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Coach (carriage)

A coach is a large, closed, four-wheeled, passenger-carrying vehicle or carriage usually drawn by two or more horses controlled by a coachman, a postilion, or both. A coach has doors in its sides and a front and a back seat inside. The driver has a raised seat in front of the carriage to allow better vision. It is often called a box, box seat, or coach box. There are many of types of coaches depending on the vehicle's purpose.

Catherine II's carved, painted and gilded Coronation Coach (Hermitage Museum)

History edit

In the early 14th century England, coaches would still have been extremely rare. It is unlikely there were more than a dozen, and even then they were 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 beams 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.[1]

Kocs was the Hungarian post town in the 15th century onwards, which gave its name to a fast light vehicle, which later spread across Europe. Therefore, the English word coach, the Spanish and Portuguese coche, the German Kutsche, and the Slovak koč and Czech kočár all probably derive from the Hungarian word "Kocsi", literally meaning "of Kocs".[2][3]

One source says that in, “1564, Boonen, a Dutchman, became the Queen’s coachman, and was the first that brought the use of coaches into England.”[4] Another source says it was not until 1580, in the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, that coaches were introduced to England from France by Henry FitzAlan, 19th Earl of Arundel.[5] These were designed to be pulled by a pair of horses. In 1619 George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham introduced the coach drawn by six horses.[6]

A coach with four horses is a coach-and-four.[7] A coach together with the horses, harness and attendants is a turnout.[8]

The bodies of early coaches were hung on leather straps. In the eighteenth century steel springs were also used in suspension systems. An advertisement in the Edinburgh Courant for 1754 reads:

The Edinburgh stage-coach, for the better accommodation of passengers, will be altered to a new genteel two-end glass coach-machine, hung on steel springs, exceedingly light and easy...

Strap suspensions persisted, however; the 19th century American Concord coaches used leather straps exactly as the first Berline from 1660 did.

A coach might have a built-in compartment called a boot, used originally as a seat for the coachman and later for storage. A luggage case for the top of a coach was called an imperial; the top, roof or second-story compartment of a coach was also known as an imperial.[9] The front and rear axles were connected by a main shaft called the perch or reach.[10] A crossbar known as a splinter bar supported the springs.

In 1772, Robert Norris described the use of two coaches in Dahomey during a ceremonial procession. They were drawn by 12 men instead of horses probably as a result of the small number of horses in Dahomey.[11]

In the 19th century the name coach was used for U.S. railway carriages,[12] and in the 20th century to motor coaches.

See John Taylor (poet) for a very adverse opinion of the arrival of horse drawn coaches in England.

Types edit

There are a number of coach types, including but not limited to:

Coaches for public hire or transport edit

  • Funeral coach: not a coach but a U.S. name for a hearse, a wagon adapted to carry a coffin. Can also be used to describe a coach used by mourners following a Hearse
  • Hackney coach or a coach for hire. The use of these in England began in 1625. They did not stand in the streets, but at the principal inns. By 1637 there were 50 Hackney coaches for hire in London and Westminster.[16]
  • Stagecoach: heavy, usually four-in-hand, closed; built to carry passengers on scheduled long-distance services changing exhausted horses at stage stations, carrying as many as twenty passengers and goods
  • Mail coach or post coach: same as a stagecoach, used to transport mail but also for carrying premium-fare passengers. The first mail coach in Britain travelled from London to Edinburgh in about 1785, and to Glasgow in 1788.[17]
  • Concord coach: as stagecoach — designed with its body swung on leather thorough-braces was to help cope with bad roads.
  • Stage wagon or mud wagon: (U.S.) lighter and smaller than a stagecoach, flat sides, simpler joinery
  • Omnibus, a type of long-bodied horse-drawn coach used to transport passengers in cities and large towns. The first omnibus in London was introduced in 1829.[18] In 1833, legislation was passed to allow these vehicles to ply the streets of that city provided the drivers and conductors took out a license and wore a badge with a number on it.[19]
  • Tally-ho, a common name given to many road coaches. Sometimes Tally-Ho was the name of a specific coach. Sometimes all the coaches in a road coach fleet were painted with "Tally-Ho" on the sides, as was the case in England.[c]

