the reasons that Postmaster General A.V. Brown awarded him the contract.

Awarding the Overland Mail Company contract edit

Through the 1840s and 1850s there was a desire for better communication between the east and west coasts of the United States. There were several proposals for railroads connecting the two coasts.[10] A more immediate realization was an overland mail route across the west. Congress authorized the Postmaster General to contract for mail service from Missouri to California to facilitate settlement in the west.[11] The Post Office Department advertised for bids for an overland mail service on April 20, 1857. Bidders were to propose routes from the Mississippi River westward. Nine bids were made by some of the most experienced stage men.[12]

None of the express companies, such as American Express, Adams Express, or Wells Fargo & Co. Express, bid on the contract because, as of yet, they had no experience running stage lines. A suggestion by The New York Times that the express companies could do a better job than the Overland Mail Company drew a sharp rebuttal from a Washington, D.C., newspaper.[13]

Mail Contract No. 12,578 for $600,000 per annum for a semi-weekly service was assigned to John Butterfield of Utica, New York, who was president for the contract that was named the Overland Mail Company. This was the longest mail contract awarded in the United States. It was a stockholding company and the main stockholders, besides John Butterfield, were also fellow directors of the company: William B. Dinsmore of New York City; William G. Fargo of Buffalo, New York;[14][15][16] James V.P. Gardner of Utica, New York; Marquis L. Kenyon[17] of Rome, New York; Alexander Holland of New York City; and Hamilton Spencer of Bloomington, Illinois. There were four others known as sureties (security against loss).

Almost all of the stockholders were connected to other businesses in Upstate New York and most lived near Butterfield's home in Utica, New York. Alexander Holland was Butterfield's son-in-law and treasurer of the Overland Mail Company. Dinsmore was vice-president of the company. The office for the company was in New York City.

Why John Butterfield was chosen was stated by Postmaster General Aaron Brown:

... a route which no contractor had bid for, but one which in the judgement of A.V. Brown, of Memphis, had more advantages than any other, and, as John Butterfield & Co. had, in the opinion of Brown, greater ability, qualification and experience than anybody else to carry out a mail service, John Butterfield & Co. was selected and preferred.[18]

The route, known as the Oxbow Route because of its long curving route through the Southwest, was 600 miles (970 km) longer than the Central Overland Trail, but had the advantage of being snow free.

Route edit

 
The stage routes from a Butterfield Overland Mail Company map

The contract with the U.S. Post Office, which went into effect on September 16, 1858, identified the route and divided it into eastern and western divisions. Franklin, Texas, later to be named El Paso, was the dividing point and these two were subdivided into minor divisions, five in the East and four in the West. These minor divisions were numbered west to east from San Francisco, each under the direction of a superintendent.[19]

Kenyon and Butterfield Jr.: architects of the Butterfield Trail edit

John Butterfield Sr. turned to two of his most trusted and experienced employees to put in place the Butterfield Trail. In 1858, with expedition leader Marquis L. Kenyon, John Butterfield Jr. helped to select the route and sites for the stage stations. Kenyon was also a stockholder/director of the Overland Mail Company and the only stockholder, other than John Butterfield, to have significant staging experience. Marquis moved from Mannsville, Jefferson County, to Rome, New York, in 1838. Rome was twelve miles from John Butterfield's home in Utica. He immediately became involved with staging. His obituary gives a good summation of his staging activities in Upstate New York and what led him to be involved with the Overland Mail Company:

"His prior occupation was a humble one—that of driver of a stage-coach between Utica and Oswego. It was but two or three years before he had saved enough money from his wages to purchase an interest in the stage-coach line of which he was an employee; and once having placed his foot on the first steps of the ladder, he soon rose, by his business tact and assiduity, to be the principal proprietor of the stage-coach lines converging to this point. At the time that railroads supplanted stages on the leading routes, Mr. Kinyon [Kenyon] was one of the most extensive owners of stage-coach property in Central New York. After the introduction of railroads, he continued to carry on the business of mail contractor and stage proprietor on the small lateral lines; but his business energies were too expansive to be thus curtailed, and he soon found ampler vent for them than the _______ of his former vast carrying business afforded. Hence, when the overland mail route to California was projected, Mr. Kinyon [Kenyon] found a field of business enterprise more commensurate with his capacities. He it was who went over the whole route originally, and surveyed it from the eastern terminus to its western in California." Returning, he procured the necessary equipment for the route, and went over it again, organizing the route as he proceeded, and remained for nearly a year in California, in charge of the western terminus of the road."[20]

After winning the contract on September 16, 1857, Butterfield had one year to organize the trail and immediately sent his hand-picked team, headed by Marquis L. Kenyon, to San Francisco to begin the task. The steamer Star of New York left New York on November 20, 1857, with passengers "M.L. Kinyon [Kenyon], J. Butterfield [Jr.], F. De Ruyter and S.K. Nellis, who go out to open the Pacific Mail Route across the plains and arrange the western terminus of said route."[21] The party left San Francisco on January 16, 1858, to begin laying out the trail and selecting the sites for stage stations. They traveled by mule covering about 40 miles (64 km) per day. Another party left St. Louis about the same time. Both were to meet at El Paso, Texas, and then return to St. Louis. The party from St. Louis was G.W. Wood, Jesse Talcott, and Charles P. Cole. A Fort Smith, Arkansas, newspaper reported:

"The parties met at El Paso and after recruiting [used in the sense of recovering] a few days, the above gentlemen left for this city—making the trip to this place in twenty-two days from El Paso, and thirty-one days from San Francisco to El Paso, or fifty-six days, through with wagons. …The party from California, in crossing Arizona, took a middle route between Beale's and the Southern route – (but little traveled heretofore,) pronounced by them, as an excellent road."[22]

Another report describes the arrival of the two parties at Fort Smith, Arkansas, and tells us that the choice for the trail did not satisfy Kenyon and his party and they returned from El Paso, Texas, by a different route, which became the trail.

"A portion of the exploring party sent out by the Overland Mail Company, for the purpose of examining the routes for the carriage of the mails from the Valley of the Mississippi to the Pacific coast, which left this city on the 3rd of January last, reached Fort Smith, Arkansas, on their return home, on the 17th inst., accompanied by four of the party which left San Francisco on the 16th of January, on purpose to examine that portion of the route from the Pacific to the Rio Grande. They left El Paso on the 22d of March, thus accomplishing the distance from the Rio Grande to Fort Smith—nine hundred and thirty miles—in the short space of twenty-five days, which we believe is the quickest time on record in crossing the Plains. The party was composed of only eight men, as follows: Major George W. Wood, Jesse Tolcott, Charles P. Cole and J.A. Lilly, of the St. Louis party, and Lieut. Frank de Ryther, James Swartz and John Butterfield Jr. of the San Francisco party. They brought with them one wagon and thirteen animals, which they left at Fort Smith for the party proceeding East. The route traveled on the return trip was different from the one passed over in going out, ... "[23]

John Jr.'s obituary summarized his accomplishment:

"John Butterfield [Jr.], the man who helped link the East to the West in establishing his famous Overland Mail Route more than half a century ago, died recently at his house in Utica, aged 82 years. His father, John Butterfield, was a superintendent of the Overland Mail Route from San Francisco to St. Louis and thence to eastern cities. The younger Butterfield first traversed the famous route, marked the stations, superintended the work of organization and drove the first stage over the route.[24]

John Butterfield makes the Southern Overland Trail his own edit

The history of the Butterfield Trail and the Emigrant Trail are intertwined. It was the purpose of awarding the contract to the Overland Mail Company, on September 16, 1857, not only for a land route to deliver mail from the East to the West coast, but to aid emigrant travel to settle the West. Butterfield accomplished this purpose by providing an improved trail and water sources at regularly spaced stage stations. When researchers hike the Southern Overland Corridor, the most visible ruts are those of the route that the Overland Mail Company established, which others followed. Even though its services ceased on the Southern Overland Corridor in March 1861 because of the impending Civil War, it was so efficient that it remained little changed until its demise with the completion of the railroad in 1880. For this reason, to this day, the Southern Overland Trail is most commonly called "The Butterfield Trail."[25]

The building of the trail was in two sections: the 462-mile (744 km) San Francisco to Los Angeles section and the rest of the 2,238-mile (3,602 km) distance to Tipton, Missouri. The San Francisco to Los Angeles section was previously one of the most developed. Some changes were made from Los Angeles to San Francisco. Settlements and wagon roads used by local stage lines were strung out between San Francisco and Los Angeles. Some existing structures, such as ranch houses and hotels were contracted as stage stations. One of the most famous is Vallecito, which is preserved as a historic site. Kenyon's hardest task building the trail was east of Los Angeles, where his trail was mostly in the open desert.[26]

Sections shortened or improved edit

Waterman L. Ormsby, the correspondent for the New York Herald, a passenger on the first stagecoach going west in September 1858, wrote in his reports of Marquis L. Kenyon's part in building the trail and the advantage for emigrants. He writes about the many improvements on the Texas side of the Red River starting about eight miles below Preston.[27]

A lengthy new section of road in Texas is described:

"Another disadvantage under which we labored, this trip, was that our road, for the most of the way, was nearly new, though Mr. Bates claims that from Sherman to [Fort] Belknap at least forty miles are saved by it. It leads through the counties of Grayson, Cooke, Jacks [Jack], Montague, Wise, and Young, all of which contribute towards its expenses, and certainly it must be a favorite with some, for, though only opened one month before I passed over it, it was already pretty well marked with wagon tracks. …It must of course improve with every day of its use."[28]

Another Texas section:

"The new road from Grape Creek to the head of Concho River, Texas, on Mr. Glover's division, is also in good order for travel and saves another thirty miles [the total length for this new section is 122 miles]. The New Pass between Los Angeles, and Fort Tejon, California, has been much improved under the superintendence of M.L. Kinyon [Kenyon], as have also been other portions of the route. The route of the company will, of course, be a favorite emigrant route, and will, therefore, be in better order than before, in fact, each month will add new facilities to the overland mail."[29]

Goddard Bailey's report shows that there were 139 stations at the beginning of Butterfield's service,[30] but by the time the line ceased operations the line had been improved by the addition of thirty-six more for a total of 175. The new stations were assigned 320 acres each[31] and many took advantage by growing crops which aided the line.

Although there were springs and rain-fed waterholes along the trail, many did not have a sufficient water capacity to supply the line and emigrants. These were dug out to hold a larger capacity. Cisterns were constructed at some of the stations and water wagons were used to transport water from distant sources to fill the cisterns. At the Hueco Tanks in Texas, correspondent Ormsby tells of the tanks being enlarged by Butterfield to hold a year's supply of water.[32]

In June 1860 Butterfield passenger Wallace reported to the Daily Alta California the following:

"Between Vallecito and Algodones there are eight of these stations, varying from nine to sixteen miles apart. Wells have been sunk at each station, and abundance of good water is obtained, except at the Monument and Garden stations. These waters are brackish and bitter—a flavor not delicate to the taste. Drinking-water is carried from the other stations. These stations are of incalculable worth to emigrants, who are no longer forced to depend upon the precious supply of water which the wells, afforded, and which were liable to be covered up by the sand-waves that move over the desert."[33]

Other improvements to the trail by Butterfield were the building of bridges:

"Fourteen miles from Boggy Depot [Indian Territory now Oklahoma] we came to Blue River station, where a heavy bridge is building for the company."[34]

There were two bridges in Arizona. One was across the San Simon River near San Simon Stage Station,[35] and the other across the San Pedro River just north of the San Pedro River Stage Station.[36]

The trail that John Butterfield had established was so efficient that it was little changed until its demise in 1880 with the completion of the railroad, and the impact the Butterfield Trail had for settling the West cannot be understated, as written by President James Buchanan congratulating John Butterfield for his achievement:

"Washington, Oct. 9, 1858

John Butterfield, Esq.:

Sir – Your dispatch has been received. I cordially congratulate you upon the result. It is a glorious triumph for civilization and the Union. Settlements will soon follow the course of the road, and the East and West will be bound together by a chain of living Americans, which can never be broken."[37]

As stated by President Buchanan in the congratulation telegram to John Butterfield, increased emigration would be a result of the improved trail. Just after Butterfield's service started in September 1858, there were many newspaper accounts of a large increase in the number of emigrants on the trail. The San Antonio and San Diego Mail Line was operating on 900 miles of the improved trail and benefited by the regularly spaced water holes at Butterfield's stations. In October 1859, Superintendent Isaiah C. Woods complimented Butterfield for these improvements and the benefit to the San Antonio and San Diego Mail Line:

"The San Diego Overland Route – Interesting News – From I.C. Woods, who has just crossed the continent on the San Diego and San Antonio Line, says the San Diego Herald, we gather some items which may be of interest: Woods pays a high compliment to the staging of the Butterfield Overland Company, along the Gila and over the Desert, particularly to Superintendent Buckley and Warren Hall, the Road Agent of this division [for Butterfield's Overland Mail Company. They have, he says, really worked wonders in organizing their road in a manner which would be a model in any country. The immigrants are coming slowly along, feeling in no hurry to enter California much before the rains have brought on the new grass. The stations of the Overland Mail companies and the wells dug by these enterprising men, are proving of incalculable benefit to those crossing with their own teams. The immigration on the Southern route, this year, will figure up from ten thousand to fifteen thousand souls, with a very large amount of cattle and sheep. The old complaints of the immigrants are at present unheard of, owing to the better knowledge of the country now so readily obtained.”[38]

Route divisions of the Butterfield Overland Mail route[39]
Division Route Miles Hours
Division 1 San Francisco to Los Angeles 462 80
Division 2 Los Angeles to Fort Yuma 282 72.2
Division 3 Fort Yuma to Tucson 280 71.5
Division 4 Tucson to Franklin 360 82
Division 5 Franklin[40] to Fort Chadbourne 458 126.3
Division 6 Fort Chadbourne to Colbert's Ferry 282+12 65.3
Division 7 Colbert's Ferry to Fort Smith 192 38
Division 8 Fort Smith to Tipton 318+12 48.6
Division 9 Tipton to St. Louis by railroad 160 11.4
Totals 2,795 596.3

