carriages / carriage types


Here are two interesting blog posts that I found today via Twitter …

First: a description and picture of a nineteenth-century Hackney coach waterman, whose job it was to bring food and water to the horses waiting at his particular Hackney-coach [i.e., taxi] stand in London.

By the end of that century, lumbering old coaches had been largely replaced in their role as “taxicabs” by lighter four-wheeled “growlers” …

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… and the ubiquitous and unmistakable Hansom Cab, of which there were reportedly 10,000 on London’s streets in 1890. …

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And today’s second fascinating blog post (containing beautiful images, as well) is about the perils of traveling across the Lancaster Sands. Be sure to scroll through the comments and watch the video of the Duke of Edinburgh and several other drivers making the same trip in the mid-1980s.

I know that some local deliveries (of milk and ice, especially) were still made with horse-drawn vehicles long after cars and trucks had taken over elsewhere, but check out this photo from 1920 …

I’m guessing this was an advertising or publicity photo for Smith’s Transfer and Storage Co. (in Washington, DC). At the front of the procession is a moving van hitched to three horses. Behind them are four different sizes and shapes of motorized vehicles, and then four more horse-drawn vans.

Here’s a photo of El Paso, Texas, in 1903. There are carriages and wagons in the streets … and quite a lot of bunting and decoration on the buildings. Judging by the sign hanging over the street, the town was getting ready for (or had perhaps just been through) a carnival.

Today’s old photo shows the streets by the old Town Hall building in Marblehead, Massachusetts, c. 1906.

All the vehicles in this scene appear to be parked for the photo. From left to right, we see a lady seated in the passenger seat of an automobile (with a driver-less delivery vehicle behind her car); the Jersey Milk and Cream deliveryman, surrounded by a group of children; another group of children, standing outside the door to the police station; and two more delivery vehicles (“Hood Farm ___” and the “Northshore News Co.”), plus another car.

… unusual for the time, at least.

Here’s a great street scene from New York, c. 1905. There are throngs of people on the sidewalk and a Hansom Cab waiting by the curb. And did you notice the unusual part? The photographer appears to have stationed himself on a horse-drawn vehicle, as you can see the back of the horse’s head at the bottom of the photo.

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