Mandy the Mule
Mandy la mula
Mandy the Mule
Mandy the Mule is an icon in El Paso's history and represents the city's change from a sleepy settlement to a modern metropolis. In the 1880s a mule-drawn streetcar system was established but soon electric cars took place. Mandy pulled one of the last remaining mule-drawn streetcars until the electrification of streets made the animal-drawn vehicles needless in 1901. The restored mule car and a replica of Mandy were displayed on San Jacinto Plaza at first, and then for many years on Cleveland Square in downtown El Paso.
Report this entry
More from the same community-collection
El Paso Police officer Howell Cobb - 1904
Witness for the Defense: On the afternoon of January 15, 1904, ...
El Paso Police officer Tom Threepersons - 1921
On March 9, 1921, the El Paso Herald reported, "One Man is ...
El Paso Police Command Staff - 1975
Chief of Police Robert Minnie with staff in front of Liberty ...
El Paso Police Department - 1903
Top Row Left to Right: Chas McDonald, Will Rynerson, Jim Briggs, ...
El Paso Police K-9 handlers - 1975
El Paso Police officers Richard Edens and Marcos Payan were the ...
Tug of War in the Rio Grande - February 16, 1977
El Paso Police officer Tim Davidson managing to outwit the ...
Trolley in front of Gateway Hotel, 1960s
The image probably dates from the 1960s. It shows a trolley in ...