San Francisco to Memphis edit

As noted above, the route from San Francisco to Fort Smith was the same for both routes. Travel time from Fort Smith to Memphis was about the same as to St. Louis. Management of the route from Fort Smith to Memphis was included in Division 8. However, because of the untamed nature of the Mississippi River and its Arkansas tributaries in those years, the southern route necessarily utilized various alternative routes and methods of travel. At that time, there was no Mississippi River bridge at Memphis, and the Memphis and Little Rock Railroad ran from Hopefield near present-day West Memphis, Arkansas, only to a point 12 miles east of Madison, Arkansas, on the St. Francis River. From there the route headed overland by stagecoach. When the Arkansas River was high enough, the mail could instead travel from Memphis by steamboat down the Mississippi to the mouth of the Arkansas River, navigate up that river to Little Rock, and on from there by stagecoach. When the Arkansas was too low for steamboat traffic, the Butterfield could take the White River to Clarendon, Arkansas, or Des Arc, Arkansas, before switching to the stagecoaches. Sometimes the entire route across eastern Arkansas would be by stage.[41]

Butterfield's stagecoaches, celerity wagons, and water wagons edit

No one on a Butterfield stage was ever killed by outlaws, but some died in accidents caused by the mostly unbroken mules or mustangs running wild.[42] Butterfield's stages were not allowed to carry shipments of valuables. In Butterfield's instructions to his employees was "No money, jewelry, bank notes, or valuables of any nature, will be allowed to be carried under any circumstances whatever."[43] For this reason, the idea of a "shotgun" rider next to the driver was not employed by Butterfield. When correspondent Ormsby asked one of the stage drivers, "Have you any arms?", the stage driver answered, "No, I don't have any; there's no danger."[44] However, most people on the Butterfield stages were armed, especially in Comanche and Apache territory. In October 1859 correspondent Farwell was a passenger heading east on a Butterfield stage and wrote the following:

"After leaving this station [Arizona's San Pedro River Stage Station], the conductor asked 'how many of us were armed', and requested that those who had arms should have them ready for use, as we now were in the Apache country. Guns and pistols were produced, and we rode all night with them in our hands."[45]

Mail stagecoach edit

This draft animal-drawn passenger and mail stage had a strong sub-frame covered by decorated wooden paneling with ornate doors and comfortably padded seats. They often had window openings, but the western models designed for the rougher conditions had no glass panels. The roof was strong enough to support a metal railing where luggage could be carried. Seats were often provided on the roof. A canvas-covered boot at the back was used for luggage and mailbags. The difference between a stagecoach and a mail stagecoach is that a large compartment was provided below the driver's seat to carry mail and the rear boot for mail was larger. Butterfield's stagecoaches were used on 30% of the Southern Overland Trail at the eastern and western ends.

Stage (celerity) wagon edit

 
Butterfield's stage (celerity) wagon partly designed by John Butterfield. Sixty-six were employed from Fort Smith, Arkansas, to Los Angeles, California.
 
Pinery Station in Guadalupe Mountains National Park

Celerity means 'swiftness of speed'. The term "celerity wagon" is sometimes used instead of "stage wagon." It was about 60% of the weight of a stagecoach and was designed for the rough frontier conditions where the trail was not as well developed, in sand, and for traversing steep inclines. They were open on the sides with no doors or windows. Often a canvas top was supported by light uprights. They had canvas or leather curtains fastened to the top that could be rolled down as a barrier to the dust. The stage wagon was used by Butterfield's Overland Mail Company exclusively on 70% of the Southern Overland Trail on the 1,920-mile (3,090 km) section between Fort Smith, Arkansas, to Los Angeles, California. Although the famous passenger wagon manufacturers Abbot-Downing Co. and J.S. & E.A. Abbot Co., of Concord, New Hampshire, never used the name "mud wagon" in their catalogs, there were others who referred to the stage wagon as a "mud wagon."[46]

Butterfield stage manufacture edit

Newspapers published an article in June 1858 that Butterfield's mail stagecoaches and stage wagons were made by the J.S. & E.A. Abbot Co. of Concord, New Hampshire.[47] Unfortunately the original order book for that time period in 1858 is missing from the Abbot-Downing Archives.[48] According to the articles, a total of 100 stages were ordered and either put into use or distributed to stations along the trail. Another important reference is from Goddard Bailey's report to the government on his inspection trip of the trail in September 1858. He stated in the report "The road is stocked with substantially-built Concord spring wagons..."[49] A July 1858 Memphis newspaper article tells how the stages were delivered and who made them. This, of course was the famous J.S. & E.A. Abbot.

"The Overland Mail Company received by the Lady Walton [riverboat], on Tuesday evening last, six stages, and on Wednesday, Mr. Glover left [from Fort Smith] to the direction of El Paso with four of them.... The stages were manufactured at Concord, New Hampshire, according to directions given by Col. John Butterfield. They will accommodate from six to nine passengers...."[50]

Another article a week later in the same Memphis newspaper stated that 60 more were to come.[51] The use of "Concord" stagecoaches was also mentioned by correspondent Ormsby.[52]

There were many similar descriptions of Butterfield's stage (celerity) wagons given by newspaper correspondents. One was given by Ormsby:

"They are made much like the express wagons in your city which carry goods for transshipment, only they are heavier built, have tops made of canvas, and are set on leather straps instead of springs. Each one has three seats, which are arranged so that the backs let down and form one bed, capable of accommodating from four to ten persons, according to their size and how they lie. From Memphis [actually Little Rock] and from St. Louis [actually Tipton] to Fort Smith regular stage coaches are used, similar in every respect to those employed in the Atlantic States; but from Fort Smith onwards the vehicles used are not unlike a Jersey wagon, they are of the description known as Celerity wagons, being similar in build to the common Troy coach, and the body is hung upon the same kind of springs [thorough-brace] and in a similar manner. Instead, however, of the heavy wooden top, with iron railing around it, in common use, they have a light canvas covering supported by light uprights, after the manner of a Jersey wagon. The covering affords ample protection against the weather, while it greatly diminishes the weight of the vehicle as well as its liability to upset. Each one had three seats, which are arranged so that the backs let down and form one bed, capable of accommodating from four to ten persons, according to their size, and how they lie. The company has over one hundred of these coaches on the ground, and has been running them regularly and with profitable results, for some time past, upon portions of the route."[53]

The same stage or stage driver was not used all the way through on the 2,700-mile (4,300 km) trip. They were changed frequently, both to avoid fatigue for the stage drivers and to avoid the braking down of the stages. Correspondent Ormsby reported that "I understand they [Overland Mail Company] have bought horses and mules, and a wagon or coach for every thirty miles, of the route, while arrangements have been made at all the stations for changing horses, feeding, &c., so that they can run straight through."[54]

From these references it is seen that Butterfield employed 100 stages distributed along the 2,700-mile trail from Tipton, Missouri, to San Francisco, California. Approximately 34 western style J.S. & E.A. Abbot mail stagecoaches were used on the settled and partially settled sections of the trail from Tipton, Missouri, to Fort Smith, Arkansas, and from Los Angeles to San Francisco, California. Stagecoach trails had already been established between these points, with a few Butterfield improvements to the trail. About sixty-six J.S. & E.A. Abbot stage (celerity) wagons, partially designed by John Butterfield, were distributed on the 1,920-mile trail through the frontier from Fort Smith, Arkansas, to Los Angeles, California.

Other wagons edit

Other wagons used by Butterfield were water wagons and freight wagons. Water wagons were an important, but expensive, necessity. To straighten out the trail, so they wouldn't have to zigzag from water hole to water hole, water wagons were used to transport water from a source to stage stations that were built on the straightened-out sections. An example was Ewell's Stage Station in the Sulphur Springs Valley of eastern Arizona. At the beginning of Butterfield's service, after leaving Apache Pass, the trail jogged northwest to Dos Cabezas Spring and then southwest to Dragoon Springs Stage Station at the foot of the Dragoon Mountains. In the spring of 1858 a new trail was made from the western entrance of Apache Pass and then along an almost straight line to the north end of the Dragoon Mountains. At approximately the midpoint of this new section a station and cistern were constructed. A water wagon was used to supply the cistern with water from Dos Cabezas Spring, which was now four miles north of the new station. Water wagons were also used to supply unusually long stretches of trail that lacked water sources. A newspaper article tells us of one of these situations:

"Chidester also informs us of the means to supply the stations in the Llanos Estecados [in Texas], or Staked Plains, with water. This desert, by the route of the Company's road, is seventy-five miles wide. From streams on either side of the Plains the Company supplies water to the stations with regular water trains, fitted up expressly for the purpose. The wagons used for this purpose are constructed of large tin boilers, similar in shape to the boilers of a steamboat, and capable of holding as much water as a team of six mules can draw. These trains run regularly, conveying water to the different stations, where large reservoirs are prepared to receive and preserve it for the use of passengers and the employés and stock of the Company. This is, of course, a very expensive method of supplying the indispensable element, but, as thus far all efforts to obtain it by boring or otherwise have proved little, the Company must submit to it for the present."[55]

Subcontractors edit

Butterfield subcontracted the section between Des Arc and Fort Smith, Arkansas, to Chidester, Reeside & Co.:

"The Overland California United States Mail left Memphis on Thursday [September 16] last. It is brought by the Memphis and Little Rock Rail Road to within twelve miles of Madison, on St. Francis River, thence by light vehicles to Des Arc—thence by Messrs. Chidester, Reeside & Co.'s line of four horse U.S. Mail coaches to Fort Smith where it meets the St. Louis mail. Messrs. Chidester, Reeside & Co., are subcontractors under Butterfield & Co., from Memphis to Fort Smith…"[56]

In an interview Chidester stated that he was using Butterfield's stage wagons:

"The vehicles used upon the road between Fort Smith are of the description known as Celerity wagons…. The company [Butterfield] have over one hundred of these coaches on the ground…"[57]

Stage drivers edit

The stage drivers, like many of Butterfield's employees, were mostly from upstate New York. An example for the many Butterfield employees being from New York State is shown in the 1860 Federal Census for Tucson. On page one a caption states "Great Overland Mail Stations," and of the 40 entries, 16 are listed as being born in New York State. Correspondent Ormsby reported that:

"The employees of the company, I found, without exception, to be courteous, civil, and attentive. They are most of them from the East, and many, especially of the drivers, from New York state. I found the drivers on the whole line, with but few exceptions, experienced men. Several are a little reckless and too anxious to make fast time, but as a general thing they are very cautious."[58]

Draft animals edit

Correspondent Ormsby reported: "Our horses were four in number, that being the allotment all along the line from Tipton [Missouri] to San Francisco [California]."[59] Many correspondents' reports describe the problems for the Overland Mail Company using unbroken wild mules and mustangs between Fort Smith, Arkansas, and Los Angeles, California. By most accounts, wild mules were used and some wild mustangs. It is surprising that the use of wild draft animals did not hinder the Overland Mail Company stages from accomplishing its contractual agreed to time schedule. The problem with the unbroken mules and mustangs was expressed in correspondent Farwell's report:

"We arrived at the station about 10 o'clock, A.M., about 1 mile to the eastward of the river. Some coffee was prepared for us, and we were soon ready to start again. This time, after we were all seated in the coach, the horses, which were said to have been always kind and gentle, refused to move. After a great deal of beating, coaxing and a trial of various methods suggested by almost every one present, we were all obliged to get out again, and after a great deal of trouble, the horses were started, but the passengers being out of the coach, the driver was obliged to stop again, and again, after they were in, the horses refused to go. After working with the might and main for some time, they were got off upon a run, and this time they were kept going. Hitherto, in starting from any station, a person was obliged to stand at the heads of the horses—they being with a few exceptions' wild ones—until the driver was seated on his box, the reins gathered and everything in readiness, when he would give the signal, "turn 'em loose," or "let 'em go," and they would go upon a run. As we get further along, however, they are growing tame, and are more easily handled."[60]

Sleeping on the stages edit

For the 25-day trip, the Butterfield stages did not stop for the passengers to sleep. They had to sleep on the stages. Many correspondents reported humorous stories about their experiences trying to sleep on the Butterfield stages. One of the most common problems was the losing of their hats while sleeping caused by the open-sided stage (celerity) wagons providing little protection from the wind.[61] National Park Service Historian Frank Norris stated in an interview that "According to historian Gerald T. Ahnert, 'pulling up to a Butterfield stage station was like making a NASCAR pit stop.'"[62]

Extant Butterfield stages edit

All the stages that weren't in use were distributed at stations along the 2,700-mile trail. At the closing of Butterfield’s operations on the Southern Overland Trail in March 1861, because of the start of the Civil War, many of the stages were confiscated and used by the Confederate Army as military vehicles.[63] As much of the equipment as possible was transferred to the central trail to continue the Overland Mail Company contract. Only enough of the stages made it to the central route to operate the line from Salt Lake City, Utah, to western Nevada. The biography of Edwin R. Purple tells of transferring the stages to the central route. He was employed by the Overland Mail Company as a financial agent at Fort Yuma, California, in May 1860. At the closing of the line, on the Southern Overland Trail, in March 1861, he was ordered to transfer the stock and stages from Tucson, Arizona, to Los Angeles, California, to supply the central route line, which was to commence operations on July 1, 1861. On May 8, 1861, with 30 men, he left Los Angeles and successfully arrived at Salt Lake City on June 16 with 18 stage wagons and 130 horses.[64] In a discussion by Gerald T. Ahnert with members of the True West Historical Society, it was suggested that many of these original stagecoaches and stage wagons were bought by movie companies in the 1930s through 1950s and used in their movie productions. Many were destroyed in scenes of the stages being attacked.[65]

Operations edit

 
Overland mail commemorative stamp issued by the U.S. Post Office, 100th Anniversary, October 10, 1958

Butterfield's Overland Mail Company held the U.S. Mail contract from September 16, 1858, on a six-year contract. The first stage going east left San Francisco at 10 minutes past midnight on September 14, 1858. The mail from San Francisco reached St. Louis in 24 days, 18 hours, and 26 minutes.[66] The first stage going west left Tipton, Missouri, at 8 am on September 16, 1858. The mail was carried by railroad for the first 160 miles (260 km) from St. Louis to Tipton.[67]

Butterfield's Overland Mail Company made two trips a week from September 1858 to March 1861. At the start of service, the mail would leave St. Louis, Missouri, and San Francisco, California, every Monday and Thursday.[68] A December 1, 1858, advertisement stated that the days for departure from San Francisco on Monday and Friday and that the through fare to Terminus of Pacific Railroad as $100.[69] An advertisement appeared in the same newspaper on January 11, 1859, that the through fare to Terminus of Pacific Railroad had increased to $200.[70] Butterfield's Overland Mail Company had 139 stage stations at the start of service[71] but more stations were built after service started and increased to about 170.[72] As noted about 100 stages were employed.

