506 results on '"STAGECOACHES"'
Search Results
2. Ticket to Christchurch
- Published
- 2023
3. Farewell to horsepower
- Author
-
Mills, Laura
- Published
- 2023
4. STRIKING OUT.
- Author
-
COE, ALEXIS
- Subjects
- *
CALIFORNIA Gold Rush, 1848-1852 , *WAGON trains , *STAGECOACHES - Abstract
A personal narrative is presented which explores the author's experiences on the Highway 50 Association's sixty-sixth trip featuring Conestoga wagons, stagecoaches, and horseback riders from Zephyr Cove, Nevada to Placerville, California which retraces a former California Gold Rush travel route.
- Published
- 2016
5. The diligencia (stagecoach) as narrative vehicle in early nineteenth-century Spain.
- Author
-
Frost, Daniel
- Subjects
- *
STAGECOACHES , *GUIDEBOOKS , *MODERNIZATION (Social science) , *RAILROADS - Abstract
This article investigates how portrayals of the diligencia (stagecoach) in costumbrista texts, guidebooks and other writings from early nineteenth-century Spain helped characterize the country's transition to modernity. Tracing the growing influence of the stagecoach network in the years before the railroad, the study examines how writers such as Mariano José de Larra and Ramón de Mesonero Romanos employ the diligencia both as a symbol of movement and a literary device well-suited to conveying the quickening pace of life that they observed. Precursor to the tranvía and train, the diligencia occasioned changes in how writers perceived and represented their era. Opening up new means of association, exchange and, ultimately, narration, the diligencia becomes an apt means to comment on the political, social and economic climate of the day. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. BREADALBANE, BEN HALL, AND THE SPURIOUS CASE AGAINST THOMAS LODGE.
- Author
-
McDonald, James
- Subjects
BUSHRANGERS ,STAGECOACHES ,GANGS - Abstract
The article examines that several people assisted the bushranger, Ben Hall, in the mid 1860. Topics include examines that the gang held up a stage coach at Breadalbane, a village halfway between Goulburn and Gunning, and brought their captives back to the Breadalbane Hotel, which was owned by Thomas Lodge.
- Published
- 2020
7. Luxury travel still a bumpy ride
- Author
-
Dykes, Mervyn
- Published
- 2020
8. ENERGY AND SUCCESS: THORP & SPRAGUE’S MOHAWK VALLEY STAGE LINE.
- Author
-
WAITE, DAVE
- Subjects
STAGECOACHES ,TRANSPORTATION ,HORSE-drawn vehicles - Abstract
The article presents the daily line of stagecoaches run by Asa Sprague, Thomas Powell and Aaron Thorp in New York between Albany and Utica in the 1800s. Also cited are the announcement by Powell that he was passing the supervision of his line to his son William H. Powell and colleague Aaron Thorp due to illness in 1825, and the renaming of the line to Thorp & Sprague.
- Published
- 2021
9. The Royall Coach: Sketching the Nation.
- Author
-
Pottroff, Christy L.
- Subjects
- *
TRAVELERS' writings , *AMERICAN authors , *STAGECOACHES , *HISTORY of travel writing , *19TH century American literature , *AMERICAN women's writings - Abstract
This article elucidates the extent to which the stagecoach created new opportunities for aspiring authors and underwrote the emergence of Jacksonian-era literary culture. Travel writers like Anne Newport Royall built their publication and distribution practices around the mobility of the stagecoach industry, which operated under a government subsidy to deliver the mail. Between 1826 and 1831, Royall travelled by stagecoach throughout the United States both to find stories to fill her travel books and to sell her books to far-flung audiences. The stagecoach network itself could be said to have created a demand for new kinds of writing. By incorporating far-flung localities into a single national system, the stagecoach network contributed to a growing curiosity about distant people and places in the new nation, a curiosity that contributed to the proliferation of travel sketches in books and magazines. In effect, the stagecoach network at once sparked a hunger for representations of the United States and a means to satisfy it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. THEY RODE FOR WELLS FARGO.
- Author
-
Boessenecker, John
- Subjects
- *
GOLD mining , *CALIFORNIA Gold Rush, 1848-1852 , *STAGECOACHES - Abstract
The article offers information on the history of Wells Fargo & Co., which provided delivery and banking services to gold mining companies, shipping gold and silver from the mining regions, accepting deposits and buying and selling bullion and dust. The bank's earliest express messengers made deliveries to and from mining camps by horseback during the California Gold Rush, and carried guns to keep highway robbers away. One of Wells Fargo's best-known shotgun messenger was Mike Tovey.
- Published
- 2018
11. Reading While Travelling in the Long Nineteenth Century
- Author
-
Ferguson, Christopher, author
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Trial by Stagecoach.
- Author
-
Ostler, Rosemarie
- Subjects
- *
AUTHORS' promotional tours , *TEXTBOOKS -- History , *STAGECOACHES , *AMERICAN English language , *ENGLISH language dictionaries , *HISTORY ,UNITED States description & travel - Abstract
The article discusses the history of a promotional book tour by American author Noah Webster following publication of the textbook set "Grammatical Institute of the English Language." Emphasis is given to topics such as conditions for traveling by stagecoach, Webster's lectures on a national language for the U.S., and his publishing of a dictionary for American English.
