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P.O. Box 19423
Lenexa,
KS 66285
913-708-5119
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KANSAS LEGENDS
OF AH'S
Haunted Hollenberg
Station |
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Hollenberg
Station Today, September,
2005, Kathy Weiser
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“In
mid-century America, communication between St. Joseph on the fringe of
western settlement and gold mining communities of California challenged
the bold and made skeptical the timid. Into this picture rode the Pony
Express. In rain and in snow, in sleet and in hail over moonlit
prairie, down tortuous mountain path . . . pounding pony feet knitted
together the ragged edges of a rising nation.” - Frank S. Popplewell
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Five
miles northeast of Hanover,
Kansas
is the only remaining
Pony
Express stop still standing in its original location. Built
on Cottonwood Creek in 1857 by Gerat H. Hollenberg, this station was
also the largest stop along the
Pony
Express route. Intending to capitalize on the many wagon
trains passing his way on the
Oregon-California Trail,
Hollenberg’s six-room building initially served as a grocery store,
tavern, and an unofficial post office. Three years later it
became a
Pony Express station and later a stage coach station.
The
Pony
Express Route, which ran 2,000 miles from St Joseph,
Missouri
to Sacramento,
California
was in operation for only eighteen months, from April 1860 through
October, 1861. Amazingly, these young riders carried
approximately 35,000 pieces of mail over more than 650,000 miles
during this time and it is said they only lost one sack of mail during
this time.
Before
the Pony
Express, the railroads and telegraph lines extended no further
west than
St. Joseph,
Missouri
and mail traveled west by stagecoach and wagons, a trip that could
take months, if it arrived at all. The
Pony
Express alleviated this problem with riders who could dramatically
reduce the amount of time it took for the mail to be delivered.
But, it was a dangerous job, fraught with
Indian
attacks, rough terrain and severe weather.

The First Ride by Charles
Hargens, hangs in the
Pony Express
Museum in
St. Joseph,
Missouri
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For this
reason, a
Pony Express an 1860 advertisement in
California
read: “Wanted. Young, skinny, wiry fellows not over 18. Must
be expert riders, willing to risk death daily. Orphans preferred.”
Most of the riders were around 20, but there was one that was only 11 and
the oldest rider was in his mid-40’s. Usually, they weighed about
120 pounds. One Hundred, eighty-three men rode for the
Pony Express,
each receiving $100 per month in pay. Riding in a relay fashion,
each rider would cover about 75-100 miles before another rider took his
place on the route. However, rider’s received fresh horses every
10-15 miles. The entire one-way trip would take about ten days.
While the
Pony Express
dramatically improved the communication between the east and west, it was
a financial disaster for its owners. Hoping to gain a million dollar
government mail contract, the Central Overland
California
and Pikes Peak Express Company spent about $700,000 on the project, losing
about $200,000 of their investment. The owners failed to gain the
million dollar contract and when the telegraph was completed in October,
1861, the company declared bankruptcy and closed down.
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Afterwards, most of the 163 stations fell into ruins but
somehow the
Hollenberg Station managed to survive. In 1869, the town of
Hanover was founded and its residents made every effort to preserve the
old station. The building is now located on a state historical park
and operates as a museum and visitor’s center.
However,
according to many visitors and staff members, some
Pony Express
riders have chosen to linger at the station long after the building ceased
to serve the
Pony Express. Many claim to have heard the sounds of pounding
hoofs thundering through the night and the distant sounds of young men
calling out as their phantom mounts near the station. Others have
even claimed to have seen the riders. Witnesses also report the
occurrence of many strange sounds and cold spots within the building.
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Inside the
Hollenberg
Station today, September, 2005,
Kathy Weiser
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Scenic view of the
Hollenberg
Station from the backside,
September, 2005, Kathy Weiser. |
Hollenberg
Station is located four miles north of U.S. 36 on K-148, and one mile east
on K-243 in Hanover,
Kansas.
Hours are 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Wednesday-Saturday and 1:00-5:00 p.m. on
Sunday.
January, 2004
Also See:
Pony Express
- Fasted Mail Across the West
Tales & Trails of
the American West |
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Pony Express
Riders
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