Pony Express as part of the Overland Mail Company contract edit

When the Overland Mail Company Contract No. 12578 was transferred to the Central Overland Trail, the contract was amended on March 12, 1861, to include the Pony Express. The new contract stated the following:

"And to be required also, during the continuance of their contract, or until completion of the overland telegraph, to run a pony-express semi-weekly at a schedule time of ten days, eight months of the year, and twelve days four months of the year [presumably the winter months], and to convey for the Government free of charge five pounds of mail matter, with liberty of charging the public for transportation of letters by said express not exceeding $1 per half ounce. The compensation for the whole service [which included the stage line mail service] to be $1,000,000 per annum, to take effect on or before the 1st of July, 1861 and to expire the 1st of July, 1864 [the same date for the end of the old contract No. 12578]. The number of the route to be changed to 10773 and the service to be recorded in the route register for Missouri."[73]

In behalf of the Overland Mail Company, the order was signed by president W.B. Dinsmore. William B. Dinsmore became president after John Butterfield was voted out as president. Butterfield still remained a stockholder.[74] The Pony Express was terminated before the end of the contract because the telegraph line was completed October 24, 1861.

A correspondent for the New York Herald, Waterman L. Ormsby, remarked after his 2,812-mile (4,525 km) trek through the western US to San Francisco on a Butterfield Stagecoach thus: "Had I not just come out over the route, I would be perfectly willing to go back, but I now know what Hell is like. I've just had 24 days of it."[1] Ormsby was the only passenger on the first East-West run of the Butterfield Stage who journeyed the entire distance of the mail route. He sent periodic dispatches to the paper describing his journey, including the pickup of passengers outside the Lawrence Livery Stables.[75]

Near the end of Butterfield's service, in March 1861 on the Southern Overland Trail, John Butterfield was voted out as president of the Overland Mail Company because he wasn't making money for the stockholders. He remained a stockholder in the company and attended the meetings with vice-president William B. Dinsmore now elevated to president of the company. The Congressional report shows the modifications to the six-year Butterfield contract ending on September 15, 1864. Kirby Sanders was the National Park Service consulting historian and lead researcher for compiling the history for the master Special Resource Study for the Butterfield National Trail project and put into perspective the confusion over Wells, Fargo & Co.'s only involvement on the Butterfield Trail (Southern Overland Trail). He stated that they had only a secondary role and may have run a "trunk route" off of Butterfield from Los Angeles to San Diego.[76] Waddell F. Smith, grandson of William Bradford Waddell, one of the founders of the Pony Express put into perspective the later involvement of Wells, Fargo & Co., two years after the Butterfield contract ended. What was known as the "Grand Consolidation," of the three stage lines, that held the mail contract on the Central Overland Trail, was achieved by Ben Holladay, "The Stagecoach King." The three lines now comprising the consolidation were the Pioneer Stage Line, the Overland Mail Company, and Wells, Fargo & Co. This three-million-dollar corporation, formed on February 5, 1866, became a new giant with an increased capitalization of ten million dollars. Wells, Fargo & Co. changed its name to Wells, Fargo and Company and was approved by the stockholders on December 10, 1866. Wells, Fargo and Company bought out Ben Holladay and was finally operating as a mail carrying stage company, with their name finally on a transom rail of a stagecoach, on the Central Overland Trail. But the end was in sight, as the construction of the Transcontinental Railroad was nearing completion. On May 16, 1868, the board of directors of Wells, Fargo and Company authorized the sale of the company's stage lines, although they remained in operation until the completion of the railroad on May 10, 1869.[77]

Transfer to Central Overland Trail edit

Butterfield’s Overland Mail Company was ordered to transfer the company to the Union-held Central Overland Trail, because of the impending start of the Civil War.[78] The last Overland Mail Company mail bag left St. Louis, Missouri, March 18, 1861.[79] This last mail arrived in San Francisco, California April 13, 1861.[80]

William Buckley, of Watertown, New York, was the Superintendent of the Fourth Division for Butterfield's Overland Mail Company on the Southern Overland Trail. When Butterfield's Overland Mail Company contract was transferred to the Central Overland Trail, although some of the employees returned to Upstate New York, some retained their positions with the company. William Buckley was one of the original employees to continue with the company on the Central Overland Trail and took the position of Superintendent. Although William B. Dinsmore was now the company president, John Butterfield was still a stockholder and it can be seen in this article that the Overland Mail Company was still called "Butterfield's" by the employees.

Only enough equipment and employees were transferred to stock the trail from Carson City, Nevada, to Salt Lake City, Utah.[81] A June 1861 newspaper accounted the details:

"Great Salt Lake City, June 5, 1861. ... William Buckley, formerly the Superintendent of the Butterfield route from San Francisco to El Paso, F. Cluggage, an Agent in that route and Bolivar Roberts, the Superintendent of the western division on this route, came in a week ago yesterday from Carson, which I noticed in my last letter, and on Friday Edward Fisher, and four other employees in some department, came in from St. Joseph. ...They have, whatever else besides, at least made all the necessary arrangements for a vigorous start to the daily mail, and everything will be ready by the first week in July [July 1 was when the line was ordered to start by the new contract] to fulfill the of obligations of the million contract. ... Last evening, profiting by a conversation with Mr. Buckley, I obtained from him a copy of his measurement of the road from Carson to this city [Salt Lake City]. ... Placerville [California] being the terminus, another 100 miles should be added between that and Carson, as the entire distance of the Butterfield new route. These are the stations now in use and to be continued, from the facilities they afford of proximity to wood, water and feed; but I am informed the Butterfield Company propose erecting intermediate stations every twelve miles, on account of the greater amount of horses required for the accomplishment of the journey within the specified time of sixteen days from St. Joseph to Placerville.”[82]

Under the Confederate States of America, the abandoned Butterfield route between Texas and Southern California operated under a new Federal contract as part of the Overland Mail Corporation route with limited success by George Henry Giddings. The contract was given in May 1861 and was to start on April 1, 1861, and to end on June 30, 1862. "An attempt was made to fulfill the contract, beginning April 1, but faced with insurmountable obstacles and with the development of the Civil War, the contractors were compelled to give it up. The eastern portion of the line was curtailed June 30, 1861. The final chapter was closed when the latter part of the line was discontinued Aug. 1, 1861."[83] Wells Fargo continued its stagecoach runs to mining camps in more northern locations until the coming of the US Transcontinental Railroad in 1869.

At least four battles of the American Civil War occurred at or near Butterfield mail posts, the Battle of Stanwix Station, the Battle of Picacho Pass, Second Battle of Mesilla and the Battle of Pea Ridge. Four clashes between the Apache and Confederate or Union forces in the Apache Wars occurred on the route, First Battle of Dragoon Springs, Second Battle of Dragoon Springs, the Battle of Apache Pass and Skirmish in Doubtful Canyon. Confederates attempted to keep the stations from Tucson to Mesilla open while they destroyed the stations from Tucson to Yuma which were used to supply the Union army as it advanced through Traditional Arizona. The burning of the Stanwix Station and others led to a significant delay to the Union advance, postponing the Fall of Tucson, Arizona's western Confederate capital, which housed one of two territorial courts; the other court was in Mesilla.[citation needed] All said engagements happened in the Confederate Arizona and Arkansas sectors of the mail route.

Modern remnants edit

There are two surviving stage stations in San Diego County: the Oak Grove Butterfield Stage Station in Oak Grove, California, and Warner's Ranch near Warner Springs, California. Both properties, 20 miles (32 km) apart, were declared National Historic Landmarks in 1961.[84]

The Elkhorn Tavern in the Pea Ridge National Military Park was another destination along the route that was rebuilt after the Civil War. It is on one of the last sections of the trail that still exists: The segment of Old Wire Road running through Northwest Arkansas. Also in Arkansas is the town of Pottsville, which was built around Potts Inn. Potts Inn was finished in 1859 and was a popular stop along the route. It survives as a museum owned by the Pope County Historic Society.

When it was first established, the route proceeded due east from Franklin, Texas, toward the Hueco Tanks;[85] the remains of a stagecoach stop are still visible at the Hueco Tanks State Historic Site.

The summit of Guadalupe Peak in Guadalupe Mountains National Park features a stainless steel pyramid erected in 1958 to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Butterfield Overland Mail, which passed south of the mountain.

National historic trail edit

On March 30, 2009, President Barack Obama signed Congressional legislation (Sec. 7209 of P.L. 111-11) to conduct a study of designating the trail a National Historic Trail. The National Park Service concluded its Special Resource Study/Environmental Assessment in 2018 and determine that it would be feasible and desirable as part of the National Trails System.[86]

Congress passed a bill designating the Butterfield Overland National Historic Trail in 2022.[87] The trail covers 3,292 miles in eight states. The bill uniquely includes a provision specifying that the trail shall not hinder any energy transmission project.[88] The Park Service will develop a comprehensive administration plan.

In popular culture edit

The Butterfield Overland Mail Company is featured in the 1957 film 3:10 to Yuma. The railroad was not completed through Arizona until 1879, eighteen years after Butterfield's Overland Mail Company ceased its service through Arizona. Also Butterfield never used his name on a stagecoach, only "Overland Mail Company."

The Butterfield Overland Mail Company is the main subject of the 1965 film Apache Uprising, featuring several main characters under the employ of Butterfield: District Manager, Station Agent, and Driver.

