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The Midway Stage Station is a historic building in Gothenburg, Nebraska.It was built in 1859, and expanded in 1860–1861. [2] Initially built as a station for the Leavenworth City & Pike's Peak Express Company, it served as a station for the Pony Express from the 1860s to the late 1870s. [2]
The Pony Express Trail runs through Gothenburg. There are two original Pony Express Stations in Gothenburg. In 1931, a station located on the Upper 96 Ranch, four miles east of Fort McPherson in Lincoln County, was donated to the city. The station was moved to Ehmen Park in central Gothenburg. [11]
Thirty-Two Mile Station Site. February 20, 1975 ... Site of stage and Pony Express station, burned by Indians in 1864 ... –Nebraska State Historical Society
Pony Express Station: Gothenburg: Dawson: Central: History: Two former Pony Express station sites [68] [69] Potter Historical Museum: Potter: Cheyenne: Nebraska Panhandle: Local history: Open by appointment [70] Prairie Country School: Murdock: Cass: Southeast: Education: website, 1890s-period one room schoolhouse Prairie Schooner Museum ...
Today, as the last vestige of the Mud Spring Station, a stone monument, inlaid with a bronze Pony Express plaque, stands at the historic site. [5] Currently, listed on the National Register of Historic Places, originally, the Pony Express Station site was donated in 1939 to the Nebraska State Historical Society, by the then site-owner, Mrs ...
April 24, 1973 (County road 107 between 68 and 70 [6: Dalton: Originally listed as "Mud Springs Pony Express Station Site"; boundaries increased on September 6, 2011 [4]: 7
Pages in category "Pony Express stations" ... Cold Springs Pony Express Station Ruins; Cove Fort; Cozad, Nebraska; D. Dayton, Nevada ... Fort Churchill State Historic ...
Rock Creek Station: Endicott: A Pony Express Station and now a State Historical Park. Setting of an 1861 gunfight between David McCanles and Wild Bill Hickok. Oak Grove Station: Oak: A Pony Express station is marked by a monument commemorating an 1864 Indian battle called the Little Blue Raid. Simonton-Smith wagon train attack site: Hastings