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The Story of the Pony Express is a book written by Glenn D. Bradley. This tiny book's sole goal is to provide a reliable, practical, and readable overview of the Pony Express. This admirable endeavor made a significant contribution to history and showed what the American spirit is capable of. It demonstrated that not all of the "heroes of '61" engaged in armed conflict south of the Mason-Dixon line. Strangely enough, hardly much formal writing has been done on the subject. The author has attempted to highlight and make accessible to all readers the more significant details of the Pony Express,…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The Story of the Pony Express is a book written by Glenn D. Bradley. This tiny book's sole goal is to provide a reliable, practical, and readable overview of the Pony Express. This admirable endeavor made a significant contribution to history and showed what the American spirit is capable of. It demonstrated that not all of the "heroes of '61" engaged in armed conflict south of the Mason-Dixon line. Strangely enough, hardly much formal writing has been done on the subject. The author has attempted to highlight and make accessible to all readers the more significant details of the Pony Express, including its conception, structure, and development, its historical significance, its background, and some anecdotes related to its operation. The subject introduces you to a wide range of fascinating material, much of it irrelevant but nevertheless fascinating. This information is disjointed and illogical on its own. It would be simple to fill many pages with western adventures that have no particular connection to the main subject.
Autorenporträt
Author Glenn D. Bradley was born on April 12, 1884, in Kinderhook, Michigan, in the United States. Later, in 1930, he passed away in Toledo, Ohio, in the USA. Bradley graduated from the University of Michigan with a Ph.D. in history. He worked as a history teacher in a number of high schools before rising to the position of associate professor at Toledo, Ohio's Municipal University. He also briefly taught English at Michigan University. He belonged to a number of organizations dedicated to the progress of history. In Toledo, Ohio, on January 4, 1930, he passed away. The novels Winning the Southwest: A Story of Conquest (about 1912), The Story of the Pony Express (1913), Fort Meigs in the War of 1812 (1930), and The Story of the Santa Fe (approximately 1920) are a few examples of his writings. The Pony Express made it possible to send a message from St. Joseph, Missouri, to Sacramento, California, more quickly than ever before.