A Butterfield Overland stagecoach is also featured in the 2015 western film The Hateful Eight. The stagecoach in the movie was not representative of John Butterfield's stagecoaches as the movie fictionally represented the Central Overland Trail after the Civil War. John Butterfield never used his name on a stage; only "Overland Mail Company" and only operated on the Southern Overland Trail.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Waterman L. Ormsby, edited by Lyle H. Wright and Josephine M. Bynum, "The Butterfield Overland Mail", The Huntington Library, San Marino, California, 1991.
  2. ^ Goddard Bailey, Special Agent to Hon. A.V. Brown. P.M., Washington, D.C., The Senate of the United States, Second Session, Thirty-Fifth Congress, 1858–'59, Postmaster General, Appendix, "Great Overland Mail", Washington, D. C., October 18, 1858.https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.c109481050;view=1up;seq=745
  3. ^ Aaron V. Brown, Report of the Postmaster General, Senate, 35th Congress, 2d Session, Ex. Doc. No. 48, Contract with J. Butterfield and Co. p. 1.
  4. ^ Isaiah Churchill Woods, Report to Hon. A.V. Brown, "Postmaster General on the Opening and Present Condition of the Overland Mail Route Between San Antonio, Texas, and San Diego, California", by J.[I] C. Wood [Woods] Superintendent, Washington City, D.C., March 1858. Note: This 43-page report to the Postmaster General also contains references from Woods' day book.https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=miun.aft3376.0001.001;view=1up;seq=1
  5. ^ "S.3519 - Butterfield Overland National Historic Trail Designation Act". Congress.gov.
  6. ^ A biographical memorial of General Daniel Butterfield, edited by Julia Lorrilard Butterfield, The Grafton Press, New York, 1904
  7. ^ From an advertisement titled "1827 – Half Century – 1880, The Old Established Butterfield Livery Stable", Francis & Stewart's Utica City Directory for 1880, June 1st, 1880, Published by the Utica Directory Co., 167 Genesee St., Utica, N.Y.
  8. ^ History of Oneida County, New York: with illustrations and biographical sketches of some of its prominent men and pioneers, Philadelphian, Everts & Fariss, 1878.
  9. ^ Oswego Weekly Palladium, Oswego, New York, "Butterfield Stables Sold," June 13, 1894.
  10. ^ Lieutenant John G. Parke, Exploration and Surveys for a Rail Road Route from the Mississippi River to the Pacific Ocean, Route near the 32d Parallel & Coast Route Cal., 1854–1855.
  11. ^ . Bridgeport, Texas Historical Society. Archived from the original on September 11, 2011. Retrieved May 6, 2011.
  12. ^ Abstract of Bids, Report of the Postmaster General, Senate, 35th Congress, 2d Session, Ex. Doc., No. 48, Post Office Department. U.S. Government Printing Office. March 3, 1859.
  13. ^ The California Overland Mail Company Contract, Evening Star, Washington, D. C., April 29, 1858.
  14. ^ "William George Fargo". Encyclopaedia Britannica. October 16, 2022. Retrieved October 16, 2022.
  15. ^ "William G. Fargo "Expressing" the Nation". The Buffalo History Gazette. September 15, 2023. Retrieved September 15, 2023.
  16. ^ "Torn-Down Tuesday: The Fargo Mansion, home of a Wells Fargo founder". The Buffalo News. September 15, 2023. Retrieved September 15, 2023.
  17. ^ His name was misspelled in Contract with J. Butterfield and Co., Report of the Postmaster General, Senate, 35th Congress, 2d Session, Ex. Doc. No. 48. pp. 7–10. In the details of the contract is M.L. Kinyon and at the end of the contract is M.L. Kenyon. Because his name was misspelled, researchers have been unable to find information concerning Kenyon's history. In Waterman L. Ormsby's The Butterfield Overland Mail in footnote 151 on p. 131, publisher Huntington Library stated nothing has been found concerning Garner, of Utica, New York, or Kinyon, of Rome, NY. The other misspellings are Marquis L. Kinyon, Marcus L. Kinyon on the 1860 Federal Census, and M.L. Kinyon. All of these have also been used without the middle initial. Mark Kenyon and Mark Kinyon were sometimes used in Upstate New York newspapers.
  18. ^ Immigrant Roads and Mail Routes across the Continent, Sacramento Daily Union, November 2, 1858.
  19. ^ G. Bailey, Special Agent, to Hon. A.V. Brown, P.M. General, Washington, D.C., Appendix, Great Overland Mail, Washington, October 18, 1858, The Senate of the United States, Second Session, Thirty-Fifth Congress, 1858–'59, Washington, 1859, pp. 739–744 Note: This report is based on Bailey's inspection trip on the first Butterfield stage to leave San Francisco heading east. He lists all the stations and their divisions. He also lists the time that he traveled on these divisions.https://books.google.com/books?id=gG9HAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA739&dq=%22postmaster+General%22+Appendix+%22great+Overland+Mail%22&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwir46Wno8HPAhVIMSYKHfw4Ab4Q6AEIJjAC#v=onepage&q=%22postmaster%20General%22%20Appendix%20%22great%20Overland%20Mail%22&f=false
  20. ^ Utica Daily Observer (New York), obituary, The Late Hon. M.L. Kinyon (sic), April 3, 1862
  21. ^ Evening Star, Washington City, November 23, 1857
  22. ^ Oneida Weekly Herald, The Overland Mail Route, Utica, New York, May 4, 1858
  23. ^ From the St. Louis Republican April 27, New York Herald Tribune, Return of the Overland Mail Expedition, May 3, 1858
  24. ^ The Binghamton Press, New York, Utica Man Linked East with West, John Butterfield Established Overland Mail Route Half a Century Ago, March 23, 1909
  25. ^ Frank Norris, Historian National Park Service, Desert Tracks, "Butterfield Overland Mail," pp. 15–20.
  26. ^ For a more comprehensive history concerning this subject see: Gerald T. Ahnert, Butterfield Makes the Southern Overland Trail His Own. The report has been requested by many organizations. Copies have been supplied to National Park Service Historian Frank Norris, Dr. Aaron Wright, Archaeology Southwest, Tucson, San Diego History Center, Arizona Historical Society Archives, Tucson, Arizona, Oneida Historical Society, Oneida, New York, and Benson Visitors Center, Benson, Arizona
  27. ^ Waterman L. Ormsby, The Butterfield Overland Mail, Only Through Passenger on the First Westbound Stage, Edited by Lyle H. Wright and Johnson M. Bynum, The Huntington Library, San Marino California, 1991, p. 42.
  28. ^ Ormsby, p. 44. (Italics added for emphasis).
  29. ^ Ormsby, p. 44.
  30. ^ Goddard Bailey, Special Agent to Hon. A.V. Brown. P. M., Washington, D.C., The Senate of the United States, Second Session, Thirty-Fifth Congress, 1858–'59, Postmaster General, Appendix, "Great Overland Mail", Washington, D.C., October 1858," pp. 742–743
  31. ^ "Contract with J. Butterfield and Co.," The Executive Documents Printed by Order of the Senate of the United States, Second Session, Thirty-Fifth Congress, 1858–'59, Washington, 1859, p. 4.
  32. ^ Ormsby, p. 77.
  33. ^ William A Wallace, "The Stations," Daily Alta California, June 10, 1860.
  34. ^ Ormsby, p. 33.
  35. ^ The Executive Documents Printed by Order of the Senate of the United States, First Session, Thirty-Sixth Contress, 1859–60, "Colonel Bonneville to the General-in-chief, Headquarters Department of New Mexico, Santa Fe, July 15, 1859," Washington, 1860, p. 300
  36. ^ Lieut. Col. E.E. Eyre, The War of the Rebellion, Series I, Volume L, Fort Thorn, Arizona, July 6. 1862, p. 121.
  37. ^ Evening Star, Washington, D.C., October 11, 1858, p. 2.
  38. ^ Sacramento Daily Union, October 29, 1859 (italics added for emphasis)
  39. ^ Wright, "Historic Places – Appendix A", p. 821
  40. ^ Richardson, "Butterfield Overland Mail": "As of 1858 the route extended from San Francisco to Los Angeles, thence by Fort Yuma, California, and Tucson, Arizona, to Franklin, Texas (present El Paso)."
  41. ^ The Butterfield Overland Mail Route Lucian Wood Road Segment. February 1, 2014, at the Wayback Machine History & Architecture: Arkansas Historic Preservation Program.
  42. ^ New York Herald, Sunday, July 22, 1860
  43. ^ Special Instructions to Conductors, Agents, Drivers & Employees, John Butterfield, Order No. 8. A copy of these instructions was published in The Butterfield Overland Mail, by Waterman L. Ormsby
  44. ^ Waterman L. Ormsby, The Butterfield Overland Mail, p. 55
  45. ^ John M. Farwell, Daily Alta California, San Francisco, "Letter from our Overland Correspondent," Tuesday, November 16, 1858
  46. ^ The Western Horseman, "The Mud Wagon", John and Mildred Frizzell, May 1976, p. 140
  47. ^ The Buffalo Courier, Buffalo, New York, Saturday, June 26, 1858, Sacramento Daily Union, California, July 31, 1858
  48. ^ Special Collections, Tuck Library, New Hampshire Historical Society, Concord, New Hampshire. Historian Gerald T. Ahnert visited the archives twice and found that the original order book for June and July 1858 was missing. This was the time period for Butterfield's order.
  49. ^ G. Bailey, Report of the Postmaster General, The Senate of the United States, Second Session. Thirty-Fifth Congress, 1858–59, Washington, 1858. p. 741.
  50. ^ The Memphis Daily Appeal, Tennessee, July 13, 1858, reprinted from the Fort Smith Herald (Arkansas)
  51. ^ The Memphis Daily Appeal, Tennessee, July 21, 1858, reprinted from the Fort Smith Times (Arkansas)
  52. ^ Waterman L. Ormsby, The Butterfield Overland Mail, p. 127
  53. ^ Waterman L. Ormsby, The Butterfield Overland Mail, pp. 17–18
  54. ^ Waterman L. Ormsby, The Butterfield Overland Mail, pp. 49, 53–55, 66, 68, 94, 123–124, 139
  55. ^ Sacramento Daily Union, California, October 13, 1858. The article was taken from Memphis Appeal, which published "…the particulars of an interview had with Mr. J.T. Chidester, a member of the firm of Chidester, Reeside & Co., upon the western end of the route, between Memphis and Fort Smith, who came down to superintend the departure of the first train."
  56. ^ Des Arc Citizen, Arkansas, Friday, September 16, 1858
  57. ^ Sacramento Daily Union, California, October 13, 1858. Article reprinted from The Memphis Appeal, Tennessee
  58. ^ Waterman L. Ormsby, The Butterfield Overland Mail, p. 94
  59. ^ Waterman L. Ormsby, The Butterfield Overland Mail, p. 14
  60. ^ John M. Farwell, Daily Alta California, San Francisco, “Letter from our Overland Correspondent,” Tuesday, November 16, 1858
  61. ^ Gerald T. Ahnert, The Carriage Journal, “Surviving the Ride on a Butterfield Stagecoach,” Volume 53, Number 4, August 2015, pp. 220–225. This article tells correspondents humorous accounts about riding on Butterfield’s stages.
  62. ^ Frank Norris, Desert Tracks, "Butterfield Overland Trail," January 2015. This article is about the proposal for the Butterfield National Historic Trail.
  63. ^ Tri Weekly Commonwealth, Frankfort, Kentucky, "Later from Texas, Fort Smith, Feb. 20," February 22, 1861
  64. ^ Edwin R. Purple, The New York State Genealogical and Biographical Record, New York, July, 1879
  65. ^ For a more comprehensive history concerning this subject see: Gerald T. Ahnert, Butterfield's Overland Mail Company Stagecoaches and (Celerity) Wagons on the Southern Overland Trail, 1858–1861. The report has been requested by many organizations. Copies have been supplied to National Park Service Historian Frank Norris, Dr. Aaron Wright, Archaeology Southwest, Tucson, San Diego History Center, Arizona Historical Society Archives, Tucson, Arizona, Oneida Historical Society, Oneida, New York, and Benson Visitors Center, Benson, Arizona
  66. ^ G. Bailey, Report of the Postmaster General, Appendix, p. 739 (the time the stage left San Francisco) & 744 (the total number of hours to St. Louis).
  67. ^ Waterman L. Ormsby, The Butterfield Overland Mail p. 9 .
  68. ^ John Butterfield, Overland Mail Company Through Time Schedule between St. Louis, Mo./Memphis, Tenn. & San Francisco, Cal., No. 1, Sep. 16th, 1858
  69. ^ San Francisco Bulletin, California, December 1, 1858. This ad appeared until January 10, 1858.
  70. ^ San Francisco Bulletin, January 11, 1859
  71. ^ Bailey, Great Overland Mail, Postmaster General, The Senate of the United States, Second Session, Thirty-Fifth Congress, 1858–59, Washington, 1858, pp. 742–743
  72. ^ National Park Service Historian Frank Norris, Desert Tracks, January 2015, p. 17
  73. ^ Contract with Overland Mail Company, Report of the Postmaster General, Senate, 46th Congress, 3d Session, Ex. Doc. No. 21, p. 7.https://books.google.com/books?id=AqEZAAAAYAAJ&pg=RA14-PA1&dq=%22contract+with+overland+mail+company%22++46th+congress&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjw_IPK5_XdAhUSPq0KHXQXDoIQuwUIKTAA#v=onepage&q=%22contract%20with%20overland%20mail%20company%22%20%2046th%20congress&f=false
  74. ^ Waddell F. Smith, The Smoke Signal "The Pony Express – The Overland Mail," Spring 1968, No. 17, published by The Corral of the Westerners, Tucson, Arizona. Note: This article, by the grandson of one of the Pony Express owners, is an excellent study of the Pony Express becoming part of the Overland Mail Company contract, pp. 153, 154
  75. ^ . Ormsby.org. Archived from the original on July 27, 2011. Retrieved February 6, 2011.
  76. ^ Kirby Sanders, "Butterfield Overland Trail Friends," facebook site. Sanders was the administer of the site until his death. The site is for historians interested in the Butterfield Trail, as well as for the public. https://www.facebook.com/groups/338802216162970/
  77. ^ Waddell F. Smith, The Smoke Signal "The Pony Express – The Overland Mail," Spring 1968, No. 17, published by The Corral of the Westerners, Tucson, Arizona. Note: This article, by the grandson of one of the Pony Express owners, is an excellent study of the Overland Mail Company's history.
  78. ^ Contract with Overland Mail Company, Report of the Postmaster General, Senate, 35th Congress, 2d Session, Ex. Doc. No. 48, "1861, March 12. Ordered that the overland mail service on route 12578 be discontinued," p. 4
  79. ^ Sacramento Daily Union, California, April 5, 1861, “Letter from St. Louis, from our Special Correspondent, St. Louis, March 19, 1861.
  80. ^ Daily Alta California, San Francisco, Sunday, April 14, 1861.
  81. ^ Root, The Overland Stage to California, p. 42: "The stock, coaches, etc., on the southern route were pulled off, and accordingly moved north, and, by act of Congress, on July 1, 1861, the route between St. Joseph and Placerville, having been duly equipped for a daily line, went into operation. It took about three months to make the transfer of stages and stock, and to build a number of new stations, secure hay and grain, and get everything in readiness for operating a six-times-a-week mail line. The new line was designated by the post-office department as the Central Overland California Route."
  82. ^ Sacramento Daily Union, California, June 11, 1861, “Letter from Salt Lake, From our Special Correspondent." Note: The complete article can be accessed by the following link https://cdnc.ucr.edu/cgi-bin/cdnc?a=d&d=SDU18610611&e=-------en--20--1--txt-txIN--------1
  83. ^ Basil C. Pearce, The Jackass Mail – San Antonio and San Diego Mail Line, The Journal of San Diego History, San Diego Historical Society Quarterly, Spring 1969, Volume 15, Number 2
  84. ^ Patricia Heintzelman and Charles Snell (1975) National Register of Historic Places Inventory–Nomination: Oak Grove Butterfield Station, National Park Service, accessed 18 November 2009
  85. ^ Butterfield Overland Mail from the Handbook of Texas Online
  86. ^ "ParkPlanning - Butterfield Overland Trail Special Resource Study". parkplanning.nps.gov. Retrieved January 1, 2023.
  87. ^ "Butterfield Trail gets national historic designation". Arkansas Online. December 23, 2022. Retrieved January 1, 2023.
  88. ^ "BUTTERFIELD OVERLAND NATIONAL HISTORIC TRAIL DESIGNATION ACT; Congressional Record Vol. 168, No. 200". Congress.gov. December 22, 2022.

Bibliography edit

  • Ahnert, Gerald T., The Butterfield Trail and Overland Mail Company in Arizona, 1858–1861, Canastota Publishing, Co. Inc., Canastota, New York, 2011. This book is a comprehensive account of the Butterfield Trail in Arizona.
  • Ahnert, Gerald T., The Cochise County Historical Journal, A Cochise County Historical Publication, Vol. 46 No. 1 – Spring/Summer 2016, 50th Anniversary Issue, All articles were by Gerald T. Ahnert concerning the history of Butterfield's Overland Mail Company.
  • Ahnert, Gerald T., Butterfield Makes the Southern Overland Trail His Own, The Architects of the Butterfield Trail – Marquis L. Kenyon and John Butterfield Jr. add a Personal Touch to Arizona (Revised Edition 2017), NoBottomGulch Publications, Syracuse, NY.
  • Hackler, George, The Butterfield Trail in New Mexico, Yucca Enterprises, 2005. This book is a comprehensive account of the Butterfield Trail in New Mexico.
  • Ely, Glen Sample, The Texas Frontier and The Butterfield Overland Mail, 1858–1861, University of Oklahoma Press, 2016. This book is a comprehensive account of the Butterfield Trail in Texas.
  • Smith, Waddell F., The Smoke Signal "The Pony Express – The Overland Mail," Spring 1968, No. 17, published by The Corral of the Westerners, Tucson, Arizona. Note: This article, by the grandson of one of the Pony Express owners, is an excellent study of the Overland Mail Company and Pony Express history.
  • Richardson, Rupert N. Butterfield Overland Mail from the Handbook of Texas Online. Retrieved 2006-08-22.
  • Root, Frank. The Overland Stage to California. Topeka, Kansas: W.Y. Morgan, 1901.
  • Wright, Muriel H. "", Chronicles of Oklahoma 11:2 (June 1933) 821–822 (accessed August 16, 2006).
  • Hafen, L.R.R. (2004). The overland mail, 1849–1869: promoter of settlement precursor of railroads September 29, 2007, at the Wayback Machine. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.
  • Butterfield, J., Fargo, W.G., & Holland, A. (1857). Letter to the postmaster general in relations to the overland mail to California September 29, 2007, at the Wayback Machine.
  • Butterfield, J.W. (1857). Skeleton map of the overland mail route to California. Route adopted by the department traced in green. Route proposed by John Butterfield and others (who were the lowest bidders) in red September 29, 2007, at the Wayback Machine.
  • Overland Mail Company, & Butterfield, J. (1858). Overland Mail Company: through time schedule between St. Louis, Mo., Memphis, Tenn. & San Francisco, Cal September 29, 2007, at the Wayback Machine. [S.l: The Company?.
  • Reed, M., & Pourade, R.F. (1966). The colorful Butterfield Overland Stage. Reproductions in color of 20 paintings by Marjorie Reed from the collection of James S. Copley September 26, 2007, at the Wayback Machine. Palm Desert, Calif: Best-West Publications.

