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Carriage

A carriage is a private four-wheeled vehicle for people and is most commonly horse-drawn. Second-hand private carriages were common public transport, the equivalent of modern cars used as taxis. Carriage suspensions are by leather strapping and, on those made in recent centuries, steel springs. Two-wheeled carriages are informal and usually owner-driven.

Carriage London 2016
Competitive driving Rennes, France 2014
The National Coach Museum in Lisbon, Portugal.

Coaches are a special category within carriages. They are carriages with four corner posts and a fixed roof.

Two-wheeled war chariots and transport vehicles such as four-wheeled wagons and two-wheeled carts were forerunners of carriages.[1][2]

In the twenty-first century, horse-drawn carriages are occasionally used for public parades by royalty and for traditional formal ceremonies. Simplified modern versions are made for tourist transport in warm countries and for those cities where tourists expect open horse-drawn carriages to be provided. Simple metal sporting versions are still made for the sport known as competitive driving.

Overview

 
Coach of an imperial family, c. 1870

The word carriage (abbreviated carr or cge) is from Old Northern French cariage, to carry in a vehicle.[3] The word car, then meaning a kind of two-wheeled cart for goods, also came from Old Northern French about the beginning of the 14th century[3] (probably derived from the Late Latin carro, a car[4]); it is also used for railway carriages and in the US around the end of the 19th century, early cars (automobiles) were briefly called horseless carriages.

History

Prehistory

Some horsecarts found in Celtic graves show hints that their platforms were suspended elastically.[5] Four-wheeled wagons were used in Bronze Age Europe, and their form known from excavations suggests that the basic construction techniques of wheel and undercarriage (that survived until the age of the motor car) were established then.[6]

Bullock carriage

A bullock carriage, also known as a bullock cart, is a large, four wheeled carriage typically pulled by oxen.[7][8] It conventionally includes a sturdy wooden tongue between the wheels, a yoke connecting the pair of oxen, a wooden platform for passengers or cargo, and large steel rimmed wooden wheels.[7][9] These carriages were first protyped in the 3rd millennium BC and predated chariots.[9][10] Evidence of both light and heavy wheeled bullock carriages have been found in sites like Mohenjo--Daro, Harappa and Chanhu-daro.[9]

Chariot

Two-wheeled carriage models have been discovered from the Indus valley civilization including twin horse drawn covered carriages resembling ekka from various sites such as Harappa, Mohenjo Daro and Chanhu Daro.[11] The earliest recorded sort of carriage was the chariot, reaching Mesopotamia as early as 1900 BC.[12] Used typically for warfare by Egyptians, the Near Easterners and Europeans, it was essentially a two-wheeled light basin carrying one or two passengers, drawn by one to two horses. The chariot was revolutionary and effective because it delivered fresh warriors to crucial areas of battle with swiftness.

Roman carriage

 
Reconstruction of a Roman traveling carriage richly decorated with bronze fittings, Romisch-Germanisches Museum, Cologne

First century BC Romans used sprung wagons for overland journeys.[13] It is likely that Roman carriages employed some form of suspension on chains or leather straps, as indicated by carriage parts found in excavations. In 2021 archaeologists discovered the remains of a ceremonial four wheel carriage, a pilentum, near the ancient Roman city of Pompeii. It is thought the pilentum may have been used in ceremonies such as weddings. The find has been described as being "in an excellent state of preservation".[14]

Ancient Chinese carriage

During the Zhou dynasty of China, the Warring States were also known to have used carriages as transportation. With the decline of these city-states and kingdoms, these techniques almost disappeared.

Medieval carriage

 
Horse-drawn wagon, c. 1455
 
A two-tiered carriage drawn by four elephants

The medieval carriage was typically a four-wheeled wagon type, with a rounded top ("tilt") similar in appearance to the Conestoga Wagon familiar from the United States. Sharing the traditional form of wheels and undercarriage known since the Bronze Age, it very likely also employed the pivoting fore-axle in continuity from the ancient world. Suspension (on chains) is recorded in visual images and written accounts from the 14th century ("chars branlant" or rocking carriages), and was in widespread use by the 15th century.[15] Carriages were largely used by royalty, aristocrats (and especially by women), and could be elaborately decorated and gilded. These carriages were usually on four wheels and were drawn by two to four horses depending on their size and status. Wood and iron were the primary materials needed to build a carriage and carriages that were used by non-royalty were covered by plain leather.

Another form of carriage was the pageant wagon of the 14th century. Historians debate the structure and size of pageant wagons; however, they are generally miniature house-like structures that rest on four to six wheels depending on the size of the wagon. The pageant wagon is significant because up until the 14th century most carriages were on two or three wheels; the chariot, rocking carriage, and baby carriage are two examples of carriages which pre-date the pageant wagon. Historians also debate whether or not pageant wagons were built with pivotal axle systems, which allowed the wheels to turn. Whether it was a four- or six-wheel pageant wagon, most historians maintain that pivotal axle systems were implemented on pageant wagons because many roads were often winding with some sharp turns. Six wheel pageant wagons also represent another innovation in carriages; they were one of the first carriages to use multiple pivotal axles. Pivotal axles were used on the front set of wheels and the middle set of wheels. This allowed the horse to move freely and steer the carriage in accordance with the road or path.

Coach

One of the great innovations in carriage history was the invention of the suspended carriage or the chariot branlant (though whether this was a Roman or medieval innovation remains uncertain). The "chariot branlant" of medieval illustrations was suspended by chains rather than leather straps as had been believed.[16][17] Suspension, whether on chains or leather, might provide a smoother ride since the carriage body no longer rested on the axles, but could not prevent swinging (branlant) in all directions. It is clear from illustrations (and surviving examples) that the medieval suspended carriage with a round tilt was a widespread European type, referred to by any number of names (car, currus, char, chariot).[citation needed]

In the early 14th century England, coaches would still have been extremely rare. They would have been unlikely to be more than a dozen, and even then to be very costly until the end of the century. These coaches would have had four six-spoke six-foot high wheels that were linked by greased axles under the body of the coach, and they had no suspension. The chassis was made from oak beam and the barrel shaped roof was covered in brightly painted leather or cloth. The interior would include seats, beds, cushions, tapestries and even rugs. They would be pulled by four to five horses.[18]

Under King Mathias Corvinus (1458–90), who enjoyed fast travel, the Hungarians developed fast road transport, and the town of Kocs between Budapest and Vienna became an important post-town, and gave its name to the new vehicle type.[19][20] The earliest illustrations of the Hungarian "Kochi-wagon" do not indicate any suspension, a body with high sides of lightweight wickerwork, and typically drawn by three horses in harness. Later models were considerably lighter and famous for a single horse being able to draw many passengers.[21]

 
"The Grand Gala Berlin", a coach constructed in Rome for pontiff Leo XII in the years 1824–1826. Gregory XVI requested some important modifications.
 
A Gala Coupé, 18th century; Royal Museums of Art and History, Brussels

The Hungarian coach spread across Europe rather quickly, in part due to Ippolito d'Este of Ferrara (1479–1529), nephew of Mathias' queen Beatrix of Aragon, who as a very junior Archbishopric of Esztergom developed a taste for Hungarian riding and took his carriage and driver back to Italy.[22] Around 1550 the "coach" made its appearance throughout the major cities of Europe, and the new word entered the vocabulary of all their languages.[23] However, the new "coach" seems to have been a fashionable concept (fast road travel for men) as much as any particular type of vehicle, and there is no obvious technological change that accompanied the innovation. As its use spread throughout Europe in the late 16th century, the coach's body structure was ultimately changed, from a round-topped tilt to the "four-poster" carriages that became standard everywhere by c.1600.[15]

Later development of the coach

 
The London-Farringdon coach, 1835

The coach had doors in the side, with an iron step protected by leather that became the "boot" in which servants might ride. The driver sat on a seat at the front, and the most important occupant sat in the back facing forwards. The earliest coaches can be seen at Veste Coburg, Lisbon, and the Moscow Kremlin, and they become a commonplace in European art. It was not until the 17th century that further innovations with steel springs and glazing took place, and only in the 18th century, with better road surfaces, was there a major innovation with the introduction of the steel C-spring.[24]

Many innovations were proposed, and some patented, for new types of suspension or other features. It was only from the 18th century that changes to steering systems were suggested, including the use of the 'fifth wheel' substituted for the pivoting fore-axle, and on which the carriage turned. Another proposal came from Erasmus Darwin, a young English doctor who was driving a carriage about 10,000 miles a year to visit patients all over England. Darwin found two essential problems or shortcomings of the commonly used light carriage or Hungarian carriage. First, the front wheels were turned by a pivoting front axle, which had been used for years, but these wheels were often quite small and hence the rider, carriage and horse felt the brunt of every bump on the road. Secondly, he recognized the danger of overturning.

