Most People Don’t Know The Pony Express Still Operates In Arizona
By Monica Spencer|Published January 21, 2017
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Monica Spencer
Author
Monica is a Diné (Navajo) freelance writer and photographer based in the Southwest. Born in Gallup and raised in Phoenix, she is Tódich'ii'nii (Bitter Water People) and Tsi'naajinii (Black Streak Wood People). Monica is a staff writer for Only In Your State, photo editor for The Mesa Legend, and previously a staff writer for The Navajo Post. You can reach her at monica.d.spencer@gmail.com.
Reminiscent of another time, the Pony Express was a mid-19th century mail delivery operation that became a legend in its own right. Running for approximately 18 months between 1860 and 1861, the mail service offered a quicker way of delivering mail between the coasts, boasting of a short ten-day delivery. The service was short-lived and originally did not run through Arizona.
That, however, hasn’t deterred some people from figuring what a Pony Express route through Arizona could have looked more than 150 years ago. In fact, you can witness an operating Pony Express in just a couple weeks!
Called the Hashknife Pony Express, this is the longest operating and only U.S.P.S. sanctioned Pony Express in the country, running for 58 years.
The route runs a rigorous 200 miles from Holbrook to Scottsdale for several days each winter and it becomes quite the celebration for each town it passes through. The week-long festivity includes parades, luncheons, breakfasts, meet and greet events, and, of course, a relay mail carrying.
It runs from Holbrook down to Heber-Overgaard then down the Rim to Payson, following the highways. Eventually the riders cross the Verde River and ride into Fountain Hills and Scottsdale to deliver the mail and participate in the end celebrations.
A hashknife is the name of an Old West cooking utensil! The knife was used by cooks in chuck wagons to quickly chop up meat that would later be served to cowboys.
If you’re familiar with the history of Holbrook, then the Hashknife outfit might ring a bell.
It became associated with the Aztec Land and Cattle Company since their brand depicted a hashknife standing blade side up and was featured prominently on their cattle. It also came to be linked with the cowboy gang, the Hashknife outfit which, depending on where you get your source information, gained a reputation for being a wild bunch of gunslingers and rustlers.
The name eventually came to be used by the Navajo County Sheriff’s posse in 1955 and within a couple of years it became the name for a county, then state Pony Express. From there, the present-day Hashknife Pony Express was born.
The best part of all this? You can actually have your next letter to Grandma delivered via Pony Express, complete with a commemorative stamp and some fresh mountain air.
If you want to send out a letter or two via Pony Express, see the organization’s website for details about where to drop off your letters (multiple locations). You can also visit the same site for details about the trail ride and where you can watch the riders.