Coach-building edit

Coach-building had reached a high degree of specialization in Britain by the middle of the 19th century. Separate branches of the trade dealt with the timber, iron, leather, brass and other materials used. And there were many minor specialists within each of these categories. The “body-makers” produced the body or vehicle itself, while the “carriage-makers” made the stronger timbers beneath and around the body. The timbers used included ash, beech, elm, oak, mahogany, pine, birch and larch. The tools and processes were similar to those used in cabinet-making, plus others specific to coach-making. Making the curved woodwork alone called for considerable skill. Making the iron axels, springs and other metal used was the work of the “coach-smith,” one of the most highly paid classes of workmen in London.[20] Lining the interior of the coach with leather and painting, trimming, and decorating the exterior required the work of specialist tradesmen. Building carts and wagons involved similar skills, but of a coarser kind.

Miscellany edit

 
A Portuguese Royal Coach driver's uniform
 
Park Drag Paris 1906

The business of a coachman, like the pilot of an aircraft, was to expertly direct and take all responsibility for a coach or carriage and its horses, their stabling, feeding and maintenance and the associated staff. He was also called a jarvey or jarvie, especially in Ireland.

If he drove dangerously fast or recklessly he was a jehu (from Jehu, king of Israel, who was noted for his furious attacks in a chariot (2 Kings 9:20), or a Phaeton (from Greek Phaethon, son of Helios, who attempted to drive the chariot of the sun but managed to set the earth on fire).

A postilion or postillion sometimes rode as a guide on the near horse of a pair or of one of the pairs attached to a coach, especially when there was no coachman. A guard on a horse-drawn coach was called a shooter.

Traveling by coach, or pleasure driving in a coach, as in a tally-ho, was called coaching. In driving a coach, the coachman used a coachwhip, usually provided with a long lash. Experienced coachmen never used the lash on their horses. They used the whip to flick the ear of the leader to give them the office to move on, or cracked it next to their heads to request increased speed.

  • box coat: a heavy overcoat with or without shoulder capes used by coachmen (riding on the box seat) exposed to all kinds of weather.[21]
  • hammercloth: ornamented and often fringed was hung over the coachman's seat, especially on a ceremonial coach.[22]
  • cockhorse: An extra horse led behind a coach to be hitched when passing over steep or difficult terrain.
  • stable was a building to shelter horses usually close to the owner's house. Staff accommodation would be close often within the same building.
  • coach house was a special building for sheltering a coach or coaches but coaches were more often kept within the stable building.
  • coaching inn or coaching house provided accommodation for travellers and usually provided a change of horses and offered stabling.
  • coach dog or carriage dog was trained to run in attendance on a coach particularly Dalmatians.

Coach horses edit

A coach horse or coacher bred for drawing a coach is typically heavier and of more compact build than a saddle horse and exhibits good style and action.[23] Breeds include:

  • Breton: heavy, French, for draft or meat
  • German coach: large, rather coarse, heavy draft horse or harness horse; bay, brown or black in color
  • Hanoverian: developed by crossing heavy cold-blooded German horses with Thoroughbreds
  • Holstein: German, heavyweight, for riding and dressage, initially a carriage horse; bay, black or brown. Called also Holsteiner, Warmblut, Warmblood.
  • Yorkshire Coach Horse: large, strong, bay or brown; dark legs, mane and tail; belongs to an English breed derived largely from the Cleveland Bay

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Quotation, page 239: "the term now recognized as properly descriptive of a coach for private driving is 'drag.'"[14]: 239 
  2. ^ John M. Seabrook shows his park drag made by F & R Shanks (at 8:50-10:00 minutes), and Thomas Ryder explains the difference between a park drag and a road coach (at 10:00-12:15 minutes) [15]
  3. ^ Quotation from pages 236 & 239, "A curious error into which people generally have fallen is that of calling the four-in-hand coach a Tally-ho. Even the lexicographers have perpetuated it, and so I suppose it will stand, although it may be interesting to point it out. De Lancey Kane named the four-in-hand road coach which he drove between New York and Pelham, a quarter of a century ago, the Tally-ho. It was merely the name of the vehicle, given according to English usage to the coaches which rumbled over their highways, for convenience in advertising and in conversation, the same as the name of a sea-going vessel."[14]: 236–9 