Further reading edit

  • Swensen, Henry Edward (1911). The overland mail and passenger service.
    The overland mail and passenger service. p. 156.
    , E'book
  • Greene, A.C., 900 Miles on the Butterfield Trail. Denton: University of North Texas Press, 1994. Project MUSE, ISBN 978-1574412130, OCLC 835770429

External links edit

  • Butterfield Overland National Historic Trail
  • Desert USA.com: John Butterfield + Butterfield Overland Mail Unfortunately this article is not primary source reference and contains some errors. Wells Fargo Co. did not take over Butterfield's Overland Mail Company.
  • Over-land.com: Official Millennium Trail – The Overland Trail May 16, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  • "Panning for history along Cache la Poudre River" The Moultrie News (Charleston, SC) 2019-08-22 at the Wayback Machine Article about the Central Overland Trail
  • Texas Historical Society: Butterfield Overland Mail Company in Bridgeport 2011-09-11 at the Wayback Machine
  • Butterfield Express under the Confederate States of America

butterfield, overland, mail, overland, mail, redirects, here, films, overland, mail, 1942, film, overland, mail, 1939, film, officially, overland, mail, company, stagecoach, service, united, states, operating, from, 1858, 1861, carried, passengers, mail, from,. Overland Mail redirects here For the films see Overland Mail 1942 film and Overland Mail 1939 film Butterfield Overland Mail officially the Overland Mail Company 1 was a stagecoach service in the United States operating from 1858 to 1861 It carried passengers and U S Mail from two eastern termini Memphis Tennessee and St Louis Missouri to San Francisco California The routes from each eastern terminus met at Fort Smith Arkansas and then continued through Indian Territory Oklahoma Texas New Mexico Arizona Mexico and California ending in San Francisco 2 On March 3 1857 Congress authorized the U S postmaster general at that time Aaron V Brown to contract for delivery of the U S mail from St Louis to San Francisco 3 Prior to this U S Mail bound for the Far West had been delivered by the San Antonio and San Diego Mail Line Jackass Mail since June 1857 4 Butterfield Overland MailIndustryPostal serviceHeadquartersUnited States The Overland Mail Coach illustration from Arizona As It Is 1877 The route was designated a national historic trail in 2023 5 Contents 1 Origins 1 1 John Butterfield president of Overland Mail Company 1 2 Awarding the Overland Mail Company contract 2 Route 2 1 Kenyon and Butterfield Jr architects of the Butterfield Trail 2 2 John Butterfield makes the Southern Overland Trail his own 2 3 Sections shortened or improved 2 4 San Francisco to Memphis 3 Butterfield s stagecoaches celerity wagons and water wagons 3 1 Mail stagecoach 3 2 Stage celerity wagon 3 3 Butterfield stage manufacture 3 4 Other wagons 4 Subcontractors 5 Stage drivers 6 Draft animals 7 Sleeping on the stages 8 Extant Butterfield stages 9 Operations 9 1 Pony Express as part of the Overland Mail Company contract 9 2 Transfer to Central Overland Trail 10 Modern remnants 11 National historic trail 12 In popular culture 13 See also 14 References 15 Bibliography 16 Further reading 17 External linksOrigins editJohn Butterfield president of Overland Mail Company edit nbsp Butterfield and signature John Butterfield was a descendant of Benjamin Butterfield who brought his family from England to the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1638 His father Daniel Butterfield lived at Berne in the Helderberg near Albany N Y where John was born He attended schools near his boyhood home but his education was meager 6 John s early involvement with stage lines started about 1820 John Butterfield was borne at Berne in the Helderberg near Albany November 18 1801 In early life we find him in the employment of Thorpe amp Sprague of that city as a driver and through the solicitation of Mr Theodore S Faxton came to Utica NY where he for a time was employed in picking up passengers from the taverns and boats for Parker s stages After a time he started a livery 1827 with but small accommodations 7 His connection to Parker amp Co continued so long as they were still in business and was succeeded by lines of his own wherein he was a leading manager in the State until staging was superseded by railroads 8 After his employment with other stage lines John decided to use this experience for running his own stage lines in Upstate New York Mr Butterfield devoted his attention largely to lines running North and South At the height of stage coaching he had forty lines running from Utica as headquarters to Ogdensburg and Sacketts Harbor on the North and South to the Pennsylvania line and through Chemung and Susquehanna valleys 9 By 1857 when John was awarded the Overland Mail Company contract he had had 37 years of experience working for and running stage lines This was one of the reasons that Postmaster General A V Brown awarded him the contract Awarding the Overland Mail Company contract edit Through the 1840s and 1850s there was a desire for better communication between the east and west coasts of the United States There were several proposals for railroads connecting the two coasts 10 A more immediate realization was an overland mail route across the west Congress authorized the Postmaster General to contract for mail service from Missouri to California to facilitate settlement in the west 11 The Post Office Department advertised for bids for an overland mail service on April 20 1857 Bidders were to propose routes from the Mississippi River westward Nine bids were made by some of the most experienced stage men 12 None of the express companies such as American Express Adams Express or Wells Fargo amp Co Express bid on the contract because as of yet they had no experience running stage lines A suggestion by The New York Times that the express companies could do a better job than the Overland Mail Company drew a sharp rebuttal from a Washington D C newspaper 13 Mail Contract No 12 578 for 600 000 per annum for a semi weekly service was assigned to John Butterfield of Utica New York who was president for the contract that was named the Overland Mail Company This was the longest mail contract awarded in the United States It was a stockholding company and the main stockholders besides John Butterfield were also fellow directors of the company William B Dinsmore of New York City William G Fargo of Buffalo New York 14 15 16 James V P Gardner of Utica New York Marquis L Kenyon 17 of Rome New York Alexander Holland of New York City and Hamilton Spencer of Bloomington Illinois There were four others known as sureties security against loss Almost all of the stockholders were connected to other businesses in Upstate New York and most lived near Butterfield s home in Utica New York Alexander Holland was Butterfield s son in law and treasurer of the Overland Mail Company Dinsmore was vice president of the company The office for the company was in New York City Why John Butterfield was chosen was stated by Postmaster General Aaron Brown a route which no contractor had bid for but one which in the judgement of A V Brown of Memphis had more advantages than any other and as John Butterfield amp Co had in the opinion of Brown greater ability qualification and experience than anybody else to carry out a mail service John Butterfield amp Co was selected and preferred 18 The route known as the Oxbow Route because of its long curving route through the Southwest was 600 miles 970 km longer than the Central Overland Trail but had the advantage of being snow free Route edit nbsp The stage routes from a Butterfield Overland Mail Company map The contract with the U S Post Office which went into effect on September 16 1858 identified the route and divided it into eastern and western divisions Franklin Texas later to be named El Paso was the dividing point and these two were subdivided into minor divisions five in the East and four in the West These minor divisions were numbered west to east from San Francisco each under the direction of a superintendent 19 Kenyon and Butterfield Jr architects of the Butterfield Trail edit John Butterfield Sr turned to two of his most trusted and experienced employees to put in place the Butterfield Trail In 1858 with expedition leader Marquis L Kenyon John Butterfield Jr helped to select the route and sites for the stage stations Kenyon was also a stockholder director of the Overland Mail Company and the only stockholder other than John Butterfield to have significant staging experience Marquis moved from Mannsville Jefferson County to Rome New York in 1838 Rome was twelve miles from John Butterfield s home in Utica He immediately became involved with staging His obituary gives a good summation of his staging activities in Upstate New York and what led him to be involved with the Overland Mail Company His prior occupation was a humble one that of driver of a stage coach between Utica and Oswego It was but two or three years before he had saved enough money from his wages to purchase an interest in the stage coach line of which he was an employee and once having placed his foot on the first steps of the ladder he soon rose by his business tact and assiduity to be the principal proprietor of the stage coach lines converging to this point At the time that railroads supplanted stages on the leading routes Mr Kinyon Kenyon was one of the most extensive owners of stage coach property in Central New York After the introduction of railroads he continued to carry on the business of mail contractor and stage proprietor on the small lateral lines but his business energies were too expansive to be thus curtailed and he soon found ampler vent for them than the of his former vast carrying business afforded Hence when the overland mail route to California was projected Mr Kinyon Kenyon found a field of business enterprise more commensurate with his capacities He it was who went over the whole route originally and surveyed it from the eastern terminus to its western in California Returning he procured the necessary equipment for the route and went over it again organizing the route as he proceeded and remained for nearly a year in California in charge of the western terminus of the road 20 After winning the contract on September 16 1857 Butterfield had one year to organize the trail and immediately sent his hand picked team headed by Marquis L Kenyon to San Francisco to begin the task The steamer Star of New York left New York on November 20 1857 with passengers M L Kinyon Kenyon J Butterfield Jr F De Ruyter and S K Nellis who go out to open the Pacific Mail Route across the plains and arrange the western terminus of said route 21 The party left San Francisco on January 16 1858 to begin laying out the trail and selecting the sites for stage stations They traveled by mule covering about 40 miles 64 km per day Another party left St Louis about the same time Both were to meet at El Paso Texas and then return to St Louis The party from St Louis was G W Wood Jesse Talcott and Charles P Cole A Fort Smith Arkansas newspaper reported The parties met at El Paso and after recruiting used in the sense of recovering a few days the above gentlemen left for this city making the trip to this place in twenty two days from El Paso and thirty one days from San Francisco to El Paso or fifty six days through with wagons The party from California in crossing Arizona took a middle route between Beale s and the Southern route but little traveled heretofore pronounced by them as an excellent road 22 Another report describes the arrival of the two parties at Fort Smith Arkansas and tells us that the choice for the trail did not satisfy Kenyon and his party and they returned from El Paso Texas by a different route which became the trail A portion of the exploring party sent out by the Overland Mail Company for the purpose of examining the routes for the carriage of the mails from the Valley of the Mississippi to the Pacific coast which left this city on the 3rd of January last reached Fort Smith Arkansas on their return home on the 17th inst accompanied by four of the party which left San Francisco on the 16th of January on purpose to examine that portion of the route from the Pacific to the Rio Grande They left El Paso on the 22d of March thus accomplishing the distance from the Rio Grande to Fort Smith nine hundred and thirty miles in the short space of twenty five days which we believe is the quickest time on record in crossing the Plains The party was composed of only eight men as follows Major George W Wood Jesse Tolcott Charles P Cole and J A Lilly of the St Louis party and Lieut Frank de Ryther James Swartz and John Butterfield Jr of the San Francisco party They brought with them one wagon and thirteen animals which they left at Fort Smith for the party proceeding East The route traveled on the return trip was different from the one passed over in going out 23 John Jr s obituary summarized his accomplishment John Butterfield Jr the man who helped link the East to the West in establishing his famous Overland Mail Route more than half a century ago died recently at his house in Utica aged 82 years His father John Butterfield was a superintendent of the Overland Mail Route from San Francisco to St Louis and thence to eastern cities The younger Butterfield first traversed the famous route marked the stations superintended the work of organization and drove the first stage over the route 24 John Butterfield makes the Southern Overland Trail his own edit The history of the Butterfield Trail and the Emigrant Trail are intertwined It was the purpose of awarding the contract to the Overland Mail Company on September 16 1857 not only for a land route to deliver mail from the East to the West coast but to aid emigrant travel to settle the West Butterfield accomplished this purpose by providing an improved trail and water sources at regularly spaced stage stations When researchers hike the Southern Overland Corridor the most visible ruts are those of the route that the Overland Mail Company established which others followed Even though its services ceased on the Southern Overland Corridor in March 1861 because of the impending Civil War it was so efficient that it remained little changed until its demise with the completion of the railroad in 1880 For this reason to this day the Southern Overland Trail is most commonly called The Butterfield Trail 25 The building of the trail was in two sections the 462 mile 744 km San Francisco to Los Angeles section and the rest of the 2 238 mile 3 602 km distance to Tipton Missouri The San Francisco to Los Angeles section was previously one of the most developed Some changes were made from Los Angeles to San Francisco Settlements and wagon roads used by local stage lines were strung out between San Francisco and Los Angeles Some existing structures such as ranch houses and hotels were contracted as stage stations One of the most famous is Vallecito which is preserved as a historic site Kenyon s hardest task building the trail was east of Los Angeles where his trail was mostly in the open desert 26 Sections shortened or improved edit Waterman L Ormsby the correspondent for the New York Herald a passenger on the first stagecoach going west in September 1858 wrote in his reports of Marquis L Kenyon s part in building the trail and the advantage for emigrants He writes about the many improvements on the Texas side of the Red River starting about eight miles below Preston 27 A lengthy new section of road in Texas is described Another disadvantage under which we labored this trip was that our road for the most of the way was nearly new though Mr Bates claims that from Sherman to Fort Belknap at least forty miles are saved by it It leads through the counties of Grayson Cooke Jacks Jack Montague Wise and Young all of which contribute towards its expenses and certainly it must be a favorite with some for though only opened one month before I passed over it it was already pretty well marked with wagon tracks It must of course improve with every day of its use 28 Another Texas section The new road from Grape Creek to the head of Concho River Texas on Mr Glover s division is also in good order for travel and saves another thirty miles the total length for this new section is 122 miles The New Pass between Los Angeles and Fort Tejon California has been much improved under the superintendence of M L Kinyon Kenyon as have also been other portions of the route The route of the company will of course be a favorite emigrant route and will therefore be in better order than before in fact each month will add new facilities to the overland mail 29 Goddard Bailey s report shows that there were 139 stations at the beginning of Butterfield s service 30 but by the time the line ceased operations the line had been improved by the addition of thirty six more for a total of 175 The new stations were assigned 320 acres each 31 and many took advantage by growing crops which aided the line Although there were springs and rain fed waterholes along the trail many did not have a sufficient water capacity to supply the line and emigrants These were dug out to hold a larger capacity Cisterns were constructed at some of the stations and water wagons were used to transport