A pivoting front axle changes a carriage's base from a rectangle to a triangle because the wheel on the inside of the turn is able to turn more sharply than the outside front wheel. Darwin suggested a fix for these insufficiencies by proposing a principle in which the two front wheels turn (independently of the front axle) about a centre that lies on the extended line of the back axle. This idea was later patented in 1818 as Ackermann steering. Darwin argued that carriages would then be easier to pull and less likely to overturn.

Carriage use in North America came with the establishment of European settlers. Early colonial horse tracks quickly grew into roads especially as the colonists extended their territories southwest. Colonists began using carts as these roads and trading increased between the north and south. Eventually, carriages or coaches were sought to transport goods as well as people. As in Europe, chariots, coaches and/or carriages were a mark of status. The tobacco planters of the South were some of the first Americans to use the carriage as a form of human transportation. As the tobacco farming industry grew in the southern colonies so did the frequency of carriages, coaches and wagons. Upon the turn of the 18th century, wheeled vehicle use in the colonies was at an all-time high. Carriages, coaches and wagons were being taxed based on the number of wheels they had. These taxes were implemented in the South primarily as the South had superior numbers of horses and wheeled vehicles when compared to the North. Europe, however, still used carriage transportation far more often and on a much larger scale than anywhere else in the world.

 
Tourists horse-drawn taxis in Naghsh-i Jahan Square, Esfahan.

Demise

Carriages and coaches began to disappear as use of steam propulsion began to generate more and more interest and research. Steam power quickly won the battle against animal power as is evident by a newspaper article written in England in 1895 entitled "Horseflesh vs. Steam".[25][26] The article highlights the death of the carriage as the main means of transportation.

Today

Nowadays, carriages are still used for day-to-day transport in the United States by some minority groups such as the Amish. They are also still used in tourism as vehicles for sightseeing in cities such as Bruges, Vienna, New Orleans, and Little Rock, Arkansas.

The most complete working collection of carriages can be seen at the Royal Mews in London where a large selection of vehicles is in regular use. These are supported by a staff of liveried coachmen, footmen and postillions. The horses earn their keep by supporting the work of the Royal Household, particularly during ceremonial events. Horses pulling a large carriage known as a "covered brake" collect the Yeoman of the Guard in their distinctive red uniforms from St James's Palace for Investitures at Buckingham Palace; High Commissioners or Ambassadors are driven to their audiences with the Queen in landaus; visiting heads of state are transported to and from official arrival ceremonies and members of the Royal Family are driven in Royal Mews coaches during Trooping the Colour, the Order of the Garter service at Windsor Castle and carriage processions at the beginning of each day of Royal Ascot.

Construction

Body

 
George VI and Queen Elizabeth in a landau with footmen and a postillion, riding on the near wheel horse, controlling both teams of horses. Canada, 1939

Carriages may be enclosed or open, depending on the type.[27] The top cover for the body of a carriage, called the head or hood, is often flexible and designed to be folded back when desired. Such a folding top is called a bellows top or calash. A hoopstick forms a light framing member for this kind of hood. The top, roof or second-story compartment of a closed carriage, especially a diligence, was called an imperial. A closed carriage may have side windows called quarter lights (British) as well as windows in the doors, hence a "glass coach". On the forepart of an open carriage, a screen of wood or leather called a dashboard intercepts water, mud or snow thrown up by the heels of the horses. The dashboard or carriage top sometimes has a projecting sidepiece called a wing (British). A foot iron or footplate may serve as a carriage step.

A carriage driver sits on a box or perch, usually elevated and small. When at the front, it is known as a dickey box, a term also used for a seat at the back for servants. A footman might use a small platform at the rear called a footboard or a seat called a rumble behind the body. Some carriages have a moveable seat called a jump seat. Some seats had an attached backrest called a lazyback.

The shafts of a carriage were called limbers in English dialect. Lancewood, a tough elastic wood of various trees, was often used especially for carriage shafts. A holdback, consisting of an iron catch on the shaft with a looped strap, enables a horse to back or hold back the vehicle. The end of the tongue of a carriage is suspended from the collars of the harness by a bar called the yoke. At the end of a trace, a loop called a cockeye attaches to the carriage.

In some carriage types, the body is suspended from several leather straps called braces or thoroughbraces, attached to or serving as springs.

Undercarriage

Beneath the carriage body is the undergear or undercarriage (or simply carriage), consisting of the running gear and chassis.[28] The wheels and axles, in distinction from the body, are the running gear. The wheels revolve upon bearings or a spindle at the ends of a bar or beam called an axle or axletree. Most carriages have either one or two axles. On a four-wheeled vehicle, the forward part of the running gear, or forecarriage, is arranged to permit the front axle to turn independently of the fixed rear axle. In some carriages a dropped axle, bent twice at a right angle near the ends, allows for a low body with large wheels. A guard called a dirtboard keeps dirt from the axle arm.

Several structural members form parts of the chassis supporting the carriage body. The fore axletree and the splinter bar above it (supporting the springs) are united by a piece of wood or metal called a futchel, which forms a socket for the pole that extends from the front axle. For strength and support, a rod called the backstay may extend from either end of the rear axle to the reach, the pole or rod joining the hind axle to the forward bolster above the front axle.

A skid called a drag, dragshoe, shoe or skidpan retards the motion of the wheels. A London patent of 1841 describes one such apparatus: "An iron-shod beam, slightly longer than the radius of the wheel, is hinged under the axle so that when it is released to strike the ground the forward momentum of the vehicle wedges it against the axle". The original feature of this modification was that instead of the usual practice of having to stop the carriage to retract the beam and so lose useful momentum the chain holding it in place is released (from the driver's position) so that it is allowed to rotate further in its backwards direction, releasing the axle. A system of "pendant-levers" and straps then allows the beam to return to its first position and be ready for further use.[29]

A catch or block called a trigger may be used to hold a wheel on an incline.

A horizontal wheel or segment of a wheel called a fifth wheel sometimes forms an extended support to prevent the carriage from tipping; it consists of two parts rotating on each other about the kingbolt or perchbolt above the fore axle and beneath the body. A block of wood called a headblock might be placed between the fifth wheel and the forward spring.

Fittings

Many of these fittings were carried over to horseless carriages and evolved into the modern elements of automobiles. During the Brass Era they were often the same parts on either type of carriage (i.e., horse-drawn or horseless).

  • Upholstery (trimming): traditionally similar to the upholstery of furniture; evolved into car interior upholstery such as car seats and door trim panels
  • Carriage lamps: typically oil lamps for centuries, although carbide lamps and battery-powered electric lamps were also used in the late 19th and early 20th centuries; evolved into car headlamps
  • Trunk: a luggage trunk serving the same purpose as, and which gave its name to, later car trunks
  • Toolbox: a small box with enough hand tools to make simple repairs on the roadside
  • Blankets: in winter, blankets for the driver and passengers and often horse blankets as well
  • Running board: a step to assist in climbing onto the carriage and also sometimes a place for standing passengers
  • Shovel: useful for mud and snow in the roadway, to free the carriage from being stuck; was especially important in the era when most roads were dirt roads, often with deep ruts
  • Buggy whip or coachwhip: whips for the horses. For obvious reasons, this is one of the components of carriage equipment that did not carry over from horse-drawn carriages to horseless carriages, and that fact has made such whips one of the prototypical or stereotypical examples of products whose manufacture is subject to disruptive innovation

Carriage terminology

A person whose business was to drive a carriage was a coachman. A servant in livery called a footman or piquer formerly served in attendance upon a rider or was required to run before his master's carriage to clear the way. An attendant on horseback called an outrider often rode ahead of or next to a carriage. A carriage starter directed the flow of vehicles taking on passengers at the curbside. A hackneyman hired out horses and carriages. When hawking wares, a hawker was often assisted by a carriage.

Upper-class people of wealth and social position, those wealthy enough to keep carriages, were referred to as carriage folk or carriage trade.

Carriage passengers often used a lap robe as a blanket or similar covering for their legs, lap and feet. A buffalo robe, made from the hide of an American bison dressed with the hair on, was sometimes used as a carriage robe; it was commonly trimmed to rectangular shape and lined on the skin side with fabric. A carriage boot, fur-trimmed for winter wear, was made usually of fabric with a fur or felt lining. A knee boot protected the knees from rain or splatter.

A horse especially bred for carriage use by appearance and stylish action is called a carriage horse; one for use on a road is a road horse. One such breed is the Cleveland Bay, uniformly bay in color, of good conformation and strong constitution. Horses were broken in using a bodiless carriage frame called a break or brake.

A carriage dog or coach dog is bred for running beside a carriage.

