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The Concord coach was an American horse-drawn coach, often used as stagecoaches, mailcoaches, and hotel coaches. The term was first used for the coaches built by coach-builder J. Stephen Abbot and wheelwright Lewis Downing of the Abbot-Downing Company in Concord, New Hampshire, but later to be sometimes used generically. Like their predecessors ...
This category is to list all animal-powered vehicles. ... Flint Wagon Works; Float (horse-drawn) Flying Dutchman (horse-powered locomotive) Four-in-hand (carriage) G.
Laconia Car Company manufactured railway cars in Laconia, New Hampshire from 1848 to 1928. Boston Elevated Railway streetcar built by Laconia Car Company in 1911 Laconia Car Company streetcar built in 1918 preserved at the Seashore Trolley Museum. The Ranlet Manufacturing Company began building horse-drawn wagons, carriages and stagecoaches in ...
Buckboard Stereo card showing a long buckboard. Note the boards lay directly on the axles without springs Duke's cigarettes advertising insert card, 1850–1920. A buckboard is a four-wheeled wagon of simple construction meant to be drawn by a horse or other large animal.
The American mud wagon was an earlier, smaller, and cruder vehicle, being mostly open-sided with minimal protection from weather, causing passengers to risk being mud-splashed. [1]: 120 A canvas-topped stage wagon was used for freight and passengers, and it had a lower center of gravity, making it harder to overturn. [1]: 153
Police in Merrimack, New Hampshire reached out to the public via Facebook to alert them about a strange animal seen wandering in an area graveyard. Though the authorities noted the creature is ...
The Voortrekkers used ox-wagons (Afrikaans: Ossewa) during the Great Trek north and north-east from the Cape Colony in the 1830s and 1840s. An ox-wagon traditionally made with the sides rising toward the rear of the wagon to resemble the lower jaw-bone of an animal is also known as a kakebeenwa (jaw-bone wagon). South Africa has 800 varieties ...