water from distant sources to fill the cisterns At the Hueco Tanks in Texas correspondent Ormsby tells of the tanks being enlarged by Butterfield to hold a year s supply of water 32 In June 1860 Butterfield passenger Wallace reported to the Daily Alta California the following Between Vallecito and Algodones there are eight of these stations varying from nine to sixteen miles apart Wells have been sunk at each station and abundance of good water is obtained except at the Monument and Garden stations These waters are brackish and bitter a flavor not delicate to the taste Drinking water is carried from the other stations These stations are of incalculable worth to emigrants who are no longer forced to depend upon the precious supply of water which the wells afforded and which were liable to be covered up by the sand waves that move over the desert 33 Other improvements to the trail by Butterfield were the building of bridges Fourteen miles from Boggy Depot Indian Territory now Oklahoma we came to Blue River station where a heavy bridge is building for the company 34 There were two bridges in Arizona One was across the San Simon River near San Simon Stage Station 35 and the other across the San Pedro River just north of the San Pedro River Stage Station 36 The trail that John Butterfield had established was so efficient that it was little changed until its demise in 1880 with the completion of the railroad and the impact the Butterfield Trail had for settling the West cannot be understated as written by President James Buchanan congratulating John Butterfield for his achievement Washington Oct 9 1858John Butterfield Esq Sir Your dispatch has been received I cordially congratulate you upon the result It is a glorious triumph for civilization and the Union Settlements will soon follow the course of the road and the East and West will be bound together by a chain of living Americans which can never be broken 37 As stated by President Buchanan in the congratulation telegram to John Butterfield increased emigration would be a result of the improved trail Just after Butterfield s service started in September 1858 there were many newspaper accounts of a large increase in the number of emigrants on the trail The San Antonio and San Diego Mail Line was operating on 900 miles of the improved trail and benefited by the regularly spaced water holes at Butterfield s stations In October 1859 Superintendent Isaiah C Woods complimented Butterfield for these improvements and the benefit to the San Antonio and San Diego Mail Line The San Diego Overland Route Interesting News From I C Woods who has just crossed the continent on the San Diego and San Antonio Line says the San Diego Herald we gather some items which may be of interest Woods pays a high compliment to the staging of the Butterfield Overland Company along the Gila and over the Desert particularly to Superintendent Buckley and Warren Hall the Road Agent of this division for Butterfield s Overland Mail Company They have he says really worked wonders in organizing their road in a manner which would be a model in any country The immigrants are coming slowly along feeling in no hurry to enter California much before the rains have brought on the new grass The stations of the Overland Mail companies and the wells dug by these enterprising men are proving of incalculable benefit to those crossing with their own teams The immigration on the Southern route this year will figure up from ten thousand to fifteen thousand souls with a very large amount of cattle and sheep The old complaints of the immigrants are at present unheard of owing to the better knowledge of the country now so readily obtained 38 Route divisions of the Butterfield Overland Mail route 39 Division Route Miles Hours Division 1 San Francisco to Los Angeles 462 80 Division 2 Los Angeles to Fort Yuma 282 72 2 Division 3 Fort Yuma to Tucson 280 71 5 Division 4 Tucson to Franklin 360 82 Division 5 Franklin 40 to Fort Chadbourne 458 126 3 Division 6 Fort Chadbourne to Colbert s Ferry 282 1 2 65 3 Division 7 Colbert s Ferry to Fort Smith 192 38 Division 8 Fort Smith to Tipton 318 1 2 48 6 Division 9 Tipton to St Louis by railroad 160 11 4 Totals 2 795 596 3 San Francisco to Memphis edit As noted above the route from San Francisco to Fort Smith was the same for both routes Travel time from Fort Smith to Memphis was about the same as to St Louis Management of the route from Fort Smith to Memphis was included in Division 8 However because of the untamed nature of the Mississippi River and its Arkansas tributaries in those years the southern route necessarily utilized various alternative routes and methods of travel At that time there was no Mississippi River bridge at Memphis and the Memphis and Little Rock Railroad ran from Hopefield near present day West Memphis Arkansas only to a point 12 miles east of Madison Arkansas on the St Francis River From there the route headed overland by stagecoach When the Arkansas River was high enough the mail could instead travel from Memphis by steamboat down the Mississippi to the mouth of the Arkansas River navigate up that river to Little Rock and on from there by stagecoach When the Arkansas was too low for steamboat traffic the Butterfield could take the White River to Clarendon Arkansas or Des Arc Arkansas before switching to the stagecoaches Sometimes the entire route across eastern Arkansas would be by stage 41 Butterfield s stagecoaches celerity wagons and water wagons editNo one on a Butterfield stage was ever killed by outlaws but some died in accidents caused by the mostly unbroken mules or mustangs running wild 42 Butterfield s stages were not allowed to carry shipments of valuables In Butterfield s instructions to his employees was No money jewelry bank notes or valuables of any nature will be allowed to be carried under any circumstances whatever 43 For this reason the idea of a shotgun rider next to the driver was not employed by Butterfield When correspondent Ormsby asked one of the stage drivers Have you any arms the stage driver answered No I don t have any there s no danger 44 However most people on the Butterfield stages were armed especially in Comanche and Apache territory In October 1859 correspondent Farwell was a passenger heading east on a Butterfield stage and wrote the following After leaving this station Arizona s San Pedro River Stage Station the conductor asked how many of us were armed and requested that those who had arms should have them ready for use as we now were in the Apache country Guns and pistols were produced and we rode all night with them in our hands 45 Mail stagecoach edit This draft animal drawn passenger and mail stage had a strong sub frame covered by decorated wooden paneling with ornate doors and comfortably padded seats They often had window openings but the western models designed for the rougher conditions had no glass panels The roof was strong enough to support a metal railing where luggage could be carried Seats were often provided on the roof A canvas covered boot at the back was used for luggage and mailbags The difference between a stagecoach and a mail stagecoach is that a large compartment was provided below the driver s seat to carry mail and the rear boot for mail was larger Butterfield s stagecoaches were used on 30 of the Southern Overland Trail at the eastern and western ends Stage celerity wagon edit nbsp Butterfield s stage celerity wagon partly designed by John Butterfield Sixty six were employed from Fort Smith Arkansas to Los Angeles California nbsp Pinery Station in Guadalupe Mountains National ParkCelerity means swiftness of speed The term celerity wagon is sometimes used instead of stage wagon It was about 60 of the weight of a stagecoach and was designed for the rough frontier conditions where the trail was not as well developed in sand and for traversing steep inclines They were open on the sides with no doors or windows Often a canvas top was supported by light uprights They had canvas or leather curtains fastened to the top that could be rolled down as a barrier to the dust The stage wagon was used by Butterfield s Overland Mail Company exclusively on 70 of the Southern Overland Trail on the 1 920 mile 3 090 km section between Fort Smith Arkansas to Los Angeles California Although the famous passenger wagon manufacturers Abbot Downing Co and J S amp E A Abbot Co of Concord New Hampshire never used the name mud wagon in their catalogs there were others who referred to the stage wagon as a mud wagon 46 Butterfield stage manufacture edit Newspapers published an article in June 1858 that Butterfield s mail stagecoaches and stage wagons were made by the J S amp E A Abbot Co of Concord New Hampshire 47 Unfortunately the original order book for that time period in 1858 is missing from the Abbot Downing Archives 48 According to the articles a total of 100 stages were ordered and either put into use or distributed to stations along the trail Another important reference is from Goddard Bailey s report to the government on his inspection trip of the trail in September 1858 He stated in the report The road is stocked with substantially built Concord spring wagons 49 A July 1858 Memphis newspaper article tells how the stages were delivered and who made them This of course was the famous J S amp E A Abbot The Overland Mail Company received by the Lady Walton riverboat on Tuesday evening last six stages and on Wednesday Mr Glover left from Fort Smith to the direction of El Paso with four of them The stages were manufactured at Concord New Hampshire according to directions given by Col John Butterfield They will accommodate from six to nine passengers 50 Another article a week later in the same Memphis newspaper stated that 60 more were to come 51 The use of Concord stagecoaches was also mentioned by correspondent Ormsby 52 There were many similar descriptions of Butterfield s stage celerity wagons given by newspaper correspondents One was given by Ormsby They are made much like the express wagons in your city which carry goods for transshipment only they are heavier built have tops made of canvas and are set on leather straps instead of springs Each one has three seats which are arranged so that the backs let down and form one bed capable of accommodating from four to ten persons according to their size and how they lie From Memphis actually Little Rock and from St Louis actually Tipton to Fort Smith regular stage coaches are used similar in every respect to those employed in the Atlantic States but from Fort Smith onwards the vehicles used are not unlike a Jersey wagon they are of the description known as Celerity wagons being similar in build to the common Troy coach and the body is hung upon the same kind of springs thorough brace and in a similar manner Instead however of the heavy wooden top with iron railing around it in common use they have a light canvas covering supported by light uprights after the manner of a Jersey wagon The covering affords ample protection against the weather while it greatly diminishes the weight of the vehicle as well as its liability to upset Each one had three seats which are arranged so that the backs let down and form one bed capable of accommodating from four to ten persons according to their size and how they lie The company has over one hundred of these coaches on the ground and has been running them regularly and with profitable results for some time past upon portions of the route 53 The same stage or stage driver was not used all the way through on the 2 700 mile 4 300 km trip They were changed frequently both to avoid fatigue for the stage drivers and to avoid the braking down of the stages Correspondent Ormsby reported that I understand they Overland Mail Company have bought horses and mules and a wagon or coach for every thirty miles of the route while arrangements have been made at all the stations for changing horses feeding amp c so that they can run straight through 54 From these references it is seen that Butterfield employed 100 stages distributed along the 2 700 mile trail from Tipton Missouri to San Francisco California Approximately 34 western style J S amp E A Abbot mail stagecoaches were used on the settled and partially settled sections of the trail from Tipton Missouri to Fort Smith Arkansas and from Los Angeles to San Francisco California Stagecoach trails had already been established between these points with a few Butterfield improvements to the trail About sixty six J S amp E A Abbot stage celerity wagons partially designed by John Butterfield were distributed on the 1 920 mile trail through the frontier from Fort Smith Arkansas to Los Angeles California Other wagons edit Other wagons used by Butterfield were water wagons and freight wagons Water wagons were an important but expensive necessity To straighten out the trail so they wouldn t have to zigzag from water hole to water hole water wagons were used to transport water from a source to stage stations that were built on the straightened out sections An example was Ewell s Stage Station in the Sulphur Springs Valley of eastern Arizona At the beginning of Butterfield s service after leaving Apache Pass the trail jogged northwest to Dos Cabezas Spring and then southwest to Dragoon Springs Stage Station at the foot of the Dragoon Mountains In the spring of 1858 a new trail was made from the western entrance of Apache Pass and then along an almost straight line to the north end of the Dragoon Mountains At approximately the midpoint of this new section a station and cistern were constructed A water wagon was used to supply the cistern with water from Dos Cabezas Spring which was now four miles north of the new station Water wagons were also used to supply unusually long stretches of trail that lacked water sources A newspaper article tells us of one of these situations Chidester also informs us of the means to supply the stations in the Llanos Estecados in Texas or Staked Plains with water This desert by the route of the Company s road is seventy five miles wide From streams on either side of the Plains the Company supplies water to the stations with regular water trains fitted up expressly for the purpose The wagons used for this purpose are constructed of large tin boilers similar in shape to the boilers of a steamboat and capable of holding as much water as a team of six mules can draw These trains run regularly conveying water to the different stations where large reservoirs are prepared to receive and preserve it for the use of passengers and the employes and stock of the Company This is of course a very expensive method of supplying the indispensable element but as thus far all efforts to obtain it by boring or otherwise have proved little the Company must submit to it for the present 55 Subcontractors editButterfield subcontracted the section between Des Arc and Fort Smith Arkansas to Chidester Reeside amp Co The Overland California United States Mail left Memphis on Thursday September 16 last It is brought by the Memphis and Little Rock Rail Road to within twelve miles of Madison on St Francis River thence by light vehicles to Des Arc thence by Messrs Chidester Reeside amp Co s line of four horse U S Mail coaches to Fort Smith where it meets the St Louis mail Messrs Chidester Reeside amp Co are subcontractors under Butterfield amp Co from Memphis to Fort Smith 56 In an interview Chidester stated that he was using Butterfield s stage wagons The vehicles used upon the road between Fort Smith are of the description known as Celerity wagons The company Butterfield have over one hundred of these coaches on the ground 57 Stage drivers editThe stage drivers like many of Butterfield s employees were mostly from upstate New York An example for the many Butterfield employees being from New York State is shown in the 1860 Federal Census for Tucson On page one a caption states Great Overland Mail Stations and of the 40 entries 16 are listed as being born in New York State Correspondent Ormsby reported that The employees of the company I found without exception to be courteous civil and attentive They are most of them from the East and many especially of the drivers from New York state I found the drivers on the whole line with but few exceptions experienced men Several are a little reckless and too anxious to make fast time but as a general thing they are very cautious 58 Draft animals editCorrespondent Ormsby reported Our horses were four in number that being the allotment all along the line from Tipton Missouri to San Francisco California 59 Many correspondents reports describe the problems for the Overland Mail Company using unbroken wild mules and mustangs between Fort Smith Arkansas and Los Angeles California By most accounts wild mules were used and some wild mustangs It is surprising that the use of wild draft animals did not hinder the Overland Mail Company stages from accomplishing its contractual agreed to time schedule The problem with the unbroken mules and mustangs was expressed in correspondent Farwell s report We arrived at the station about 10 o clock A M about 1 mile to the eastward of the river Some coffee was prepared for us and we were soon ready to start again This time after we were all seated in the coach the horses which were said to have been always kind and gentle refused to move