A roofed structure that extends from the entrance of a building over an adjacent driveway and that shelters callers as they get in or out of their vehicles is known as a carriage porch or porte cochere. An outbuilding for a carriage is a coach house, which was often combined with accommodation for a groom or other servants.

A livery stable kept horses and usually carriages for hire. A range of stables, usually with carriage houses (remises) and living quarters built around a yard, court or street, is called a mews.

A kind of dynamometer called a peirameter indicates the power necessary to haul a carriage over a road or track.

Competitive driving

 
A 'marathon wagon' at the 2017 FEI European Championships

In most European and English-speaking countries, driving is a competitive equestrian sport. Many horse shows host driving competitions for a particular style of driving, breed of horse, or type of vehicle. Show vehicles are usually carriages, carts, or buggies and, occasionally, sulkies or wagons. Modern high-technology carriages are made purely for competition by companies such as Bennington Carriages.[30] in England.

Terminology varies: the simple, lightweight two- or four-wheeled show vehicle common in many nations is called a "cart" in the USA, but a "carriage" in Australia.

Internationally, there is intense competition in the all-round test of driving: combined driving, also known as horse-driving trials, an equestrian discipline regulated by the Fédération Équestre Internationale (International Equestrian Federation) with national organizations representing each member country. World championships are conducted in alternate years, including single-horse, horse pairs and four-in-hand championships. The World Equestrian Games, held at four-year intervals, also includes a four-in-hand competition.

For pony drivers, the World Combined Pony Championships are held every two years and include singles, pairs and four-in-hand events.

Carriage collections

 
In Vienna, rental landaus called Fiacres carry tourists around the old city.

Argentina

  • Muhfit (Museo Histórico Fuerte Independencia Tandil), Tandil.[31]

Australia

  • Cobb + Co Museum – National Carriage Collection, Queensland Museum, Toowoomba, Queensland.[32]
  • The National Trust of Australia (Victoria) Carriage Collection

Austria

Belgium

  • VZW Rijtuigmuseum Bree, Bree, Limburg[34]
  • De Groom Carriage Center Bruges, Bruges, West Flanders
  • Koetsenmuseum Verdonckt
  • Royal Museum for Art and History Brussels (KMKG/MRAH)

Brazil

 
Permanent exhibit featuring carriages of the imperial era at the National Historical Museum of Brazil

Canada

Denmark

Egypt

France

Germany

Italy

  • Museo "Le Carrozze d'Epoca", Rome.
  • Museo Civico delle Carrozze d'Epoca di Codroipo.
  • Museo Civico delle Carrozze d'Epoca, San Martino, Udine.
  • Museo della Carrozza di Macerata.
  • Museo delle Carrozze del Quirinale, Rome.
  • Museo delle Carrozze di Palazzo Farnese, Piacenza.
  • Museo delle Carrozze, Catanzaro.
  • Museo delle Carrozze, Naples.

Japan

  • Japanese Imperial Household Agency, Tokyo

Netherlands

Poland

 
Łańcut Castle, the exhibit of carriages

Portugal

Spain

  • Carriage Museum, Seville

United Kingdom

United States

 
Crossing the Mississippi on the ice, 19th century

Types of horse-drawn carriages

An almost bewildering variety of horse-drawn carriages existed. Arthur Ingram's Horse Drawn Vehicles since 1760 in Colour lists 325 types with a short description of each. By the early 19th century one's choice of carriage was only in part based on practicality and performance; it was also a status statement and subject to changing fashions. The types of carriage included the following:


See also

Notes

  1. ^ Tarr, Laszlo. The History of the Carriage. Arco Pub. Co, 1969.
  2. ^ Piggott, Stuart. Wagon, Chariot and Carriage: Symbol the Status in the History of Transport. Thames and Hudson, London, 1992
  3. ^ a b Oxford English Dictionary 1933: Car, Carriage
  4. ^ Wedgwood, Hensleigh (1855). "On False Etymologies". Transactions of the Philological Society (6): 71.
  5. ^ Raimund Karl (2003). [Deliberations on Traffic in the Ironage Celtic Culture] (PDF) (in German). Universität Wien. Archived from the original (.PDF) on 11 April 2008. Retrieved 30 January 2008. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  6. ^ Stuart Piggott, The Earliest Wheeled Transport (1983); C.F.E Pare, Wagons and Wagon-Graves of the Early Iron Age in Central Europe. (Oxford, 1992).
  7. ^ a b "Bullock carts | Infopedia". eresources.nlb.gov.sg. Retrieved 17 November 2021.
  8. ^ Baeder, J., Nagaraj , V., & Strom, M. (2016). Technical Report. University of Maryland.
  9. ^ a b c Raghavan, M. R., & Nagendra, H. R. (1979, December). A study on bullock carts. Part 1. Engineering analysis of the two-wheel bullock cart design. Bangalore, India; Indian Institute of Science.
  10. ^ Wolpert, Stanley (1994). An Introduction to India. p. 5. ISBN 9780140168709.
  11. ^ Piggott, Stuart (1970). "Copper Vehicle-Models in the Indus Civilization". The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland. 102 (2): 200–202. doi:10.1017/S0035869X00128394. JSTOR 25203212. S2CID 163967541.
  12. ^ Tarr, László (1969). The history of the carriage. Arco Pub. Co. ISBN 9780668018715. earliest carriage was the chariot,used in Mesopotamia in 1900 BC.
  13. ^ Jochen Garbsch (June 1986). (in German). Leibniz-Rechenzentrum München. Archived from the original (.HTML) on 24 April 2008. Retrieved 29 January 2008. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  14. ^ "Pompeii: Archaeologists unveil ceremonial chariot discovery". BBC News. 27 February 2021. Retrieved 27 February 2021.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  15. ^ a b Munby, Julian (2008), "From Carriage to Coach: What Happened?", in Bork, Robert; Kahn, Andrea (eds.), The Art, Science, and Technology of Medieval Travel, Ashgate, pp. 41–53
  16. ^ Léon marquis De Laborde. Glossaire français du Moyen Age. Labitte, Paris, 1872. p. 208.
  17. ^ Munby, Julian (2008), "From Carriage to Coach: What Happened?", in Bork, Robert; Kahn, Andrea (eds.), The Art, Science, and Technology of Medieval Travel, Ashgate, p. 45
  18. ^ Mortimer, Ian (2009). The time traveller's guide to medieval England : a handbook for visitors to the fourteenth century. London: Vintage. pp. 133–134. ISBN 978-1-84595-099-6.
  19. ^ "coach". CollinsDictionary.com. HarperCollins. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  20. ^ Coach. Oxford English Dictionary (1st ed.). Oxford University Press. 1933.
  21. ^ "coach (horse-drawn vehicle)". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  22. ^ Munby, Julian (2008), "From Carriage to Coach: What Happened?", in Bork, Robert; Kahn, Andrea (eds.), The Art, Science, and Technology of Medieval Travel, Ashgate, p. 51
  23. ^ Etymology for Coach in Oxford English Dictionary, Second Edition. Oxford University Press, 1989.
  24. ^ Straus, Ralph (1912). Carriages & Coaches: Their History & Their Evolution. London: Martin Secker. pp. 204 ff.
  25. ^ Mechanical Road Carriages: Horseflesh V. Steam. The British Medical Journal, Vol. 2, No. 1823 (7 December 1895), pp. 1434–1435. BMJ Publishing Group
  26. ^ "Mechanical Road Carriages: Horseflesh v. Steam". British Medical Journal. 2 (1823): 1434–1435. 7 December 1895. ISSN 0007-1447. PMC 2509017. PMID 20755870.
  27. ^ "Horse Carriage Parts Horse Drawn Vehicle". Great Northern Livery Company, Inc. 30 October 2003. Retrieved 30 January 2008.
  28. ^ "Basic Carriage Gear Horse Drawn Vehicles". Great Northern Livery Company, Inc. 2 November 2003. Retrieved 30 January 2008.
  29. ^ Patent 9020, 7 July 1841, awarded to Thomas Fuller, a coach-builder of Bath
  30. ^ "Bennington Carriages homepage".
  31. ^ Alejandro, Campitelli. "MUHFIT – Museo Hístorico Fuerte Independencia Tandil". museodelfuerte.org.ar. Retrieved 3 October 2018.
  32. ^ Museum, c=AU; co=Queensland Government; ou=Queensland. "National Carriage Collection". www.cobbandco.qm.qld.gov.au. Retrieved 12 February 2019.
  33. ^ . Archived from the original on 26 March 2011. Retrieved 29 August 2016.
  34. ^ VZW Rijtuigmuseum Bree
  35. ^ . Archived from the original on 22 December 2004. Retrieved 12 February 2019.
  36. ^ Museum of Carriages and Sleighs
  37. ^ "kutschenmuseum.de". www.kutschenmuseum.de. Retrieved 12 February 2019.
  38. ^ Nationaal Rijtuigmuseum 19 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  39. ^ . Archived from the original on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 12 February 2019.
  40. ^ Mossman Collection Website 22 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  41. ^ Royal Mews 17 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  42. ^ . www.swingletree.co.uk. Archived from the original on 20 May 2018. Retrieved 12 February 2019.
  43. ^ National Trust Carriage Museum 21 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  44. ^ . Archived from the original on 16 July 2014. Retrieved 12 February 2019.
  45. ^ "Florida Carriage Museum & Resort". Retrieved 12 February 2019.
  46. ^ "SkylineFarm". www.skylinefarm.org. Retrieved 12 February 2019.
  47. ^ The Carriage Collection of the Owls Head Transportation Museum 15 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  48. ^ "The Carriage Museum". www.washingtonky.com. Retrieved 12 February 2019.
  49. ^ "Carriage Museum of America". carriagemuseumlibrary.org. Retrieved 12 February 2019.
  50. ^ Horse Drawn Vehicles 8 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  51. ^ . Archived from the original on 20 May 2018. Retrieved 12 February 2019.
  52. ^ "HugeDomains.com - ThrasherCarriage.com is for sale (Thrasher Carriage)". www.hugedomains.com. Retrieved 12 February 2019. {{cite web}}: Cite uses generic title (help)
  53. ^ "Wade House - Wisconsin Historical Society - Home". Wade House. Retrieved 12 February 2019.
  54. ^ "Forney Museum of Transportation". www.forneymuseum.org. Retrieved 12 February 2019.
  55. ^ "Mifflinburg Buggy Museum". www.buggymuseum.org. Retrieved 12 February 2019.
  56. ^ The Frick Pittsburgh[permanent dead link]

