Twenty mule team
Encyclopedia : T : TW : TWE : Twenty mule team
- For information on the cleaning product, please see Twenty-Mule-Team Borax.
Twenty mule teams were teams of eighteen mules and two horses attached to large wagons that ferried borax out of Death Valley from 1883 to 1889. They traveled from mines to the nearest railroad spur, 165 miles (275 km) away in Mojave, California.
The wagons were among the largest ever pulled by horses, designed to carry 10 short tons (9 metric tons) of borax ore at a time. The rear wheels measured seven feet (2.1 m) high, with tires made of one-inch-thick (25 mm) iron. The wagons beds measured 16 feet long and were 6 feet deep (4.9 m long, 1.8 m deep); constructed of solid oak, they weighed 7,800 pounds (3,500 kg) empty; when loaded with ore and a 500 U.S. gallon (1900 L) water tank was added the total weight of the mule train was 73,200 pounds (33.2 metric tons or 36 1/2 short tons). With the mules were the caravan stretched over 100 feet (30 m).
The teams hauled more than 20 million pounds (9,000 metric tons) of borax out of Death Valley in the six years of the operation.
External link
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