After a great deal of beating coaxing and a trial of various methods suggested by almost every one present we were all obliged to get out again and after a great deal of trouble the horses were started but the passengers being out of the coach the driver was obliged to stop again and again after they were in the horses refused to go After working with the might and main for some time they were got off upon a run and this time they were kept going Hitherto in starting from any station a person was obliged to stand at the heads of the horses they being with a few exceptions wild ones until the driver was seated on his box the reins gathered and everything in readiness when he would give the signal turn em loose or let em go and they would go upon a run As we get further along however they are growing tame and are more easily handled 60 Sleeping on the stages editFor the 25 day trip the Butterfield stages did not stop for the passengers to sleep They had to sleep on the stages Many correspondents reported humorous stories about their experiences trying to sleep on the Butterfield stages One of the most common problems was the losing of their hats while sleeping caused by the open sided stage celerity wagons providing little protection from the wind 61 National Park Service Historian Frank Norris stated in an interview that According to historian Gerald T Ahnert pulling up to a Butterfield stage station was like making a NASCAR pit stop 62 Extant Butterfield stages editAll the stages that weren t in use were distributed at stations along the 2 700 mile trail At the closing of Butterfield s operations on the Southern Overland Trail in March 1861 because of the start of the Civil War many of the stages were confiscated and used by the Confederate Army as military vehicles 63 As much of the equipment as possible was transferred to the central trail to continue the Overland Mail Company contract Only enough of the stages made it to the central route to operate the line from Salt Lake City Utah to western Nevada The biography of Edwin R Purple tells of transferring the stages to the central route He was employed by the Overland Mail Company as a financial agent at Fort Yuma California in May 1860 At the closing of the line on the Southern Overland Trail in March 1861 he was ordered to transfer the stock and stages from Tucson Arizona to Los Angeles California to supply the central route line which was to commence operations on July 1 1861 On May 8 1861 with 30 men he left Los Angeles and successfully arrived at Salt Lake City on June 16 with 18 stage wagons and 130 horses 64 In a discussion by Gerald T Ahnert with members of the True West Historical Society it was suggested that many of these original stagecoaches and stage wagons were bought by movie companies in the 1930s through 1950s and used in their movie productions Many were destroyed in scenes of the stages being attacked 65 Operations edit nbsp Overland mail commemorative stamp issued by the U S Post Office 100th Anniversary October 10 1958 Butterfield s Overland Mail Company held the U S Mail contract from September 16 1858 on a six year contract The first stage going east left San Francisco at 10 minutes past midnight on September 14 1858 The mail from San Francisco reached St Louis in 24 days 18 hours and 26 minutes 66 The first stage going west left Tipton Missouri at 8 am on September 16 1858 The mail was carried by railroad for the first 160 miles 260 km from St Louis to Tipton 67 Butterfield s Overland Mail Company made two trips a week from September 1858 to March 1861 At the start of service the mail would leave St Louis Missouri and San Francisco California every Monday and Thursday 68 A December 1 1858 advertisement stated that the days for departure from San Francisco on Monday and Friday and that the through fare to Terminus of Pacific Railroad as 100 69 An advertisement appeared in the same newspaper on January 11 1859 that the through fare to Terminus of Pacific Railroad had increased to 200 70 Butterfield s Overland Mail Company had 139 stage stations at the start of service 71 but more stations were built after service started and increased to about 170 72 As noted about 100 stages were employed Pony Express as part of the Overland Mail Company contract edit When the Overland Mail Company Contract No 12578 was transferred to the Central Overland Trail the contract was amended on March 12 1861 to include the Pony Express The new contract stated the following And to be required also during the continuance of their contract or until completion of the overland telegraph to run a pony express semi weekly at a schedule time of ten days eight months of the year and twelve days four months of the year presumably the winter months and to convey for the Government free of charge five pounds of mail matter with liberty of charging the public for transportation of letters by said express not exceeding 1 per half ounce The compensation for the whole service which included the stage line mail service to be 1 000 000 per annum to take effect on or before the 1st of July 1861 and to expire the 1st of July 1864 the same date for the end of the old contract No 12578 The number of the route to be changed to 10773 and the service to be recorded in the route register for Missouri 73 In behalf of the Overland Mail Company the order was signed by president W B Dinsmore William B Dinsmore became president after John Butterfield was voted out as president Butterfield still remained a stockholder 74 The Pony Express was terminated before the end of the contract because the telegraph line was completed October 24 1861 A correspondent for the New York Herald Waterman L Ormsby remarked after his 2 812 mile 4 525 km trek through the western US to San Francisco on a Butterfield Stagecoach thus Had I not just come out over the route I would be perfectly willing to go back but I now know what Hell is like I ve just had 24 days of it 1 Ormsby was the only passenger on the first East West run of the Butterfield Stage who journeyed the entire distance of the mail route He sent periodic dispatches to the paper describing his journey including the pickup of passengers outside the Lawrence Livery Stables 75 Near the end of Butterfield s service in March 1861 on the Southern Overland Trail John Butterfield was voted out as president of the Overland Mail Company because he wasn t making money for the stockholders He remained a stockholder in the company and attended the meetings with vice president William B Dinsmore now elevated to president of the company The Congressional report shows the modifications to the six year Butterfield contract ending on September 15 1864 Kirby Sanders was the National Park Service consulting historian and lead researcher for compiling the history for the master Special Resource Study for the Butterfield National Trail project and put into perspective the confusion over Wells Fargo amp Co s only involvement on the Butterfield Trail Southern Overland Trail He stated that they had only a secondary role and may have run a trunk route off of Butterfield from Los Angeles to San Diego 76 Waddell F Smith grandson of William Bradford Waddell one of the founders of the Pony Express put into perspective the later involvement of Wells Fargo amp Co two years after the Butterfield contract ended What was known as the Grand Consolidation of the three stage lines that held the mail contract on the Central Overland Trail was achieved by Ben Holladay The Stagecoach King The three lines now comprising the consolidation were the Pioneer Stage Line the Overland Mail Company and Wells Fargo amp Co This three million dollar corporation formed on February 5 1866 became a new giant with an increased capitalization of ten million dollars Wells Fargo amp Co changed its name to Wells Fargo and Company and was approved by the stockholders on December 10 1866 Wells Fargo and Company bought out Ben Holladay and was finally operating as a mail carrying stage company with their name finally on a transom rail of a stagecoach on the Central Overland Trail But the end was in sight as the construction of the Transcontinental Railroad was nearing completion On May 16 1868 the board of directors of Wells Fargo and Company authorized the sale of the company s stage lines although they remained in operation until the completion of the railroad on May 10 1869 77 Transfer to Central Overland Trail edit Butterfield s Overland Mail Company was ordered to transfer the company to the Union held Central Overland Trail because of the impending start of the Civil War 78 The last Overland Mail Company mail bag left St Louis Missouri March 18 1861 79 This last mail arrived in San Francisco California April 13 1861 80 William Buckley of Watertown New York was the Superintendent of the Fourth Division for Butterfield s Overland Mail Company on the Southern Overland Trail When Butterfield s Overland Mail Company contract was transferred to the Central Overland Trail although some of the employees returned to Upstate New York some retained their positions with the company William Buckley was one of the original employees to continue with the company on the Central Overland Trail and took the position of Superintendent Although William B Dinsmore was now the company president John Butterfield was still a stockholder and it can be seen in this article that the Overland Mail Company was still called Butterfield s by the employees Only enough equipment and employees were transferred to stock the trail from Carson City Nevada to Salt Lake City Utah 81 A June 1861 newspaper accounted the details Great Salt Lake City June 5 1861 William Buckley formerly the Superintendent of the Butterfield route from San Francisco to El Paso F Cluggage an Agent in that route and Bolivar Roberts the Superintendent of the western division on this route came in a week ago yesterday from Carson which I noticed in my last letter and on Friday Edward Fisher and four other employees in some department came in from St Joseph They have whatever else besides at least made all the necessary arrangements for a vigorous start to the daily mail and everything will be ready by the first week in July July 1 was when the line was ordered to start by the new contract to fulfill the of obligations of the million contract Last evening profiting by a conversation with Mr Buckley I obtained from him a copy of his measurement of the road from Carson to this city Salt Lake City Placerville California being the terminus another 100 miles should be added between that and Carson as the entire distance of the Butterfield new route These are the stations now in use and to be continued from the facilities they afford of proximity to wood water and feed but I am informed the Butterfield Company propose erecting intermediate stations every twelve miles on account of the greater amount of horses required for the accomplishment of the journey within the specified time of sixteen days from St Joseph to Placerville 82 Under the Confederate States of America the abandoned Butterfield route between Texas and Southern California operated under a new Federal contract as part of the Overland Mail Corporation route with limited success by George Henry Giddings The contract was given in May 1861 and was to start on April 1 1861 and to end on June 30 1862 An attempt was made to fulfill the contract beginning April 1 but faced with insurmountable obstacles and with the development of the Civil War the contractors were compelled to give it up The eastern portion of the line was curtailed June 30 1861 The final chapter was closed when the latter part of the line was discontinued Aug 1 1861 83 Wells Fargo continued its stagecoach runs to mining camps in more northern locations until the coming of the US Transcontinental Railroad in 1869 At least four battles of the American Civil War occurred at or near Butterfield mail posts the Battle of Stanwix Station the Battle of Picacho Pass Second Battle of Mesilla and the Battle of Pea Ridge Four clashes between the Apache and Confederate or Union forces in the Apache Wars occurred on the route First Battle of Dragoon Springs Second Battle of Dragoon Springs the Battle of Apache Pass and Skirmish in Doubtful Canyon Confederates attempted to keep the stations from Tucson to Mesilla open while they destroyed the stations from Tucson to Yuma which were used to supply the Union army as it advanced through Traditional Arizona The burning of the Stanwix Station and others led to a significant delay to the Union advance postponing the Fall of Tucson Arizona s western Confederate capital which housed one of two territorial courts the other court was in Mesilla citation needed All said engagements happened in the Confederate Arizona and Arkansas sectors of the mail route Modern remnants editThere are two surviving stage stations in San Diego County the Oak Grove Butterfield Stage Station in Oak Grove California and Warner s Ranch near Warner Springs California Both properties 20 miles 32 km apart were declared National Historic Landmarks in 1961 84 The Elkhorn Tavern in the Pea Ridge National Military Park was another destination along the route that was rebuilt after the Civil War It is on one of the last sections of the trail that still exists The segment of Old Wire Road running through Northwest Arkansas Also in Arkansas is the town of Pottsville which was built around Potts Inn Potts Inn was finished in 1859 and was a popular stop along the route It survives as a museum owned by the Pope County Historic Society When it was first established the route proceeded due east from Franklin Texas toward the Hueco Tanks 85 the remains of a stagecoach stop are still visible at the Hueco Tanks State Historic Site The summit of Guadalupe Peak in Guadalupe Mountains National Park features a stainless steel pyramid erected in 1958 to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Butterfield Overland Mail which passed south of the mountain nbsp Butterfield marker in Sherman Texas nbsp Fort Chadbourne reconstructed stage station nbsp Fort Chadbourne museum nbsp Fort Belknap Texas Historical Marker nbsp Advertising poster for a similar but later service between California and Oregon nbsp Guadalupe Peak summit with a pyramid commemorating the 100th anniversary of the Butterfield Overland Mail nbsp Butterfield historical marker at Apache Pass Arizona nbsp Butterfield Overland Mail trail remnant at Apache Pass ArizonaNational historic trail editOn March 30 2009 President Barack Obama signed Congressional legislation Sec 7209 of P L 111 11 to conduct a study of designating the trail a National Historic Trail The National Park Service concluded its Special Resource Study Environmental Assessment in 2018 and determine that it would be feasible and desirable as part of the National Trails System 86 Congress passed a bill designating the Butterfield Overland National Historic Trail in 2022 87 The trail covers 3 292 miles in eight states The bill uniquely includes a provision specifying that the trail shall not hinder any energy transmission project 88 The Park Service will develop a comprehensive administration plan In popular culture editThe Butterfield Overland Mail Company is featured in the 1957 film 3 10 to Yuma The railroad was not completed through Arizona until 1879 eighteen years after Butterfield s Overland Mail Company ceased its service through Arizona Also Butterfield never used his name on a stagecoach only Overland Mail Company The Butterfield Overland Mail Company is the main subject of the 1965 film Apache Uprising featuring several main characters under the employ of Butterfield District Manager Station Agent and Driver A Butterfield Overland stagecoach is also featured in the 2015 western film The Hateful Eight The stagecoach in the movie was not representative of John Butterfield s stagecoaches as the movie fictionally represented the Central Overland Trail after the Civil War John Butterfield never used his name on a stage only Overland Mail Company and only operated on the Southern Overland Trail See also editSouthern Emigrant Trail San Antonio San Diego Mail Line Butterfield Overland Mail in California Butterfield Overland Mail in Baja California Butterfield Overland Mail in New Mexico Territory Butterfield Overland Mail in Texas Butterfield Overland Mail in Indian Territory Butterfield Overland Mail in Arkansas and Missouri Butterfield Overland Despatch an unrelated company Pony Express Postage stamps and postal history of the Confederate States Stockton Los Angeles Road Apache Pass Station Butterfield Overland Mail Company Los Angeles BuildingReferences edit a b Waterman L Ormsby edited by Lyle H Wright and Josephine M Bynum The Butterfield Overland Mail The Huntington Library San Marino California 1991 Goddard Bailey Special Agent to Hon A V Brown P M Washington D C The Senate of the United States Second Session Thirty Fifth Congress 1858 59 Postmaster General Appendix Great Overland Mail Washington D C October 18 1858 https babel hathitrust org cgi pt id uc1 c109481050 view 1up seq 745 Aaron V Brown Report of the Postmaster General Senate 35th Congress 2d Session Ex Doc No 48 Contract with J Butterfield and Co p 1 Isaiah Churchill Woods Report to Hon A V Brown Postmaster General on the Opening and Present Condition of