Further reading

  • Bean, Heike, & Sarah Blanchard (authors), Joan Muller (illustrator), Carriage Driving: A Logical Approach Through Dressage Training, Howell Books, 1992. ISBN 978-0-7645-7299-9
  • Berkebile, Don H., American Carriages, Sleighs, Sulkies, and Carts: 168 Illustrations from Victorian Sources, Dover Publications, 1977. ISBN 978-0-486-23328-4
  • Boyer, Marjorie Nice. "Mediaeval Suspended Carriages". Speculum, v34 n3 (July 1959): 359–366.
  • Boyer, Marjorie Nice. Mediaeval Suspended Carriages. Cambridge, Mass.: The Mediaeval Academy of America, 1959. OCLC 493631378.
  • Bristol Wagon Works Co., Bristol Wagon & Carriage Illustrated Catalog, 1900, Dover Publications, 1994. ISBN 978-0-486-28123-0
  • Elkhart Manufacturing Co., Horse-Drawn Carriage Catalog, 1909 (Dover Pictorial Archives), Dover Publications, 2001. ISBN 978-0-486-41531-4
  • Hutchins, Daniel D., Wheels Across America: Carriage Art & Craftsmanship, Tempo International Publishing Company, 1st edition, 2004. ISBN 978-0-9745106-0-6
  • Ingram, Arthur, Horse Drawn Vehicles since 1760 in Colour, Blandford Press, 1977. ISBN 978-0-7137-0820-2
  • King-Hele, Desmond. "Erasmus Darwin's Improved Design for Steering Carriages—And Cars". Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London, 56, no. 1 (2002): 41–62.
  • Kinney, Thomas A., The Carriage Trade: Making Horse-Drawn Vehicles in America (Studies in Industry and Society), The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2004. ISBN 978-0-8018-7946-3
  • Lawrence, Bradley & Pardee, Carriages and Sleighs: 228 Illustrations from the 1862 Lawrence, Bradley & Pardee Catalog, Dover Publications, 1998. ISBN 978-0-486-40219-2
  • Museums at Stony Brook, The Carriage Collection, Museums, 2000. ISBN 978-0-943924-09-0
  • Nelson Alan H. "Six-Wheeled Carts: An Underview". Technology and Culture, v13 n3 (July 1972): 391–416.
  • Richardson, M. T., Practical Carriage Building, Astragal Press, 1994. ISBN 978-1-879335-50-9
  • Ryder, Thomas (author), Rodger Morrow (editor), The Coson Carriage Collection at Beechdale, The Carriage Association of America, 1989. OCLC 21311481.
  • Wackernagel, Rudolf H., Wittelsbach State and Ceremonial Carriages: Coaches, Sledges and Sedan Chairs in the Marstallmuseum Schloss Nymphenburg, Arnoldsche Verlagsanstalt GmbH, 2002. ISBN 978-3-925369-86-5
  • Walrond, Sallie, Looking at Carriages, J. A. Allen & Co., 1999. ISBN 978-0-85131-552-2
  • Ware, I. D., Coach-Makers' Illustrated Hand-Book, 1875: Containing Complete Instructions in All the Different Branches of Carriage Building, Astragal Press, 2nd edition, 1995. ISBN 978-1-879335-61-5
  • Westermann, William Linn. "On Inland Transportation and Communication in Antiquity". Political Science Quarterly, v43 n3 (September 1928): 364–387.
  • "Colonial Roads and Wheeled Vehicles". The William and Mary Quarterly, v8 n1 (July 1899): 37–42. OCLC 4907170562.

External links

  • By Museums at Stony Brook, Stony Brook, NY, 1987. Long Island Digital Books Project, CONTENTdm Collection, Stony Brook University, Southampton, New York.
  • University of North Carolina at Charlotte.
  • The Classic Car-Nection: Yann Saunders, Cadillac Database. Drawings and text
  • Carriage Association of America. Photos and text.
  • Calisphere – A World of Digital Resources. Search carriage. University of California. Hundreds of photos.
  • Carriages & Coaches: Their History & Their Evolution by Ralph Straus, 1912, London.
  • and ThinkQuest Library. Illustrations and text.
  • Columbus, Wisconsin.
  • Driving for Pleasure, Or The Harness Stable and its Appointments by Francis Underhill, 1896. 25 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Carnegie Mellon University. A comprehensive overview, with photographs of horse-drawn carriages in use at the turn of the 19th century. Full text free to read, with free full text search.
  • An Encyclopædia of Domestic Economy, Comprising Subjects Connected with the Interests of Every Individual..., by Thomas Webster and William Parkes, 1855. Book XXIII, Carriages. Google Book Search.
  • English Pleasure Carriages: Their Origin, History, Varieties, Materials, Construction, Defects, Improvements, and Capabilities: With an Analysis of the Construction of Common Roads and Railroads, and the Public Vehicles Used on Them; Together with Descriptions of New Inventions by William Bridges Adams, 1837. Google Book Search.
  • The Guild of Model Wheelwrights.
  • Galaxy of Images | Smithsonian Institution Libraries. Carriages and sleighs.
  • Georgian Index. Illustrations and text.
  • The History of Coaches, by George Athelstane Thrupp, 1877. Google Book Search.
  • Horse-drawn Transportation Clipart etc. Educational Technology Clearinghouse, University of South Florida. Drawings.
  • Jane Austen Society of North America. Illustrations and text.
  • The Kinross Carriageworks, Stirling (Scotland), 1802–1966.
  • Lexique du cheval! Lexikon of Carriage driving.
  • Modern carriages, by W. Gilbey, 1905.[permanent dead link] The University of Hong Kong Libraries, China–America Digital Academic Library (CADAL).
  • The Guild of Model Wheelwrights. Illustrations and text.
  • Science and Society Picture Library – Search Illustrations and text.
  • Treatise on Carriages. Comprehending Coaches, Chariots, Phaetons, Curricles, Whiskeys, &c. Together with Their Proper Harness. In Which the Fair Prices of Every Article are Accurately Stated, by William Felton, coachmaker, 1794. Google Book Search.
  • Texas Transportation Museum, San Antonio. Photos and text.
  • Wheeled vehicles. The New York Times, 29 October 1871, page 2.