References edit

  1. ^ 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.
  2. ^ "coach". CollinsDictionary.com. HarperCollins. Retrieved 12 November 2012.
  3. ^ "coach". Merriam-Webster. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  4. ^ The National Cyclopaedia of Useful Knowledge, Vol IV (1848 ed.). London: Charles Knight. p. 675.
  5. ^ Percy, S.; Percy, R. (1823). The Percy Anecdotes. T. Boys. p. 54. Retrieved 12 October 2014.
  6. ^ The Book of Days by robert Chambers
  7. ^ Definition of coach-and-four by the Free Online Dictionary, Thesaurus and Encyclopedia. Free access.
  8. ^ Turn out – Definition from the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary.
  9. ^ Definition of imperial by the Free Online Dictionary, Thesaurus and Encyclopedia. Free access.
  10. ^ Thomas A Kinney, The Carriage Trade: Making Horse-Drawn Vehicles in America Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, 2004
  11. ^ Law, Robin (1980). "Wheeled Transport in Pre-Colonial West Africa". Africa: Journal of the International African Institute. 50 (3): 249–262. doi:10.2307/1159117. JSTOR 1159117.
  12. ^ Oxford English Dictionary
  13. ^ "Museu Imperial de Petrópolis, RJ, restaura Berlinda de D. Pedro II". G1. 10 December 2012. Retrieved 6 December 2022.
  14. ^ a b Belmont, Oliver H. P. (1901). "Coaching". In Patten, William (ed.). The Book of Sport. J.F. Taylor & Co. OL 24131749M.
  15. ^ "The Seabrook Carriage Collection (video)". Carriage Association of America. 2003.
  16. ^ Knight, p.676
  17. ^ Knight, p.676
  18. ^ "The London Omnibus".
  19. ^ The National Cyclopaedia of Useful Knowledge (Vol IV ed.). London: Charles Knight. 1848. p. 676.
  20. ^ Knight, p.677
  21. ^ Box Coat. Probert Encyclopaedia.
  22. ^ Hammercloth in Merriam-Webster Unabridged Dictionary (2000).
  23. ^ Detailed information about specific breeds of horses: Carriage Horses in Britain. Georgian Index.

Further reading edit

  • Kintrea, Frank (October 1967). "When The Coachman Was A Millionare". American Heritage. Vol. 18, no. 6.

External links edit

  • Belgian coach museum in Bree
  • Coaches 1750 to 1900. History Learning Site.
  • The Coaches: 'Travellers in Eighteenth-Century England'. Civilization defined and explained in plain English: Library of mainly eighteenth century authors by P.Atkinson.
  • By Anne Woodley. Also , and
  • Carriage Museum of America.
  • H3875 Horse-drawn coach, mail and passenger coach, timber / metal / leather, made by Cobb and Co. Coach and Buggy Factory, Charleville, Queensland, Australia, 1890 – Powerhouse Museum Collection. Powerhouse Museum | Science + Design | Sydney Australia.
  • The History of Coaching—Travelling in Old England—The First Coaches Introduced of The Mail-Coach System—Amateur Coachmen in the Olden Time—Early Coaching Parades—The Dangers of the Road—Highwaymen and Reckless Drivers. The New York Times, May 5, 1878, page 10.
  • Historic Pelham.
  • Jane Austen Centre Bath UK England.
  • Some Coaching Costumes by Marie Weldon, The New York Times, Magazine Supplement, page SM4.