the Overland Mail Route Between San Antonio Texas and San Diego California by J I C Wood Woods Superintendent Washington City D C March 1858 Note This 43 page report to the Postmaster General also contains references from Woods day book https babel hathitrust org cgi pt id miun aft3376 0001 001 view 1up seq 1 S 3519 Butterfield Overland National Historic Trail Designation Act Congress gov A biographical memorial of General Daniel Butterfield edited by Julia Lorrilard Butterfield The Grafton Press New York 1904 From an advertisement titled 1827 Half Century 1880 The Old Established Butterfield Livery Stable Francis amp Stewart s Utica City Directory for 1880 June 1st 1880 Published by the Utica Directory Co 167 Genesee St Utica N Y History of Oneida County New York with illustrations and biographical sketches of some of its prominent men and pioneers Philadelphian Everts amp Fariss 1878 Oswego Weekly Palladium Oswego New York Butterfield Stables Sold June 13 1894 Lieutenant John G Parke Exploration and Surveys for a Rail Road Route from the Mississippi River to the Pacific Ocean Route near the 32d Parallel amp Coast Route Cal 1854 1855 Butterfield Overland Mail Company Bridgeport Texas Historical Society Archived from the original on September 11 2011 Retrieved May 6 2011 Abstract of Bids Report of the Postmaster General Senate 35th Congress 2d Session Ex Doc No 48 Post Office Department U S Government Printing Office March 3 1859 The California Overland Mail Company Contract Evening Star Washington D C April 29 1858 William George Fargo Encyclopaedia Britannica October 16 2022 Retrieved October 16 2022 William G Fargo Expressing the Nation The Buffalo History Gazette September 15 2023 Retrieved September 15 2023 Torn Down Tuesday The Fargo Mansion home of a Wells Fargo founder The Buffalo News September 15 2023 Retrieved September 15 2023 His name was misspelled in Contract with J Butterfield and Co Report of the Postmaster General Senate 35th Congress 2d Session Ex Doc No 48 pp 7 10 In the details of the contract is M L Kinyon and at the end of the contract is M L Kenyon Because his name was misspelled researchers have been unable to find information concerning Kenyon s history In Waterman L Ormsby s The Butterfield Overland Mail in footnote 151 on p 131 publisher Huntington Library stated nothing has been found concerning Garner of Utica New York or Kinyon of Rome NY The other misspellings are Marquis L Kinyon Marcus L Kinyon on the 1860 Federal Census and M L Kinyon All of these have also been used without the middle initial Mark Kenyon and Mark Kinyon were sometimes used in Upstate New York newspapers Immigrant Roads and Mail Routes across the Continent Sacramento Daily Union November 2 1858 G Bailey Special Agent to Hon A V Brown P M General Washington D C Appendix Great Overland Mail Washington October 18 1858 The Senate of the United States Second Session Thirty Fifth Congress 1858 59 Washington 1859 pp 739 744 Note This report is based on Bailey s inspection trip on the first Butterfield stage to leave San Francisco heading east He lists all the stations and their divisions He also lists the time that he traveled on these divisions https books google com books id gG9HAQAAIAAJ amp pg PA739 amp dq 22postmaster General 22 Appendix 22great Overland Mail 22 amp hl en amp sa X amp ved 0ahUKEwir46Wno8HPAhVIMSYKHfw4Ab4Q6AEIJjAC v onepage amp q 22postmaster 20General 22 20Appendix 20 22great 20Overland 20Mail 22 amp f false Utica Daily Observer New York obituary The Late Hon M L Kinyon sic April 3 1862 Evening Star Washington City November 23 1857 Oneida Weekly Herald The Overland Mail Route Utica New York May 4 1858 From the St Louis Republican April 27 New York Herald Tribune Return of the Overland Mail Expedition May 3 1858 The Binghamton Press New York Utica Man Linked East with West John Butterfield Established Overland Mail Route Half a Century Ago March 23 1909 Frank Norris Historian National Park Service Desert Tracks Butterfield Overland Mail pp 15 20 For a more comprehensive history concerning this subject see Gerald T Ahnert Butterfield Makes the Southern Overland Trail His Own The report has been requested by many organizations Copies have been supplied to National Park Service Historian Frank Norris Dr Aaron Wright Archaeology Southwest Tucson San Diego History Center Arizona Historical Society Archives Tucson Arizona Oneida Historical Society Oneida New York and Benson Visitors Center Benson Arizona Waterman L Ormsby The Butterfield Overland Mail Only Through Passenger on the First Westbound Stage Edited by Lyle H Wright and Johnson M Bynum The Huntington Library San Marino California 1991 p 42 Ormsby p 44 Italics added for emphasis Ormsby p 44 Goddard Bailey Special Agent to Hon A V Brown P M Washington D C The Senate of the United States Second Session Thirty Fifth Congress 1858 59 Postmaster General Appendix Great Overland Mail Washington D C October 1858 pp 742 743 Contract with J Butterfield and Co The Executive Documents Printed by Order of the Senate of the United States Second Session Thirty Fifth Congress 1858 59 Washington 1859 p 4 Ormsby p 77 William A Wallace The Stations Daily Alta California June 10 1860 Ormsby p 33 The Executive Documents Printed by Order of the Senate of the United States First Session Thirty Sixth Contress 1859 60 Colonel Bonneville to the General in chief Headquarters Department of New Mexico Santa Fe July 15 1859 Washington 1860 p 300 Lieut Col E E Eyre The War of the Rebellion Series I Volume L Fort Thorn Arizona July 6 1862 p 121 Evening Star Washington D C October 11 1858 p 2 Sacramento Daily Union October 29 1859 italics added for emphasis Wright Historic Places Appendix A p 821 Richardson Butterfield Overland Mail As of 1858 the route extended from San Francisco to Los Angeles thence by Fort Yuma California and Tucson Arizona to Franklin Texas present El Paso The Butterfield Overland Mail Route Lucian Wood Road Segment Archived February 1 2014 at the Wayback Machine History amp Architecture Arkansas Historic Preservation Program New York Herald Sunday July 22 1860 Special Instructions to Conductors Agents Drivers amp Employees John Butterfield Order No 8 A copy of these instructions was published in The Butterfield Overland Mail by Waterman L Ormsby Waterman L Ormsby The Butterfield Overland Mail p 55 John M Farwell Daily Alta California San Francisco Letter from our Overland Correspondent Tuesday November 16 1858 The Western Horseman The Mud Wagon John and Mildred Frizzell May 1976 p 140 The Buffalo Courier Buffalo New York Saturday June 26 1858 Sacramento Daily Union California July 31 1858 Special Collections Tuck Library New Hampshire Historical Society Concord New Hampshire Historian Gerald T Ahnert visited the archives twice and found that the original order book for June and July 1858 was missing This was the time period for Butterfield s order G Bailey Report of the Postmaster General The Senate of the United States Second Session Thirty Fifth Congress 1858 59 Washington 1858 p 741 The Memphis Daily Appeal Tennessee July 13 1858 reprinted from the Fort Smith Herald Arkansas The Memphis Daily Appeal Tennessee July 21 1858 reprinted from the Fort Smith Times Arkansas Waterman L Ormsby The Butterfield Overland Mail p 127 Waterman L Ormsby The Butterfield Overland Mail pp 17 18 Waterman L Ormsby The Butterfield Overland Mail pp 49 53 55 66 68 94 123 124 139 Sacramento Daily Union California October 13 1858 The article was taken from Memphis Appeal which published the particulars of an interview had with Mr J T Chidester a member of the firm of Chidester Reeside amp Co upon the western end of the route between Memphis and Fort Smith who came down to superintend the departure of the first train Des Arc Citizen Arkansas Friday September 16 1858 Sacramento Daily Union California October 13 1858 Article reprinted from The Memphis Appeal Tennessee Waterman L Ormsby The Butterfield Overland Mail p 94 Waterman L Ormsby The Butterfield Overland Mail p 14 John M Farwell Daily Alta California San Francisco Letter from our Overland Correspondent Tuesday November 16 1858 Gerald T Ahnert The Carriage Journal Surviving the Ride on a Butterfield Stagecoach Volume 53 Number 4 August 2015 pp 220 225 This article tells correspondents humorous accounts about riding on Butterfield s stages Frank Norris Desert Tracks Butterfield Overland Trail January 2015 This article is about the proposal for the Butterfield National Historic Trail Tri Weekly Commonwealth Frankfort Kentucky Later from Texas Fort Smith Feb 20 February 22 1861 Edwin R Purple The New York State Genealogical and Biographical Record New York July 1879 For a more comprehensive history concerning this subject see Gerald T Ahnert Butterfield s Overland Mail Company Stagecoaches and Celerity Wagons on the Southern Overland Trail 1858 1861 The report has been requested by many organizations Copies have been supplied to National Park Service Historian Frank Norris Dr Aaron Wright Archaeology Southwest Tucson San Diego History Center Arizona Historical Society Archives Tucson Arizona Oneida Historical Society Oneida New York and Benson Visitors Center Benson Arizona G Bailey Report of the Postmaster General Appendix p 739 the time the stage left San Francisco amp 744 the total number of hours to St Louis Waterman L Ormsby The Butterfield Overland Mail p 9 John Butterfield Overland Mail Company Through Time Schedule between St Louis Mo Memphis Tenn amp San Francisco Cal No 1 Sep 16th 1858 San Francisco Bulletin California December 1 1858 This ad appeared until January 10 1858 San Francisco Bulletin January 11 1859 Bailey Great Overland Mail Postmaster General The Senate of the United States Second Session Thirty Fifth Congress 1858 59 Washington 1858 pp 742 743 National Park Service Historian Frank Norris Desert Tracks January 2015 p 17 Contract with Overland Mail Company Report of the Postmaster General Senate 46th Congress 3d Session Ex Doc No 21 p 7 https books google com books id AqEZAAAAYAAJ amp pg RA14 PA1 amp dq 22contract with overland mail company 22 46th congress amp hl en amp sa X amp ved 0ahUKEwjw IPK5 XdAhUSPq0KHXQXDoIQuwUIKTAA v onepage amp q 22contract 20with 20overland 20mail 20company 22 20 2046th 20congress amp f false Waddell F Smith The Smoke Signal The Pony Express The Overland Mail Spring 1968 No 17 published by The Corral of the Westerners Tucson Arizona Note This article by the grandson of one of the Pony Express owners is an excellent study of the Pony Express becoming part of the Overland Mail Company contract pp 153 154 Waterman Lilly Ormsby 18341919 Ormsby org Archived from the original on July 27 2011 Retrieved February 6 2011 Kirby Sanders Butterfield Overland Trail Friends facebook site Sanders was the administer of the site until his death The site is for historians interested in the Butterfield Trail as well as for the public https www facebook com groups 338802216162970 Waddell F Smith The Smoke Signal The Pony Express The Overland Mail Spring 1968 No 17 published by The Corral of the Westerners Tucson Arizona Note This article by the grandson of one of the Pony Express owners is an excellent study of the Overland Mail Company s history Contract with Overland Mail Company Report of the Postmaster General Senate 35th Congress 2d Session Ex Doc No 48 1861 March 12 Ordered that the overland mail service on route 12578 be discontinued p 4 Sacramento Daily Union California April 5 1861 Letter from St Louis from our Special Correspondent St Louis March 19 1861 Daily Alta California San Francisco Sunday April 14 1861 Root The Overland Stage to California p 42 The stock coaches etc on the southern route were pulled off and accordingly moved north and by act of Congress on July 1 1861 the route between St Joseph and Placerville having been duly equipped for a daily line went into operation It took about three months to make the transfer of stages and stock and to build a number of new stations secure hay and grain and get everything in readiness for operating a six times a week mail line The new line was designated by the post office department as the Central Overland California Route Sacramento Daily Union California June 11 1861 Letter from Salt Lake From our Special Correspondent Note The complete article can be accessed by the following link https cdnc ucr edu cgi bin cdnc a d amp d SDU18610611 amp e en 20 1 txt txIN 1 Basil C Pearce The Jackass Mail San Antonio and San Diego Mail Line The Journal of San Diego History San Diego Historical Society Quarterly Spring 1969 Volume 15 Number 2 Patricia Heintzelman and Charles Snell 1975 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Oak Grove Butterfield Station National Park Service accessed 18 November 2009 Butterfield Overland Mail from the Handbook of Texas Online ParkPlanning Butterfield Overland Trail Special Resource Study parkplanning nps gov Retrieved January 1 2023 Butterfield Trail gets national historic designation Arkansas Online December 23 2022 Retrieved January 1 2023 BUTTERFIELD OVERLAND NATIONAL HISTORIC TRAIL DESIGNATION ACT Congressional Record Vol 168 No 200 Congress gov December 22 2022 Bibliography editAhnert Gerald T The Butterfield Trail and Overland Mail Company in Arizona 1858 1861 Canastota Publishing Co Inc Canastota New York 2011 This book is a comprehensive account of the Butterfield Trail in Arizona Ahnert Gerald T The Cochise County Historical Journal A Cochise County Historical Publication Vol 46 No 1 Spring Summer 2016 50th Anniversary Issue All articles were by Gerald T Ahnert concerning the history of Butterfield s Overland Mail Company Ahnert Gerald T Butterfield Makes the Southern Overland Trail His Own The Architects of the Butterfield Trail Marquis L Kenyon and John Butterfield Jr add a Personal Touch to Arizona Revised Edition 2017 NoBottomGulch Publications Syracuse NY Hackler George The Butterfield Trail in New Mexico Yucca Enterprises 2005 This book is a comprehensive account of the Butterfield Trail in New Mexico Ely Glen Sample The Texas Frontier and The Butterfield Overland Mail 1858 1861 University of Oklahoma Press 2016 This book is a comprehensive account of the Butterfield Trail in Texas Smith Waddell F The Smoke Signal The Pony Express The Overland Mail Spring 1968 No 17 published by The Corral of the Westerners Tucson Arizona Note This article by the grandson of one of the Pony Express owners is an excellent study of the Overland Mail Company and Pony Express history Richardson Rupert N Butterfield Overland Mail from the Handbook of Texas Online Retrieved 2006 08 22 Root Frank The Overland Stage to California Topeka Kansas W Y Morgan 1901 1 Wright Muriel H Historic Places on the Old Stage Line from Fort Smith to Red River Appendix A Chronicles of Oklahoma 11 2 June 1933 821 822 accessed August 16 2006 Hafen L R R 2004 The overland mail 1849 1869 promoter of settlement precursor of railroads Archived September 29 2007 at the Wayback Machine Norman University of Oklahoma Press Butterfield J Fargo W G amp Holland A 1857 Letter to the postmaster general in relations to the overland mail to California Archived September 29 2007 at the Wayback Machine Butterfield J W 1857 Skeleton map of the overland mail route to California Route adopted by the department traced in green Route proposed by John Butterfield and others who were the lowest bidders in red Archived September 29 2007 at the Wayback Machine Overland Mail Company amp Butterfield J 1858 Overland Mail Company through time schedule between St Louis Mo Memphis Tenn amp San Francisco Cal Archived September 29 2007 at the Wayback Machine S l The Company Reed M amp Pourade R F 1966 The colorful Butterfield Overland Stage Reproductions in color of 20 paintings by Marjorie Reed from the collection of James S Copley Archived September 26 2007 at the Wayback Machine Palm Desert Calif Best West Publications Further reading editSwensen Henry Edward 1911 The overland mail and passenger service The overland mail and passenger service p 156 E book Greene A C 900 Miles on the Butterfield Trail Denton University of North Texas Press 1994 Project MUSE ISBN 978 1574412130 OCLC 835770429External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Butterfield Overland Mail Company Butterfield Overland National Historic Trail Desert USA com John Butterfield Butterfield Overland Mail Unfortunately this article is not primary source reference and contains some errors Wells Fargo Co did not take over Butterfield s Overland Mail Company Over land com Official Millennium Trail The Overland Trail Archived May 16 2011 at the Wayback Machine 1958 Overland Mail Centennial U S commemorative stamp Panning for history along Cache la Poudre River The Moultrie News Charleston SC Archived 2019 08 22 at the Wayback Machine Article about the Central Overland Trail Texas Historical Society Butterfield Overland Mail Company in Bridgeport Archived 2011 09 11 at the Wayback Machine Butterfield Express under the Confederate States of America Portals nbsp Arizona nbsp Arkansas nbsp California nbsp History nbsp Missouri nbsp New Mexico nbsp Oklahoma nbsp Roads nbsp Texas Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Butterfield Overland Mail amp oldid 1216640255, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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