carriage, this, article, about, wheeled, vehicle, humans, moved, horses, other, uses, disambiguation, carriage, private, four, wheeled, vehicle, people, most, commonly, horse, drawn, second, hand, private, carriages, were, common, public, transport, equivalent. This article is about wheeled vehicle for humans moved by horses For other uses see Carriage disambiguation A carriage is a private four wheeled vehicle for people and is most commonly horse drawn Second hand private carriages were common public transport the equivalent of modern cars used as taxis Carriage suspensions are by leather strapping and on those made in recent centuries steel springs Two wheeled carriages are informal and usually owner driven Carriage London 2016 Competitive driving Rennes France 2014 The National Coach Museum in Lisbon Portugal Coaches are a special category within carriages They are carriages with four corner posts and a fixed roof Two wheeled war chariots and transport vehicles such as four wheeled wagons and two wheeled carts were forerunners of carriages 1 2 In the twenty first century horse drawn carriages are occasionally used for public parades by royalty and for traditional formal ceremonies Simplified modern versions are made for tourist transport in warm countries and for those cities where tourists expect open horse drawn carriages to be provided Simple metal sporting versions are still made for the sport known as competitive driving Contents 1 Overview 2 History 2 1 Prehistory 2 2 Bullock carriage 2 3 Chariot 2 4 Roman carriage 2 5 Ancient Chinese carriage 2 6 Medieval carriage 2 7 Coach 2 8 Later development of the coach 2 9 Demise 2 10 Today 3 Construction 3 1 Body 3 2 Undercarriage 3 3 Fittings 4 Carriage terminology 5 Competitive driving 6 Carriage collections 7 Types of horse drawn carriages 8 See also 9 Notes 10 Further reading 11 External linksOverview Edit Coach of an imperial family c 1870 The word carriage abbreviated carr or cge is from Old Northern French cariage to carry in a vehicle 3 The word car then meaning a kind of two wheeled cart for goods also came from Old Northern French about the beginning of the 14th century 3 probably derived from the Late Latin carro a car 4 it is also used for railway carriages and in the US around the end of the 19th century early cars automobiles were briefly called horseless carriages History EditPrehistory Edit Some horsecarts found in Celtic graves show hints that their platforms were suspended elastically 5 Four wheeled wagons were used in Bronze Age Europe and their form known from excavations suggests that the basic construction techniques of wheel and undercarriage that survived until the age of the motor car were established then 6 Bullock carriage Edit A bullock carriage also known as a bullock cart is a large four wheeled carriage typically pulled by oxen 7 8 It conventionally includes a sturdy wooden tongue between the wheels a yoke connecting the pair of oxen a wooden platform for passengers or cargo and large steel rimmed wooden wheels 7 9 These carriages were first protyped in the 3rd millennium BC and predated chariots 9 10 Evidence of both light and heavy wheeled bullock carriages have been found in sites like Mohenjo Daro Harappa and Chanhu daro 9 Chariot Edit Main article Chariot Two wheeled carriage models have been discovered from the Indus valley civilization including twin horse drawn covered carriages resembling ekka from various sites such as Harappa Mohenjo Daro and Chanhu Daro 11 The earliest recorded sort of carriage was the chariot reaching Mesopotamia as early as 1900 BC 12 Used typically for warfare by Egyptians the Near Easterners and Europeans it was essentially a two wheeled light basin carrying one or two passengers drawn by one to two horses The chariot was revolutionary and effective because it delivered fresh warriors to crucial areas of battle with swiftness Roman carriage Edit Reconstruction of a Roman traveling carriage richly decorated with bronze fittings Romisch Germanisches Museum Cologne First century BC Romans used sprung wagons for overland journeys 13 It is likely that Roman carriages employed some form of suspension on chains or leather straps as indicated by carriage parts found in excavations In 2021 archaeologists discovered the remains of a ceremonial four wheel carriage a pilentum near the ancient Roman city of Pompeii It is thought the pilentum may have been used in ceremonies such as weddings The find has been described as being in an excellent state of preservation 14 Ancient Chinese carriage Edit During the Zhou dynasty of China the Warring States were also known to have used carriages as transportation With the decline of these city states and kingdoms these techniques almost disappeared Medieval carriage Edit Horse drawn wagon c 1455 A two tiered carriage drawn by four elephants The medieval carriage was typically a four wheeled wagon type with a rounded top tilt similar in appearance to the Conestoga Wagon familiar from the United States Sharing the traditional form of wheels and undercarriage known since the Bronze Age it very likely also employed the pivoting fore axle in continuity from the ancient world Suspension on chains is recorded in visual images and written accounts from the 14th century chars branlant or rocking carriages and was in widespread use by the 15th century 15 Carriages were largely used by royalty aristocrats and especially by women and could be elaborately decorated and gilded These carriages were usually on four wheels and were drawn by two to four horses depending on their size and status Wood and iron were the primary materials needed to build a carriage and carriages that were used by non royalty were covered by plain leather Another form of carriage was the pageant wagon of the 14th century Historians debate the structure and size of pageant wagons however they are generally miniature house like structures that rest on four to six wheels depending on the size of the wagon The pageant wagon is significant because up until the 14th century most carriages were on two or three wheels the chariot rocking carriage and baby carriage are two examples of carriages which pre date the pageant wagon Historians also debate whether or not pageant wagons were built with pivotal axle systems which allowed the wheels to turn Whether it was a four or six wheel pageant wagon most historians maintain that pivotal axle systems were implemented on pageant wagons because many roads were often winding with some sharp turns Six wheel pageant wagons also represent another innovation in carriages they were one of the first carriages to use multiple pivotal axles Pivotal axles were used on the front set of wheels and the middle set of wheels This allowed the horse to move freely and steer the carriage in accordance with the road or path Coach Edit Main articles Coach carriage Stagecoach and Stage wagon One of the great innovations in carriage history was the invention of the suspended carriage or the chariot branlant though whether this was a Roman or medieval innovation remains uncertain The chariot branlant of medieval illustrations was suspended by chains rather than leather straps as had been believed 16 17 Suspension whether on chains or leather might provide a smoother ride since the carriage body no longer rested on the axles but could not prevent swinging branlant in all directions It is clear from illustrations and surviving examples that the medieval suspended carriage with a round tilt was a widespread European type referred to by any number of names car currus char chariot citation needed In the early 14th century England coaches would still have been extremely rare They would have been unlikely to be more than a dozen and even then to be very costly until the end of the century These coaches would have had four six spoke six foot high wheels that were linked by greased axles under the body of the coach and they had no suspension The chassis was made from oak beam and the barrel shaped roof was covered in brightly painted leather or cloth The interior would include seats beds cushions tapestries and even rugs They would be pulled by four to five horses 18 Under King Mathias Corvinus 1458 90 who enjoyed fast travel the Hungarians developed fast road transport and the town of Kocs between Budapest and Vienna became an important post town and gave its name to the new vehicle type 19 20 The earliest illustrations of the Hungarian Kochi wagon do not indicate any suspension a body with high sides of lightweight wickerwork and typically drawn by three horses in harness Later models were considerably lighter and famous for a single horse being able to draw many passengers 21 The Grand Gala Berlin a coach constructed in Rome for pontiff Leo XII in the years 1824 1826 Gregory XVI requested some important modifications A Gala Coupe 18th century Royal Museums of Art and History Brussels The Hungarian coach spread across Europe rather quickly in part due to Ippolito d Este of Ferrara 1479 1529 nephew of Mathias queen Beatrix of Aragon who as a very junior Archbishopric of Esztergom developed a taste for Hungarian riding and took his carriage and driver back to Italy 22 Around 1550 the coach made its appearance throughout the major cities of Europe and the new word entered the vocabulary of all their languages 23 However the new coach seems to have been a fashionable concept fast road travel for men as much as any particular type of vehicle and there is no obvious technological change that accompanied the innovation As its use spread throughout Europe in the late 16th century the coach s body structure was ultimately changed from a round topped tilt to the four poster carriages that became standard everywhere by c 1600 15 Later development of the coach Edit The London Farringdon coach 1835 The coach had doors in the side with an iron step protected by leather that became the boot in which servants might ride The driver sat on a seat at the front and the most important occupant sat in the back facing forwards The earliest coaches can be seen at Veste Coburg Lisbon and the Moscow Kremlin and they become a commonplace in European art It was not until the 17th century that