If you enjoyed the recent preview clip of a British Pathé video from the Windsor Horse Show’s early days, check this out …
There was some pretty gutsy driving going on in this Driving Derby in Hamburg, West Germany, in 1965!
June 15, 2011
If you enjoyed the recent preview clip of a British Pathé video from the Windsor Horse Show’s early days, check this out …
There was some pretty gutsy driving going on in this Driving Derby in Hamburg, West Germany, in 1965!
June 13, 2011
… at the Royal Windsor Horse Show, featuring young competitors, ponies, a number of marvelous-looking trade vehicles, and even the Household Cavalry, looking much the same as they do now. The “grandstands” and the main arena, however, looked much different than they do today!
This video clip is from a company called “British Pathé,” on whose website you can “view and buy films and still photographs from the entire archive of 90,000 videos covering newsreel, sports footage, social history documentaries, entertainment, and music stories from 1896 to 1976.” Most of the films are for sale (rather than being available for free viewing online), but you can watch short clips of each one online.
I can’t actually embed the video here, but you can watch it on this British Pathé web page.
June 11, 2011
June 10, 2011
… in 1897??
I found this Q&A of sorts in the March 13, 1897, issue of Rider and Driver:
The Use of Rubber Tires in New York
The Rider and Driver was asked to decide a discussion and bet on the question whether in our opinion 25 percent of the first-class private Landaus, Victorias, and Broughams used in the city of New York have rubber tires [which had begun to come into vogue in the late nineteenth century]. We decided the matter in the affirmative, after investigation.
The following letters are interesting in connection with the subject.
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FLANDRAU & CO., New York, March 2, 1897
To the Editor of The Rider and Driver: It is very difficult to answer the question exactly, but we should say that 25 percent was well within the mark of first-class private Landaus, Victorias, and Broughams fitted with rubber tires, though we certainly put more than that portion on the new ones we sell, and have put rubber tires on a number of vehicles already in use and purchased before the rubber tires were being put on, and that we think is true of all first-class houses. If such a thing as an actual count could be made we should say one-third would be found to be correct, and that of new carriages being sold, at least 25 percent of Victorias and Cabriolets, and one-half of the Broughams are being fitted with rubber tires. — Very truly yours, Flandrau & Co.
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R. M. STIVERS, New York, March 1, 1897
To the Editor of The Rider and Driver: Your favor, February 27, just to hand. If you include Landaus, Victorias, and Broughams as comprising the vehicles lumped, I should think that 25 percent of them had rubber tires. Have never given due thought. If one stood on the avenue, he could easily count the private rigs that passed a certain point in a given time. — Respectfully, R. M. Stivers
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BREWSTER & CO., New York, March 1, 1897
To the Editor of The Rider and Driver: In reply to your letter of the 27th, would say that we can only answer you as far as our own customers are concerned. All our Landaus and Broughams have rubber tires on for stock, as a standard requisite; of Victorias, we probably do not sell over one-quarter with them on. — Yours truly, Brewster & Co.
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HEALEY & CO., New York, March 1, 1897
To the Editor of The Rider and Driver: Replying to your inquiry of the 27th, concerning rubber tires, we should say that 25 percent of the private Broughams and Landaus have rubber tires. We may be mistaken and over-estimate a little, but should say it was about that amount. — Very faithfully, Healey & Co.
May 30, 2011
I’ve just missed two days in a row here on the blog — days #4 and 5, I think, that I’ve missed posting something since I started this “post a day” thing at the beginning of the year. So that averages to missing only one day a month so far in 2011. Not bad, I suppose. And because it’s a holiday weekend, you didn’t even notice that I hadn’t posted anything all weekend, did you? Right??
At any rate, here’s another interesting video on wheelwrighting. This one shows the wheelwright using Victorian-era tools and techniques.
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