Statue depicting a Pony Express Rider

Pony Express National Historic Trail

Established

August 03, 1992

Nonprofit Partner

National Pony Express Association (NPEA)

Administering Agency

National Park Service

About The Trail

Founded in April 1860, the legendary Pony Express ran for only 18 months before it was rendered irrelevant by the installation of a transcontinental telegraph. Today, the Pony Express National Historic Trail marks the nearly 2000-mile route taken by Pony Express Riders during cross-country mail deliveries during the service’s tenure. Notable sites along this trail include Historic Trails Park (Marshall’s Ferry), Chimney Rock National Historic Site, and the B.F. Hastings Building in Sacramento, California. 

Western Terminus: the B.F. Hastings Building in Sacramento, California

Eastern Terminus: Pony Express National Museum in St. Joseph, Missouri

The Pony Express Trail runs westward from St. Joseph, Missouri, through Kansas, Nebraska, Colorado, Wyoming, Utah, and Nevada before ending in Sacramento, California. Incredibly, the entire trip took only about ten days for riders to complete.