further innovations with steel springs and glazing took place and only in the 18th century with better road surfaces was there a major innovation with the introduction of the steel C spring 24 Many innovations were proposed and some patented for new types of suspension or other features It was only from the 18th century that changes to steering systems were suggested including the use of the fifth wheel substituted for the pivoting fore axle and on which the carriage turned Another proposal came from Erasmus Darwin a young English doctor who was driving a carriage about 10 000 miles a year to visit patients all over England Darwin found two essential problems or shortcomings of the commonly used light carriage or Hungarian carriage First the front wheels were turned by a pivoting front axle which had been used for years but these wheels were often quite small and hence the rider carriage and horse felt the brunt of every bump on the road Secondly he recognized the danger of overturning A pivoting front axle changes a carriage s base from a rectangle to a triangle because the wheel on the inside of the turn is able to turn more sharply than the outside front wheel Darwin suggested a fix for these insufficiencies by proposing a principle in which the two front wheels turn independently of the front axle about a centre that lies on the extended line of the back axle This idea was later patented in 1818 as Ackermann steering Darwin argued that carriages would then be easier to pull and less likely to overturn Carriage use in North America came with the establishment of European settlers Early colonial horse tracks quickly grew into roads especially as the colonists extended their territories southwest Colonists began using carts as these roads and trading increased between the north and south Eventually carriages or coaches were sought to transport goods as well as people As in Europe chariots coaches and or carriages were a mark of status The tobacco planters of the South were some of the first Americans to use the carriage as a form of human transportation As the tobacco farming industry grew in the southern colonies so did the frequency of carriages coaches and wagons Upon the turn of the 18th century wheeled vehicle use in the colonies was at an all time high Carriages coaches and wagons were being taxed based on the number of wheels they had These taxes were implemented in the South primarily as the South had superior numbers of horses and wheeled vehicles when compared to the North Europe however still used carriage transportation far more often and on a much larger scale than anywhere else in the world Tourists horse drawn taxis in Naghsh i Jahan Square Esfahan Demise Edit Carriages and coaches began to disappear as use of steam propulsion began to generate more and more interest and research Steam power quickly won the battle against animal power as is evident by a newspaper article written in England in 1895 entitled Horseflesh vs Steam 25 26 The article highlights the death of the carriage as the main means of transportation Today Edit Nowadays carriages are still used for day to day transport in the United States by some minority groups such as the Amish They are also still used in tourism as vehicles for sightseeing in cities such as Bruges Vienna New Orleans and Little Rock Arkansas The most complete working collection of carriages can be seen at the Royal Mews in London where a large selection of vehicles is in regular use These are supported by a staff of liveried coachmen footmen and postillions The horses earn their keep by supporting the work of the Royal Household particularly during ceremonial events Horses pulling a large carriage known as a covered brake collect the Yeoman of the Guard in their distinctive red uniforms from St James s Palace for Investitures at Buckingham Palace High Commissioners or Ambassadors are driven to their audiences with the Queen in landaus visiting heads of state are transported to and from official arrival ceremonies and members of the Royal Family are driven in Royal Mews coaches during Trooping the Colour the Order of the Garter service at Windsor Castle and carriage processions at the beginning of each day of Royal Ascot Construction EditBody Edit George VI and Queen Elizabeth in a landau with footmen and a postillion riding on the near wheel horse controlling both teams of horses Canada 1939 Carriages may be enclosed or open depending on the type 27 The top cover for the body of a carriage called the head or hood is often flexible and designed to be folded back when desired Such a folding top is called a bellows top or calash A hoopstick forms a light framing member for this kind of hood The top roof or second story compartment of a closed carriage especially a diligence was called an imperial A closed carriage may have side windows called quarter lights British as well as windows in the doors hence a glass coach On the forepart of an open carriage a screen of wood or leather called a dashboard intercepts water mud or snow thrown up by the heels of the horses The dashboard or carriage top sometimes has a projecting sidepiece called a wing British A foot iron or footplate may serve as a carriage step A carriage driver sits on a box or perch usually elevated and small When at the front it is known as a dickey box a term also used for a seat at the back for servants A footman might use a small platform at the rear called a footboard or a seat called a rumble behind the body Some carriages have a moveable seat called a jump seat Some seats had an attached backrest called a lazyback The shafts of a carriage were called limbers in English dialect Lancewood a tough elastic wood of various trees was often used especially for carriage shafts A holdback consisting of an iron catch on the shaft with a looped strap enables a horse to back or hold back the vehicle The end of the tongue of a carriage is suspended from the collars of the harness by a bar called the yoke At the end of a trace a loop called a cockeye attaches to the carriage In some carriage types the body is suspended from several leather straps called braces or thoroughbraces attached to or serving as springs Undercarriage Edit Further information Front axle assembly Beneath the carriage body is the undergear or undercarriage or simply carriage consisting of the running gear and chassis 28 The wheels and axles in distinction from the body are the running gear The wheels revolve upon bearings or a spindle at the ends of a bar or beam called an axle or axletree Most carriages have either one or two axles On a four wheeled vehicle the forward part of the running gear or forecarriage is arranged to permit the front axle to turn independently of the fixed rear axle In some carriages a dropped axle bent twice at a right angle near the ends allows for a low body with large wheels A guard called a dirtboard keeps dirt from the axle arm Several structural members form parts of the chassis supporting the carriage body The fore axletree and the splinter bar above it supporting the springs are united by a piece of wood or metal called a futchel which forms a socket for the pole that extends from the front axle For strength and support a rod called the backstay may extend from either end of the rear axle to the reach the pole or rod joining the hind axle to the forward bolster above the front axle A skid called a drag dragshoe shoe or skidpan retards the motion of the wheels A London patent of 1841 describes one such apparatus An iron shod beam slightly longer than the radius of the wheel is hinged under the axle so that when it is released to strike the ground the forward momentum of the vehicle wedges it against the axle The original feature of this modification was that instead of the usual practice of having to stop the carriage to retract the beam and so lose useful momentum the chain holding it in place is released from the driver s position so that it is allowed to rotate further in its backwards direction releasing the axle A system of pendant levers and straps then allows the beam to return to its first position and be ready for further use 29 A catch or block called a trigger may be used to hold a wheel on an incline A horizontal wheel or segment of a wheel called a fifth wheel sometimes forms an extended support to prevent the carriage from tipping it consists of two parts rotating on each other about the kingbolt or perchbolt above the fore axle and beneath the body A block of wood called a headblock might be placed between the fifth wheel and the forward spring Fittings Edit Many of these fittings were carried over to horseless carriages and evolved into the modern elements of automobiles During the Brass Era they were often the same parts on either type of carriage i e horse drawn or horseless Upholstery trimming traditionally similar to the upholstery of furniture evolved into car interior upholstery such as car seats and door trim panels Carriage lamps typically oil lamps for centuries although carbide lamps and battery powered electric lamps were also used in the late 19th and early 20th centuries evolved into car headlamps Trunk a luggage trunk serving the same purpose as and which gave its name to later car trunks Toolbox a small box with enough hand tools to make simple repairs on the roadside Blankets in winter blankets for the driver and passengers and often horse blankets as well Running board a step to assist in climbing onto the carriage and also sometimes a place for standing passengers Shovel useful for mud and snow in the roadway to free the carriage from being stuck was especially important in the era when most roads were dirt roads often with deep ruts Buggy whip or coachwhip whips for the horses For obvious reasons this is one of the components of carriage equipment that did not carry over from horse drawn carriages to horseless carriages and that fact has made such whips one of the prototypical or stereotypical examples of products whose manufacture is subject to disruptive innovationCarriage terminology EditA person whose business was to drive a carriage was a coachman A servant in livery called a footman or piquer formerly served in attendance