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Date: | Thu, 1 May 2003 21:07:50 EDT |
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Hi all,
Stage coach stops may have been 10 miles apart, but it was for changing
horses, watering horses, eating meals and soforth. Most of them did not have
much room for sleeping if any.
Here is something that might be of interest.
From:
http://www.linecamp.com/museums/americanwest/western_clubs/butterfield_overlan
d_stage_company/butterfield_overland_stage_company.html
Butterfield Overland Stage began rolling on September 15, 1858, twice
weekly mail service began. A Butterfield Overland Concord Stagecoach was
started in San Francisco and another Overland Stage in Tipton, Missouri they
ran over the better roads. As the going got rougher, the passengers and
mail were transferred to " celerity wagons " designed for the roughest
conditions
Each run encompassed the 2,812 miles and had to be completed in 25 days
or less in order to qualify for the $600,000 government grant for mail
service. The western fare one way was $200 with most stages arriving 22
days later at its final destination
Kathy Rapp
OCR Specialist
Don't retype it, OCR it!
Taking the printed word and placing it into an editable format.
http://www.katscan-ocr.com
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