carriages / carriage types


We recently received a donation of books and old carriage catalogs for the CAA’s library (thank you, Charlie!), which included the 1891 catalog of fine vehicles from the Buckeye Buggy Company (“Arbiters of Fashions”) of Columbus, Ohio.

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Here is one of the firm’s vehicles (number 11.5), a “Wing Dash, Canopy Phaeton” …

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The catalog description of this carriage notes that it has “all the latest swells, curves, and sweeps.” It was available for $260.

I’ll have more on this catalog, including more Gray-Parker illustrations, over the next few days.

For the final entry in our brief tour of special-order Studebaker carriages, we have this Queen Phaeton …

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In case you missed Friday’s post, go back and read it first …

Then, here’s a special-order Studebaker Spider Phaeton:

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Continuing on from yesterday’s post, here’s a special-order Studebaker Tandem Cart:

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I came across yet another treasure in the CAA’s library: a small (just 5 by 7 inches) catalog of “fine carriages & spring passenger wagons” by the Studebaker Bros. Mfg. Co.

The catalog isn’t dated, but the library card stored with it in the filing cabinet where I found it says that it’s from 1896.

It’s filled with lovely, but fairly typical, black-and-white images of carriages. Each type, variety, and style has a name, a catalog number, specifications, a drawing (like this)

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… and, amusingly to us now, a unique “telegraph code.” Some of these; Lilac, Lovely, Quartz and, my favorite, Prune.

Carriage names and drawings like these are a huge help in trying to identify carriage types, or even just in learning what made one type different from another and how to tell all the varieties apart.

The real treasure in this catalog, though, are the full-color illustrations of some of Studebaker’s special-order vehicles. These were all painted by the prolific turn-of-the-century magazine illustrator, C. Gray-Parker. And they’re gorgeous.

Six of these will be featured in the March issue of The Carriage Journal, but I’m going to share four others with you here over the next few days.

First, here’s a special-order Studebaker Hunting Trap …

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