Handcart to Pony Express, 1856-61
In 1856, in an effort to reduce the cost of
emigration to Utah, the Mormons introduced the handcart plan.
Two-wheeled handcarts, similar to those once used by street sweepers,
were constructed of Iowa hickory and oak. One cart was assigned to each
four or five converts who walked and pushed or pulled their carts over
the long trek from the railhead at Iowa City to the Salt Lake Valley.
Livestock was driven with the parties and at times 1 ox-drawn wagon to
each 100 emigrants was provided to carry additional baggage and
supplies.
The first handcart parties were very successful, but
the last two, in 1856, started too late in the summer and were snowed in
near Devil's Gate. There, more than 200 of the 1,000 or more in the two
parties perished from cold and hunger before the survivors could be
rescued by wagon trains sent out from Utah. From 1856 to 1860 some 3,000
Mormons made the journey to Utah in 10 handcart companies, and to these
footsore travelers Fort Laramie was indeed a haven in the
wilderness.
Early in 1857, the War Department decided to abandon
Fort Laramie, but events forced the cancellation of the order before it
could be carried out, and the fort again demonstrated its strategic
importance. First, it served as a supply base for a punitive expedition
led by Col. E. V. Sumner against the Cheyennes between the Platte and
Arkansas Rivers. Then, as that campaign drew to an inconclusive end, the
fort became a vital base for the Army which marched toward Utah that
fall to subdue the reportedly rebellious Mormons.
By the next year, the Utah Campaign involved some
6,000 troops, half of whom were in or near Utah, with Fort Laramie their
nearest sure source of supply.
In spite of this warlike activity, thousands of
emigrants continued to roll westward by covered wagon, the great travel
medium of the plains. To these the fort was a vital way station, as it
was to the great firm of Russell, Majors, and Waddell, freighting
contractors who carried supplies to the Army in Utah. In 1858, this
enterprise alone involved 3,500 wagons, 40,000 oxen, 1,000 mules, and
4,000 men.
Beginning in 1850, mail service of varying frequency
and reliability linked Fort Laramie with the States to the east and Salt
Lake City to the west. Interrupted in the summer of 1857 by the Utah
Campaign, a new and improved weekly mail service was organized in 1858
bringing news only 12 days old from the Missouri River to the fort.
In 1858, the discovery of gold at Cherry Creek, 200
miles south of Fort Laramie, precipitated the Colorado gold rush. That
winter Fort Laramie was the nearest link between the gold miners
clustered about the site of Denver, Colo., and the outside world. An
informal mail express to the fort was organized and carried by old
trappers.
These developments were soon overshadowed by the
spectacular pony express. The first westbound rider galloped into Fort
Laramie on April 6, 1860, just 3 days out from St. Joseph, Mo. This
remarkable system of relays of riders and ponies carried up to 10 pounds
of mail from St. Joseph to San Francisco in 13 days, at the rate of $5
in gold for a half-ounce letter. Later, a Government subsidy, begun on
July 1, 1861, reduced the rate to $1 for one-half ounce. On that same
date daily overland mail coaches began operating from St. Joseph to San
Francisco, via Fort Laramie, on an 18-day schedule.
Meanwhile, the poles and wires of the first
transcontinental telegraph were stretching out across the plains and
mountains. Reaching Fort Laramie in September, the telegraph was
completed to Salt Lake City and connected with the line from the west
coast on October 24, 1861. That date also marked the end of the pony
express which, although a financial failure that cost W. H. Russell his
fortune, had proved the practicability of the central route to
California for year-round travel.
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