Carriage Journal magazine


Hooray! Following yesterday’s late night in the office and today’s busy morning / early afternoon, all the files for the May issue of The Carriage Journal are now at the printer.

If you’re a current member of the CAA, your copy of this issue will be on its way to your mailbox by May 1. Not yet a member? You can visit the CAA’s website to learn more about the association and our magazine.

For the cover of this issue, we’re still considering a couple of options:

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I’ll post a picture of the finished cover by the end of the week!

Today: an unusual vehicle from Mr. Sallmann’s collection of Swiss carriages and sleighs.

This odd-looking contraption is known as a Gemmiwagen (named after the Gemmi Pass in the Bernese Alps).

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Melanie reports that (as you can see in this photo of a photo of one in use), it could serve as a form of courting vehicle. In this case, the gentleman would ground-drive the horse while being able to chat with his lady friend. And she wouldn’t have to be bothered to climb the steep Swiss mountain roads.

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This photo shows the contraption on the seat back that makes it adjustable, to accommodate the incline of the road:

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And, finally, here’s an old photo of a young lady about to set out for a ride in a Gemmiwagen:

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To see photos of some of the oldest vehicles in Mr. Sallman’s collection, stay tuned for the May issue of The Carriage Journal.

CAA member Melanie Brooker (California) was in Europe not too long ago, and she made a point of scheduling a visit with Robert Sallmann (a CAA life member who lives in Switzerland) to tour his impressive carriage collection.

She sent many more photos for the “In the Carriage House” department in The Carriage Journal (coming up in the May issue) than we can possibly use, so I thought I would share some of the extras here.

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this Cabrio-Landau was used in Interlaken, Switzerland

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in 1973, Robert Sallmann and his family spent a week driving this vehicle from their home in Amriswil to St. Mortiz, a journey of about 120 miles

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Melanie wrote, “This Feder-Chaise was my favorite vehicle in Mr. Sallmann’s collection. Feder translates to Spring in English, so this would be a Spring Chaise. It has lovely C-springs front and rear; it also has a built-in weather apron and a glass windshield.”

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Here are a few other carriages and some of the many sleighs in Mr. Sallmann’s collection:

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I’m busy this week with putting together the May issue of our magazine, The Carriage Journal. And since I haven’t had time to find anything to post on the blog today am focused on the magazine, I thought I would give you a sneak peek at what we’ll be featuring in this next issue.

We’ll have an article about an unusual vehicle that may have been used by a seventeenth-century Swedish field marshal during the Thirty Years War; a photo essay on how to properly turn out Gigs in the pleasure-driving show ring; a feature on ancient Egyptian bits; and an article on the history of the horse-drawn connection to the early oil industry in Pennsylvania. Plus, as always, we’ll have interesting articles in a variety of departments, including “In the Carriage House,” “In the Stable,” “The Road Behind,” and much more.

Not yet a member / subscriber? Click here to read more about the Carriage Association and the benefits of membership, including a subscription to The Carriage Journal.

In today’s mail, I received a wonderful letter from a CAA member in Texas. In it, he shared his own carriage-driving story and the story of the c. 1895 photo he had enclosed. The photo came from a friend of his, whose grandfather, High Sheriff for Lancashire (England), was featured in the photo.

The full version of this photo (and the full story) will be included in an upcoming issue of The Carriage Journal. But, in the meantime, here’s a sneak peek:

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