I’m interrupting our nineteenth-century visit with James Flint so that you can enjoy this year’s CAA Carriage Festival, which got underway this morning. We’ll get back to Mr. Flint’s letters next week!

Yesterday, I went over to the arena and the stables to get some photos of people arriving, moving in, setting up, and getting ready for the weekend.

I found trade fair vendors setting up shop on the arena’s mezzanine, ponies being unloaded from trailers and moved into their stalls, a horse getting a bath, a beautiful carriage being cleaned, several carriages (most of them under wraps) waiting in the aisleways, and a pair of horses coming back from a drive. Oh, and I met a sweet dog named Britt. (I mean, really, what’s a horse show without dogs?)

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… another excerpt from James Flint’s journey through New York State on July 16, 1818:

Four wheeled waggons are the vehicles used in carrying home the crops, carrying manure into the fields, and produce to market. They are drawn by two horses, which trot, whether loaded or not. Small one-horse waggons are also used, they are neat, and are furnished with a seat for conveying families to church, and elsewhere. Many of the farmers who own but small properties, keep one-horse gigs. Ladies drive dexterously.

… not the Wild West of the late nineteenth century, but the West of the early nineteenth century; in other words, Ohio and Kentucky.

From 1818 to 1820, a Scotsman named James Flint traveled extensively in the eastern and (what was at the time) the western United States. He was a very observant traveler and wrote a long series of letters, which were gathered and published, in Edinburgh, in 1822.

Today, and for the next few days, I’ll share a few excerpts from his letters, which describe the state of the roads and the process of traveling at the time.

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July 16, 1818:

A stage coach runs from Brooklyn to New Utrecht. The distance is nine miles; and the fare for one person, half a dollar. This coach, like the other public ones of the country, has no glass windows in the front or the sides of it, these parts are furnished with curtains, which are let down in bad weather. The coach is long, containing four seats that run across; and travelers sit with their faces forward, as in the pews of a church.

I have agreed to stop for a few days at New Utrecht. My host is an intelligent man, obliging, but not fawning. Sometimes the landlord presides at the head of the table, and at other times he acts as servant. At dinner we were joined by the coach-driver who brought us fromBrooklyn; he is very unlike the drivers of some other coaches, is well dressed, active, and attentive to his business, by no means obsequious, answers every question with propriety, and without embarrassment. He does not depend on the gratuities of travelers for his wages. That system, which so universally prevails inBritain, is unknown here.

At the inn there were three boarders, all Scotsmen. One of them, a young gentleman from Edinburgh, who was confined to bed by a broken thigh bone, occasioned by a horse running away with a gig, from which he fell while attempting to disengage himself; he was occasionally attended by a young lady, whose visits were frequent, although she lived at the distance of ten miles. The people of the neighborhood were also very attentive to this person, often calling for him; and several of the young men sat with him all night by rotation. It was pleasing to see so creditable a display of the benevolent affections.

Sorry for the delay. I meant to post this yesterday and then had some computer issues … and then forgot.

Our second annual CAA Carriage Festival begins just one week from tomorrow today!

I’ve been working on the (full-color!) program for this year’s Festival and have sent it off to the printer. Here’s a peek at the cover:

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If you’re in the Lexington area next weekend, join us at the Kentucky Horse Park’s Alltech Arena. There will be a pleasure-driving show all day (and evenings) on Friday and Saturday, a beautiful horse-drawn carriage “parade” through the Horse Park and neighboring farms on Sunday, and, on Saturday: a display of restored carriages and an antique car show. The restored carriages and the antique cars will be vying for People’s Choice Awards.

One of the extra-special cars we’re expecting is this gem, a 1915 International Auto Wagon:

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We hope you’ll join us at the Festival! If you can’t be here in person, join us online. I’ll be reporting from the Festival each day, and posting photos, here on the blog, and on the CAA’s Facebook and Twitter pages.

Yesterday afternoon, I drove out to the Gayla Driving Center to work with Sterling Graburn on a photo shoot to illustrate an article on long-lining, scheduled for the August issue of The Carriage Journal.

Here are a few things I saw, and a couple of the other animals I met, while there:

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Ulano (a Dutch Harness Horse) waited patiently in his cross-ties, before getting suited up to be the star of our photo shoot on long-lining

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Katie is very friendly and, as you’ll see, kept us company for the duration

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… Lucky, however, chose to simply watch us from the rafters

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on the way out of the barn … I kinda love this shot

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Katie, still keeping me company …

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… and walking back to the barn with Ulano and Sterling …

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… and, after we were finished, waiting to go on a carriage ride

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Sterling and Ulano

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