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
Argyria Louise White, aged 5 months
There were a number of families named White living in El Paso at ...
Henry M. Walker - Secretary of the El Paso Central Labor Union
Henry M. Walker served in 1898 in Galveston, Tex. as president ...
Yard between electric plant and warehouse looking east.
Possibly the power plant on Santa Fe St. You can see a wooden ...
Electric Power Plant looking southwest.
A beautiful brick building with power lines strung everywhere. ...
First To Graduate From El Paso's Only High School-1887
Image caption: Kate Moore was one of two members of the first ...