coach, carriage, coach, large, closed, four, wheeled, passenger, carrying, vehicle, carriage, usually, drawn, more, horses, controlled, coachman, postilion, both, coach, doors, sides, front, back, seat, inside, driver, raised, seat, front, carriage, allow, bet. A coach is a large closed four wheeled passenger carrying vehicle or carriage usually drawn by two or more horses controlled by a coachman a postilion or both A coach has doors in its sides and a front and a back seat inside The driver has a raised seat in front of the carriage to allow better vision It is often called a box box seat or coach box There are many of types of coaches depending on the vehicle s purpose Catherine II s carved painted and gilded Coronation Coach Hermitage Museum Contents 1 History 2 Types 2 1 Coaches for public hire or transport 3 Coach building 4 Miscellany 5 Coach horses 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory editSee also Carriage In the early 14th century England coaches would still have been extremely rare It is unlikely there were more than a dozen and even then they were 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 beams 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 1 Kocs was the Hungarian post town in the 15th century onwards which gave its name to a fast light vehicle which later spread across Europe Therefore the English word coach the Spanish and Portuguese coche the German Kutsche and the Slovak koc and Czech kocar all probably derive from the Hungarian word Kocsi literally meaning of Kocs 2 3 One source says that in 1564 Boonen a Dutchman became the Queen s coachman and was the first that brought the use of coaches into England 4 Another source says it was not until 1580 in the reign of Queen Elizabeth I that coaches were introduced to England from France by Henry FitzAlan 19th Earl of Arundel 5 These were designed to be pulled by a pair of horses In 1619 George Villiers 1st Duke of Buckingham introduced the coach drawn by six horses 6 A coach with four horses is a coach and four 7 A coach together with the horses harness and attendants is a turnout 8 The bodies of early coaches were hung on leather straps In the eighteenth century steel springs were also used in suspension systems An advertisement in the Edinburgh Courant for 1754 reads The Edinburgh stage coach for the better accommodation of passengers will be altered to a new genteel two end glass coach machine hung on steel springs exceedingly light and easy Strap suspensions persisted however the 19th century American Concord coaches used leather straps exactly as the first Berline from 1660 did A coach might have a built in compartment called a boot used originally as a seat for the coachman and later for storage A luggage case for the top of a coach was called an imperial the top roof or second story compartment of a coach was also known as an imperial 9 The front and rear axles were connected by a main shaft called the perch or reach 10 A crossbar known as a splinter bar supported the springs In 1772 Robert Norris described the use of two coaches in Dahomey during a ceremonial procession They were drawn by 12 men instead of horses probably as a result of the small number of horses in Dahomey 11 In the 19th century the name coach was used for U S railway carriages 12 and in the 20th century to motor coaches See John Taylor poet for a very adverse opinion of the arrival of horse drawn coaches in England Example of coaches nbsp Ornate detail on one of the Portuguese Royal Coaches at the National Coach Museum in Lisbon nbsp Coaches are nowadays also used on ceremonial occasions Here a coach is used to convey President Gudni Th Johannesson of Iceland during a state visit to Sweden nbsp Coach of King John V of Portugal 18th century nbsp Coach of a noble family c 1870 nbsp The London Farringdon coach 1835 nbsp Coach commissioned in 1837 for Emperor Pedro II of Brazil pictured before the 2012 restoration 13 Imperial Museum of Brazil nbsp The Grand Gala Berlin a coach constructed in Rome for pontiff Leo XII in the years 1824 1826 Gregory XVI requested some important modifications nbsp A Gala Coupe 18th century Royal Museums of Art and History Brussels nbsp The Gold State Coach of the British monarch nbsp The Golden Coach Netherlands is a coach owned and used by the Dutch royal family nbsp The Glass Coach Dutch royal carriage is a royal carriage that was used by the Dutch royal family Types editThere are a number of coach types including but not limited to Coach a large heavy vehicle designed to carry passengers State Coach A coach of state is used to carry very important persons like a visiting head of state royalty and antique high nobility such as princes and dukes on state occasions The principal ceremonial coaches State Coaches in the United Kingdom are the Gold State Coach Irish State Coach Lord Mayor of London s State Coach Scottish State Coach Speaker s State Coach In addition there are the Australian State Coach and the Diamond Jubilee State Coach In the Netherlands there is the Dutch Golden