Inscription
In 1858, American Express Company co-founder John Butterfield secured a $600,000 government contract to establish the first transcontinental passenger and mail delivery route. Butterfield Overland Mail Co. stagecoaches carried passengers and mail from St. Louis to San Francisco, entering New Mexico near El Paso and following the Rio Grande north to La Mesilla where the trial veered west.
The 1,795-mile journey took 21-22 days. The service was discontinued in 1861 due to federal cutbacks and the advance of the Confederates into New Mexico.
Location
Sources
More markers in Dona Ana
Bartlett Garcia Continental Survey Point
Picacho Hills, NM
On April 24, 1851, John Russell Bartlett for the United States and Pedro Garcia-Conde for the Republic of Mexico, erected near here a...
Disappearance of Albert J. Fountain and his son Henry
Las Cruces, NM
Albert Jennings Fountain was a Civil War veteran, New Mexico legislator and prominent lawyer.
Dona Ana
This site is first mentioned as a paraje along the Camino Real when the Spanish rested near here as they retreated from New Mexico...
El Camino Real the King’s Highway
Juan de Oñate, first governor of New Mexico, passed near here with his colonizing expedition in May 1598.
El Paso Del Rio Del Norte
This canyon cut here by the Rio Grande marks the crossing of the historic Camino Real, or Royal Road, to La Tierra Adentra.
