04/16/2026
In the early 1850s, before reliable roads crossed the Sierra Nevada, 37-year-old Miguel Santos carried the U.S. Mail on foot and by mule over dangerous mountain passes. He made the 120-mile journey every month, crossing deep snow in winter and swollen rivers in spring.
He never missed a delivery, even when blizzards buried the trails. In 1857, during an early heavy snowfall, Miguel found a stranded mail sack that another carrier had dropped. He carried both sacks the last 40 miles on his back so families on the other side would get their letters before Christmas.
When the first stagecoach line finally opened, Miguel was there to watch it pass. He patted the lead horse and said, “You have wheels now, but for years the mail had only my feet — and they never failed.