Coach and the Glass Coach Dutch royal carriage Private coach a very expensive cumbersome 17th century luxury replaced as they were developed by light fast carriages except on formal occasions Road coach a private coach kept for pleasure See Driving club Drag or park drag a gentleman s coach kept for pleasure usually used during driving club activities a b Coaches for public hire or transport edit Funeral coach not a coach but a U S name for a hearse a wagon adapted to carry a coffin Can also be used to describe a coach used by mourners following a Hearse Hackney coach or a coach for hire The use of these in England began in 1625 They did not stand in the streets but at the principal inns By 1637 there were 50 Hackney coaches for hire in London and Westminster 16 Stagecoach heavy usually four in hand closed built to carry passengers on scheduled long distance services changing exhausted horses at stage stations carrying as many as twenty passengers and goods Mail coach or post coach same as a stagecoach used to transport mail but also for carrying premium fare passengers The first mail coach in Britain travelled from London to Edinburgh in about 1785 and to Glasgow in 1788 17 Concord coach as stagecoach designed with its body swung on leather thorough braces was to help cope with bad roads Stage wagon or mud wagon U S lighter and smaller than a stagecoach flat sides simpler joinery Omnibus a type of long bodied horse drawn coach used to transport passengers in cities and large towns The first omnibus in London was introduced in 1829 18 In 1833 legislation was passed to allow these vehicles to ply the streets of that city provided the drivers and conductors took out a license and wore a badge with a number on it 19 Tally ho a common name given to many road coaches Sometimes Tally Ho was the name of a specific coach Sometimes all the coaches in a road coach fleet were painted with Tally Ho on the sides as was the case in England c Types of coaches nbsp Drag of His Grace the Duke of Beaufort president of the Four in Hand Driving Club nbsp The Fairman Rogers Four in Hand by Thomas Eakins Fairmount Park Philadelphia 1880 nbsp Pleasure driving 2009Marathon competition Stoneleigh ParkCoach building editCoach building had reached a high degree of specialization in Britain by the middle of the 19th century Separate branches of the trade dealt with the timber iron leather brass and other materials used And there were many minor specialists within each of these categories The body makers produced the body or vehicle itself while the carriage makers made the stronger timbers beneath and around the body The timbers used included ash beech elm oak mahogany pine birch and larch The tools and processes were similar to those used in cabinet making plus others specific to coach making Making the curved woodwork alone called for considerable skill Making the iron axels springs and other metal used was the work of the coach smith one of the most highly paid classes of workmen in London 20 Lining the interior of the coach with leather and painting trimming and decorating the exterior required the work of specialist tradesmen Building carts and wagons involved similar skills but of a coarser kind Miscellany edit nbsp A Portuguese Royal Coach driver s uniform nbsp Park Drag Paris 1906 The business of a coachman like the pilot of an aircraft was to expertly direct and take all responsibility for a coach or carriage and its horses their stabling feeding and maintenance and the associated staff He was also called a jarvey or jarvie especially in Ireland If he drove dangerously fast or recklessly he was a jehu from Jehu king of Israel who was noted for his furious attacks in a chariot 2 Kings 9 20 or a Phaeton from Greek Phaethon son of Helios who attempted to drive the chariot of the sun but managed to set the earth on fire A postilion or postillion sometimes rode as a guide on the near horse of a pair or of one of the pairs attached to a coach especially when there was no coachman A guard on a horse drawn coach was called a shooter Traveling by coach or pleasure driving in a coach as in a tally ho was called coaching In driving a coach the coachman used a coachwhip usually provided with a long lash Experienced coachmen never used the lash on their horses They used the whip to flick the ear of the leader to give them the office to move on or cracked it next to their heads to request increased speed box coat a heavy overcoat with or without shoulder capes used by coachmen riding on the box seat exposed to all kinds of weather 21 hammercloth ornamented and often fringed was hung over the coachman s seat especially on a ceremonial coach 22 cockhorse An extra horse led behind a coach to be hitched when passing over steep or difficult terrain stable was a building to shelter horses usually close to the owner s house Staff accommodation would be close often within the same building coach house was a special building for sheltering a coach or coaches but coaches were more often kept within the stable building