upon a rider or was required to run before his master s carriage to clear the way An attendant on horseback called an outrider often rode ahead of or next to a carriage A carriage starter directed the flow of vehicles taking on passengers at the curbside A hackneyman hired out horses and carriages When hawking wares a hawker was often assisted by a carriage Upper class people of wealth and social position those wealthy enough to keep carriages were referred to as carriage folk or carriage trade Carriage passengers often used a lap robe as a blanket or similar covering for their legs lap and feet A buffalo robe made from the hide of an American bison dressed with the hair on was sometimes used as a carriage robe it was commonly trimmed to rectangular shape and lined on the skin side with fabric A carriage boot fur trimmed for winter wear was made usually of fabric with a fur or felt lining A knee boot protected the knees from rain or splatter A horse especially bred for carriage use by appearance and stylish action is called a carriage horse one for use on a road is a road horse One such breed is the Cleveland Bay uniformly bay in color of good conformation and strong constitution Horses were broken in using a bodiless carriage frame called a break or brake A carriage dog or coach dog is bred for running beside a carriage A roofed structure that extends from the entrance of a building over an adjacent driveway and that shelters callers as they get in or out of their vehicles is known as a carriage porch or porte cochere An outbuilding for a carriage is a coach house which was often combined with accommodation for a groom or other servants A livery stable kept horses and usually carriages for hire A range of stables usually with carriage houses remises and living quarters built around a yard court or street is called a mews A kind of dynamometer called a peirameter indicates the power necessary to haul a carriage over a road or track Examples of carriages Hansom cab and driver adding character to period filming Bride descending from a decorated wedding carriage Cartela or Kartela a Philippine horse carriage in art 8 Waves Waterpark amp Hotel 1 San Rafael Bulacan Competitive driving Edit A marathon wagon at the 2017 FEI European Championships Main articles Driving horse Combined driving Draft horse showing and Roadster horse In most European and English speaking countries driving is a competitive equestrian sport Many horse shows host driving competitions for a particular style of driving breed of horse or type of vehicle Show vehicles are usually carriages carts or buggies and occasionally sulkies or wagons Modern high technology carriages are made purely for competition by companies such as Bennington Carriages 30 in England Terminology varies the simple lightweight two or four wheeled show vehicle common in many nations is called a cart in the USA but a carriage in Australia Internationally there is intense competition in the all round test of driving combined driving also known as horse driving trials an equestrian discipline regulated by the Federation Equestre Internationale International Equestrian Federation with national organizations representing each member country World championships are conducted in alternate years including single horse horse pairs and four in hand championships The World Equestrian Games held at four year intervals also includes a four in hand competition For pony drivers the World Combined Pony Championships are held every two years and include singles pairs and four in hand events Carriage collections Edit In Vienna rental landaus called Fiacres carry tourists around the old city Argentina Muhfit Museo Historico Fuerte Independencia Tandil Tandil 31 Australia Cobb Co Museum National Carriage Collection Queensland Museum Toowoomba Queensland 32 The National Trust of Australia Victoria Carriage CollectionAustria Museum of Carriages and Department of Court Uniforms Kunsthistorisches Museum Vienna 33 Belgium VZW Rijtuigmuseum Bree Bree Limburg 34 De Groom Carriage Center Bruges Bruges West Flanders Koetsenmuseum Verdonckt Royal Museum for Art and History Brussels KMKG MRAH Brazil Permanent exhibit featuring carriages of the imperial era at the National Historical Museum of Brazil National Historical Museum in Rio de Janeiro Brazil Imperial Museum in Petropolis BrazilCanada The Remington Carriage Museum in Cardston Alberta Canada The Campbell Carriage Factory Museum in Sackville New Brunswick Canada The Kings Landing Historical Settlement in Prince William New Brunswick Canada has a large collection of horse and oxen drawn vehicles Denmark Royal Carriage Museum Christiansborg Palace Copenhagen Slesvigske Vognsamling HaderslevEgypt Carriage MuseumFrance Apremont sur Allier Musee des caleches Berry Bourg Musee Au temps des caleches Guyenne Cazes Mondenard Musee de l Attelage et du corbillard Yvan Quercy Quercy chateau de Chambord Salle des carrosses du comte de Chambord Sologne Orleanais chateau de Compiegne Musee National de la voiture et du tourisme de Compiegne Picardie Cussac Fort Medoc Musee du cheval du chateau Lanessan Guyenne Le Fleix Musee de l hippomobile Andre Clament Perigord Les Epesses Musee de la voiture a cheval Vendee Bas Poitou Marcigny Musee de la voiture a cheval Bourgogne Plouay Musee du conservatoire breton de la voiture hippomobile Brittany Sacy le grand Musee du cheval de trait Picardie Saint Auvent musee Au temps jadis Limousin Serignan Musee de l attelage et du cheval Languedoc chateau de Vaux le Vicomte Musee des Equipages Ile de France Palace of Versailles Galerie des carrosses The Versailles Stables 35 Ile de France Germany Romano Germanic Museum Marstallmuseum of Carriages and Sleighs in the former Royal Stables Nymphenburg Palace Munich 36 Hesse Museum of Carriages and Sleighs in Lohfelden near Kassel 37 Italy Museo Le Carrozze d Epoca Rome Museo Civico delle Carrozze d Epoca di Codroipo Museo Civico delle Carrozze d Epoca San Martino Udine Museo della Carrozza di Macerata Museo delle Carrozze del Quirinale Rome Museo delle Carrozze di Palazzo Farnese Piacenza Museo delle Carrozze Catanzaro Museo delle Carrozze Naples Japan Japanese Imperial Household Agency TokyoNetherlands Nationaal Rijtuigmuseum Leek in Groningen 38 Poland Lancut Castle the exhibit of carriages Lancut Castle Rogalin PalacePortugal National Coach Museum Museu dos Coches Lisbon 39 Geraz do Lima Carriage museumSpain Carriage Museum SevilleUnited Kingdom Mossman Collection Luton Bedfordshire 40 Royal Mews at Buckingham Palace London 41 Swingletree Carriage Collection John Parker Swingletree Carriage Driving Swingletree Wingfield Nr Diss Norfolk 42 National Trust Carriage Museum Arlington Court near Barnstaple Devon 43 The Tyrwhitt Drake Museum of Carriages Maidstone Kent 44 United States Crossing the Mississippi on the ice 19th century Florida Carriage Museum Weirsdale Florida Formerly Austin Carriage Museum 45 Skyline Farm Carriage Museum North Yarmouth Maine 46 The Carriage Collection of the Owls Head Transportation Museum Owls Head Maine 47 The Carriage Museum Washington Kentucky 48 Carriage Museum of America Lexington Kentucky 49 Henry Ford Museum Dearborn Michigan 50 The Long Island Museum of American Art History amp Carriages Stony Brook New York Pioneer Village Farmington Utah 51 Thrasher Carriage Museum Frostburg Maryland 52 The Wesley W Jung Carriage Museum Greenbush Wisconsin 53 Shelburne Museum Shelburne Vermont Forney Museum of Transportation Denver Colorado 54 Mifflinburg Buggy Museum Mifflinburg PA Only museum in US that preserves an original intact 19th century carriage factory 55 Frick Art amp Historical Center Car amp Carriage Museum Pittsburgh Pennsylvania preserving carriages owned by Henry Clay Frick and his family 56 The Northwest Carriage Museum Raymond Washington Types of horse drawn carriages EditAn almost bewildering variety of horse drawn carriages existed Arthur Ingram s Horse Drawn Vehicles since 1760 in Colour lists 325 types with a short description of each By the early 19th century one s choice of carriage was only in part based on practicality and performance it was also a status statement and subject to changing fashions The types of carriage included the following See also EditBullock carriage a carriage pulled by oxen Coach carriage Coupe carriage Driving horse Horse and buggy Horse drawn vehicle Horsecar Horse harness Horseless carriage term for early automobiles Howdah carriage positioned on the back of an elephant or camel Ox wagon Steering undercarriage Wagon Wagonette War wagonNotes Edit Tarr Laszlo The History of the Carriage Arco Pub Co 1969 Piggott Stuart Wagon Chariot and Carriage Symbol the Status in the History of Transport Thames and Hudson London 1992 a b Oxford English Dictionary 1933 Car Carriage Wedgwood Hensleigh 1855 On False Etymologies Transactions of the Philological Society 6 71 Raimund Karl 2003 Uberlegungen zum Verkehr in der eisenzeitlichen Keltike Deliberations on Traffic in the Ironage Celtic Culture PDF in German Universitat Wien Archived from the original PDF on 11 April 2008 Retrieved 30 January 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Stuart Piggott The Earliest Wheeled Transport 1983 C F E Pare Wagons and Wagon Graves of the Early Iron Age in Central Europe Oxford 1992 a b Bullock carts Infopedia eresources nlb gov sg Retrieved 17 November 2021 Baeder J Nagaraj V amp Strom M 2016 Technical Report University of Maryland a b c Raghavan M R amp Nagendra H R 1979 December A study on bullock carts Part 1 Engineering analysis of the two wheel bullock cart design Bangalore India Indian Institute of Science Wolpert Stanley 1994 An Introduction to India p 5 ISBN 9780140168709 Piggott Stuart 1970 Copper Vehicle Models in the Indus Civilization The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 102 2 200 202 doi 10 1017 S0035869X00128394 JSTOR 25203212 S2CID 163967541 Tarr Laszlo 1969 The history of the carriage Arco Pub Co ISBN 9780668018715 earliest carriage was the chariot used in Mesopotamia in 1900 BC Jochen Garbsch June 1986 Restoration of a Roman travelling wagon and of a wagon from the Hallstadt bronze culture in German Leibniz Rechenzentrum Munchen Archived from the original