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Lot 104

Wells, Fargo & Co, 1861, 10c green entire (U18), with printed “1/2 Ounce Paid from St. Joseph to Placerville per Pony Express” printed frank in red, script “Agent of Pony Express” alongside, indicia cancelled with black four-ring target, postmarked with “New-York / Oct / 26” double-circle c.d.s., circular “Pony Express / The Central Overland California & Pikes Peak / Express Company / Oct 31 / St. Joseph” datestamp, to De Witt, Kettle & Co in San Francisco, with embossed return address of the company’s New York office on back flap, endorsed “the last kick of the Pony” in manuscript at top, docketed on reverse “the last ‘Pony Express’ received” and dated “Rec’d Nov. 21st 1861”, small piece torn from back corner, some light uniform aging, a striking cover, intended for the final westbound journey of the Pony Express. (FKW Census W70).

Note: The completion of the telegraph line to New York in October, 1861, heralded the end of the Pony Express as the most effective method for the time-sensitive conveyance of news. The cover here, postmarked in New York only a few days after completion of the telegraph, was sent with the intention of transport by Pony Express; news of the service’s cancellation had likely not yet been received. Frajola, Kramer, and Walske conclude that this cover would have been part of the mails which were bagged in St. Joseph by the Express agent as pony mail, but put on the daily overland mail stagecoaches from Atchison. Though ultimately not delivered via Pony Express, it remains a fascinating and remarkable cover, and an artifact of the final days of an iconic era of American history.