coaching inn or coaching house provided accommodation for travellers and usually provided a change of horses and offered stabling coach dog or carriage dog was trained to run in attendance on a coach particularly Dalmatians Coach horses editA coach horse or coacher bred for drawing a coach is typically heavier and of more compact build than a saddle horse and exhibits good style and action 23 Breeds include Breton heavy French for draft or meat German coach large rather coarse heavy draft horse or harness horse bay brown or black in color Hanoverian developed by crossing heavy cold blooded German horses with Thoroughbreds Holstein German heavyweight for riding and dressage initially a carriage horse bay black or brown Called also Holsteiner Warmblut Warmblood Yorkshire Coach Horse large strong bay or brown dark legs mane and tail belongs to an English breed derived largely from the Cleveland BaySee also editCarriage Coupe carriage Hansom Hearse Stagecoach Wagon OmnibusNotes edit Quotation page 239 the term now recognized as properly descriptive of a coach for private driving is drag 14 239 John M Seabrook shows his park drag made by F amp R Shanks at 8 50 10 00 minutes and Thomas Ryder explains the difference between a park drag and a road coach at 10 00 12 15 minutes 15 Quotation from pages 236 amp 239 A curious error into which people generally have fallen is that of calling the four in hand coach a Tally ho Even the lexicographers have perpetuated it and so I suppose it will stand although it may be interesting to point it out De Lancey Kane named the four in hand road coach which he drove between New York and Pelham a quarter of a century ago the Tally ho It was merely the name of the vehicle given according to English usage to the coaches which rumbled over their highways for convenience in advertising and in conversation the same as the name of a sea going vessel 14 236 9 References edit 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 12 November 2012 coach Merriam Webster Retrieved 20 November 2021 The National Cyclopaedia of Useful Knowledge Vol IV 1848 ed London Charles Knight p 675 Percy S Percy R 1823 The Percy Anecdotes T Boys p 54 Retrieved 12 October 2014 The Book of Days by robert Chambers Definition of coach and four by the Free Online Dictionary Thesaurus and Encyclopedia Free access Turn out Definition from the Merriam Webster Online Dictionary Definition of imperial by the Free Online Dictionary Thesaurus and Encyclopedia Free access Thomas A Kinney The Carriage Trade Making Horse Drawn Vehicles in America Johns Hopkins University Press Baltimore 2004 Law Robin 1980 Wheeled Transport in Pre Colonial West Africa Africa Journal of the International African Institute 50 3 249 262 doi 10 2307 1159117 JSTOR 1159117 Oxford English Dictionary Museu Imperial de Petropolis RJ restaura Berlinda de D Pedro II G1 10 December 2012 Retrieved 6 December 2022 a b Belmont Oliver H P 1901 Coaching In Patten William ed The Book of Sport J F Taylor amp Co OL 24131749M The Seabrook Carriage Collection video Carriage Association of America 2003 Knight p 676 Knight p 676 The London Omnibus The National Cyclopaedia of Useful Knowledge Vol IV ed London Charles Knight 1848 p 676 Knight p 677 Box Coat Probert Encyclopaedia Hammercloth in Merriam Webster Unabridged Dictionary 2000 Detailed information about specific breeds of horses Carriage Horses in Britain Georgian Index Further reading editKintrea Frank October 1967 When The Coachman Was A Millionare American Heritage Vol 18 no 6 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Coaches carriage nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Coaches nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Coach Belgian coach museum in Bree Coaches 1750 to 1900 History Learning Site The Coaches Travellers in Eighteenth Century England Civilization defined and explained in plain English Library of mainly eighteenth century authors by P Atkinson Coaching History By Anne Woodley Also Coaching Accidents Coaching Anecdotes and A selection of Georgian Coaches Coachman Driven Vehicles Carriage Museum of America H3875 Horse drawn coach mail and passenger coach timber metal leather made by Cobb and Co Coach and Buggy Factory Charleville Queensland Australia 1890 Powerhouse Museum Collection Powerhouse Museum Science Design Sydney Australia The History of Coaching Travelling in Old England The First Coaches Introduced of The Mail Coach System Amateur Coachmen in the Olden Time Early Coaching Parades The Dangers of the Road Highwaymen and Reckless Drivers The New York Times May 5 1878 page 10 Col Delancey Kane and The Pelham Coach Historic Pelham Landscape Property Regency Georgian history lifestyle house Going By Coach Jane Austen Centre Bath UK England Some Coaching Costumes by Marie Weldon The New York Times Magazine Supplement page SM4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Coach carriage amp oldid 1212735158, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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