HTML on 24 April 2008 Retrieved 29 January 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Pompeii Archaeologists unveil ceremonial chariot discovery BBC News 27 February 2021 Retrieved 27 February 2021 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link a b Munby Julian 2008 From Carriage to Coach What Happened in Bork Robert Kahn Andrea eds The Art Science and Technology of Medieval Travel Ashgate pp 41 53 Leon marquis De Laborde Glossaire francais du Moyen Age Labitte Paris 1872 p 208 Munby Julian 2008 From Carriage to Coach What Happened in Bork Robert Kahn Andrea eds The Art Science and Technology of Medieval Travel Ashgate p 45 Mortimer Ian 2009 The time traveller s guide to medieval England a handbook for visitors to the fourteenth century London Vintage pp 133 134 ISBN 978 1 84595 099 6 coach CollinsDictionary com HarperCollins Retrieved 20 November 2021 Coach Oxford English Dictionary 1st ed Oxford University Press 1933 coach horse drawn vehicle Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 20 November 2021 Munby Julian 2008 From Carriage to Coach What Happened in Bork Robert Kahn Andrea eds The Art Science and Technology of Medieval Travel Ashgate p 51 Etymology for Coach in Oxford English Dictionary Second Edition Oxford University Press 1989 Straus Ralph 1912 Carriages amp Coaches Their History amp Their Evolution London Martin Secker pp 204 ff Mechanical Road Carriages Horseflesh V Steam The British Medical Journal Vol 2 No 1823 7 December 1895 pp 1434 1435 BMJ Publishing Group Mechanical Road Carriages Horseflesh v Steam British Medical Journal 2 1823 1434 1435 7 December 1895 ISSN 0007 1447 PMC 2509017 PMID 20755870 Horse Carriage Parts Horse Drawn Vehicle Great Northern Livery Company Inc 30 October 2003 Retrieved 30 January 2008 Basic Carriage Gear Horse Drawn Vehicles Great Northern Livery Company Inc 2 November 2003 Retrieved 30 January 2008 Patent 9020 7 July 1841 awarded to Thomas Fuller a coach builder of Bath Bennington Carriages homepage Alejandro Campitelli MUHFIT Museo Historico Fuerte Independencia Tandil museodelfuerte org ar Retrieved 3 October 2018 Museum c AU co Queensland Government ou Queensland National Carriage Collection www cobbandco qm qld gov au Retrieved 12 February 2019 Museum of Carriages and Department of Court Uniforms Archived from the original on 26 March 2011 Retrieved 29 August 2016 VZW Rijtuigmuseum Bree The Versailles Stables Archived from the original on 22 December 2004 Retrieved 12 February 2019 Museum of Carriages and Sleighs kutschenmuseum de www kutschenmuseum de Retrieved 12 February 2019 Nationaal Rijtuigmuseum Archived 19 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine NCM Collection Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 12 February 2019 Mossman Collection Website Archived 22 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine Royal Mews Archived 17 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine SWINGLETREE CARRIAGE COLLECTION www swingletree co uk Archived from the original on 20 May 2018 Retrieved 12 February 2019 National Trust Carriage Museum Archived 21 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine The Tyrwhitt Drake Museum of Carriages Archived from the original on 16 July 2014 Retrieved 12 February 2019 Florida Carriage Museum amp Resort Retrieved 12 February 2019 SkylineFarm www skylinefarm org Retrieved 12 February 2019 The Carriage Collection of the Owls Head Transportation Museum Archived 15 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine The Carriage Museum www washingtonky com Retrieved 12 February 2019 Carriage Museum of America carriagemuseumlibrary org Retrieved 12 February 2019 Horse Drawn Vehicles Archived 8 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine Carriage Hall Archived from the original on 20 May 2018 Retrieved 12 February 2019 HugeDomains com ThrasherCarriage com is for sale Thrasher Carriage www hugedomains com Retrieved 12 February 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Cite uses generic title help Wade House Wisconsin Historical Society Home Wade House Retrieved 12 February 2019 Forney Museum of Transportation www forneymuseum org Retrieved 12 February 2019 Mifflinburg Buggy Museum www buggymuseum org Retrieved 12 February 2019 The Frick Pittsburgh permanent dead link Further reading EditBean Heike amp Sarah Blanchard authors Joan Muller illustrator Carriage Driving A Logical Approach Through Dressage Training Howell Books 1992 ISBN 978 0 7645 7299 9 Berkebile Don H American Carriages Sleighs Sulkies and Carts 168 Illustrations from Victorian Sources Dover Publications 1977 ISBN 978 0 486 23328 4 Boyer Marjorie Nice Mediaeval Suspended Carriages Speculum v34 n3 July 1959 359 366 Boyer Marjorie Nice Mediaeval Suspended Carriages Cambridge Mass The Mediaeval Academy of America 1959 OCLC 493631378 Bristol Wagon Works Co Bristol Wagon amp Carriage Illustrated Catalog 1900 Dover Publications 1994 ISBN 978 0 486 28123 0 Elkhart Manufacturing Co Horse Drawn Carriage Catalog 1909 Dover Pictorial Archives Dover Publications 2001 ISBN 978 0 486 41531 4 Hutchins Daniel D Wheels Across America Carriage Art amp Craftsmanship Tempo International Publishing Company 1st edition 2004 ISBN 978 0 9745106 0 6 Ingram Arthur Horse Drawn Vehicles since 1760 in Colour Blandford Press 1977 ISBN 978 0 7137 0820 2 King Hele Desmond Erasmus Darwin s Improved Design for Steering Carriages And Cars Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London 56 no 1 2002 41 62 Kinney Thomas A The Carriage Trade Making Horse Drawn Vehicles in America Studies in Industry and Society The Johns Hopkins University Press 2004 ISBN 978 0 8018 7946 3 Lawrence Bradley amp Pardee Carriages and Sleighs 228 Illustrations from the 1862 Lawrence Bradley amp Pardee Catalog Dover Publications 1998 ISBN 978 0 486 40219 2 Museums at Stony Brook The Carriage Collection Museums 2000 ISBN 978 0 943924 09 0 Nelson Alan H Six Wheeled Carts An Underview Technology and Culture v13 n3 July 1972 391 416 Richardson M T Practical Carriage Building Astragal Press 1994 ISBN 978 1 879335 50 9 Ryder Thomas author Rodger Morrow editor The Coson Carriage Collection at Beechdale The Carriage Association of America 1989 OCLC 21311481 Wackernagel Rudolf H Wittelsbach State and Ceremonial Carriages Coaches Sledges and Sedan Chairs in the Marstallmuseum Schloss Nymphenburg Arnoldsche Verlagsanstalt GmbH 2002 ISBN 978 3 925369 86 5 Walrond Sallie Looking at Carriages J A Allen amp Co 1999 ISBN 978 0 85131 552 2 Ware I D Coach Makers Illustrated Hand Book 1875 Containing Complete Instructions in All the Different Branches of Carriage Building Astragal Press 2nd edition 1995 ISBN 978 1 879335 61 5 Westermann William Linn On Inland Transportation and Communication in Antiquity Political Science Quarterly v43 n3 September 1928 364 387 Colonial Roads and Wheeled Vehicles The William and Mary Quarterly v8 n1 July 1899 37 42 OCLC 4907170562 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Carriages Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Carriage 19th century American carriages Their manufacture decoration and use By Museums at Stony Brook Stony Brook NY 1987 Long Island Digital Books Project CONTENTdm Collection Stony Brook University Southampton New York 19th Century Transportation Carriages University of North Carolina at Charlotte All About Romance Novels Carriages in Regency amp Victorian Times Appendix to Cadillac Styling section coaching terminology The Classic Car Nection Yann Saunders Cadillac Database Drawings and text CAAOnline Carriage Tour Carriage Association of America Photos and text Calisphere A World of Digital Resources Search carriage University of California Hundreds of photos Carriages amp Coaches Their History amp Their Evolution by Ralph Straus 1912 London Carriage House and Carriage parts ThinkQuest Library Illustrations and text Colonial Carriage Works America s Finest Selection of Horse Drawn Vehicles Columbus Wisconsin Driving for Pleasure Or The Harness Stable and its Appointments by Francis Underhill 1896 Archived 25 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Carnegie Mellon University A comprehensive overview with photographs of horse drawn carriages in use at the turn of the 19th century Full text free to read with free full text search An Encyclopaedia of Domestic Economy Comprising Subjects Connected with the Interests of Every Individual by Thomas Webster and William Parkes 1855 Book XXIII Carriages Google Book Search English Pleasure Carriages Their Origin History Varieties Materials Construction Defects Improvements and Capabilities With an Analysis of the Construction of Common Roads and Railroads and the Public Vehicles Used on Them Together with Descriptions of New Inventions by William Bridges Adams 1837 Google Book Search Four wheeled vehicles The Guild of Model Wheelwrights Galaxy of Images Smithsonian Institution Libraries Carriages and sleighs Georgian Index Carriages Georgian Index Illustrations and text The History of Coaches by George Athelstane Thrupp 1877 Google Book Search Horse drawn Transportation Clipart etc Educational Technology Clearinghouse University of South Florida Drawings JASNA Northern California Region Jane Austen Society of North America Illustrations and text The Kinross Carriageworks Stirling Scotland 1802 1966 Lexique du cheval Lexikon of Carriage driving Modern carriages by W Gilbey 1905 permanent dead link The University of Hong Kong Libraries China America Digital Academic Library CADAL Passenger Vehicles The Guild of Model Wheelwrights Illustrations and text Science and Society Picture Library Search Illustrations and text Treatise on Carriages Comprehending Coaches Chariots Phaetons Curricles Whiskeys amp c Together with Their Proper Harness In Which the Fair Prices of Every Article are Accurately Stated by William Felton coachmaker 1794 Google Book Search TTM web Texas Transportation Museum San Antonio Photos and text Wheeled vehicles The New York Times 29 October 1871 page 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Carriage amp oldid 1125143274, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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