- Published
- 2017
13. XIV. BETWEEN THE ACTS.
- Author
-
Wister, Owen
- Subjects
VOYAGES & travels ,STAGECOACHES ,GOLD mining - Abstract
Chapter XIV of the book "THE VIRGINIAN: A Horseman Of the Plains," by Owen Wister is presented. It narrates the author's travel, passing through northwest to Fort Meade. It relates the author's conversation with two old companions, Shorty and Scipio le Moyne at the stage-coach about gold excitement at Rawhide.
- Published
- 2006
14. A STSGECOACH Comes Home.
- Author
-
WOOD, DANITA ALLEN
- Subjects
STAGECOACHES ,HORSE-drawn vehicles - Abstract
The article discusses the return of the still-working stagecoach named The Journey to Missouri, which has been operating in three different centuries.
- Published
- 2016
15. QUENTIN TARANTINO.
- Author
-
Morgan, Kim
- Subjects
- *
MOTION pictures , *BLIZZARDS , *STAGECOACHES , *HUNTERS - Abstract
The article speaks of the interview of Quentin Tarantino, the director of The Hateful Eight. Some hunters, outlaws and fugitives take in a stagecoach stop-off during blizzard in The Hateful Eight. He discusses over the garrulous enthusiasm for films with new countless influences including his early works.
- Published
- 2016
16. Regional and county centres 1700–1840.
- Abstract
It is now widely recognised that towns played a central role in the development of a new, more modern British economy and society in the years between 1700 and 1840. However, it is often assumed that the expansive element in urban society, the new social attitudes and cultural values that were helping to change patterns of consumer demand, to mobilise capital resources and to generate novel industrial processes and products, were confined to the great metropolis of London and the specialist ports, resorts and industrial towns whose growth attracted so much attention from contemporary observers. Nevertheless, it would be a mistake to ignore the role played in this process by the established regional centres and historic county towns, many of which retained their importance well into the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Their experiences during this period of substantial and sometimes dramatic change in the urban system encompass every possible permutation from explosive population growth to sullen stagnation and raise pertinent questions about the very nature of ‘success’ in the context of urban development. Rather than being passive spectators of a drama taking place elsewhere, regional and county centres were fully involved in the action. Status, fuctions and patterns of development A substantial number of the ‘Great and Good towns’ of early modern England fell into the category of county centres, towns whose social and economic influence over a broad hinterland beyond their immediate market area was recognised by their contemporary classification as ‘the capital of all the county’ or simply ‘county town’. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. The transformation of urban space 1700–1840.
- Abstract
Introduction The fabric of the urban environment experienced accelerating change during the course of the eighteenth century, and the pace of change in some towns, although by no means all, underwent a dramatic gearshift from the 1780s onwards. These changes were driven by rapid population growth and migration, and by technological innovation, leading to the mechanisation of transport and of many manufacturing processes. Central government and municipal authorities contributed very little to this metamorphosis, unlike the experience of many European cities. The traditional pattern of urban social geography, in which the well-to-do lived in the centres of towns and the poor in the suburbs, was shattered in many towns in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries and replaced by suburban residential segregation based upon socio-economic status and the separation of home and work, in its turn dependent upon ease of transport. Everywhere it is a subtle, complex process of transformation. In some towns, such as Glasgow, it takes place within a generation. In other towns, unaffected by the first stages of industrialisation, it was the end of the nineteenth century before these processes had fully worked themselves out. Much of this growth and change had to be accommodated within ancient boundaries and administrative structures, creating problems of health, sanitation and housing upon an unprecedented scale. These problems were widely recognised by the 1830s, but it is the 1840s before central government begins to take the first tentative steps towards putting things right. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. The urban landscape 1540–1700.
- Abstract
The foundations The topography of British towns at the beginning of the sixteenth century was the product of the interaction between successive generations of men and women living in society, and the opportunities and constraints presented by their environment over the preceding millennium. Volume I of this work, more especially Chapters 8 and 16, gives an account of the medieval antecedents to this chapter. Of all the features of towns inherited from the medieval centuries, the street plan, once laid down, has proved to be the most enduring, matched only by the similar longevity of the boundaries of the burgage plots which composed the spaces between the streets. The layout of both could be profoundly affected by the line of any fortifications which might be present. By the end of the medieval period well over a hundred English and Welsh towns had been fortified, including Coventry, Southampton, Hereford and Newcastle-upon-Tyne, ‘the strength and magnificens of the waulling of this towne’, Leland thought, ‘far passith al the waulles of the cities of England and of most of the townes of Europa’. Numerous others, including Aylesbury, Chelmsford and Trowbridge, were not fortified, whilst in some cathedral cities the close formed a separate fortified enceinte, as at Salisbury. Many town walls were, by the beginning of this period, ruinous, and there was much encroaching and piecemeal destruction. A survey of Oswestry made in 1602 revealed great waste made on the castle, with stones carried away by the wagon load and whole towers taken down, with the gates of the town all very ruinous except Churchgate, where the burgesses had made their election house. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. England: North.
- Abstract
The nature of the region Urban growth in parts of northern England during the three centuries under review was spectacular even by the standards of the first industrial nation. It was spectacular in the literal sense that by the early decades of the nineteenth century not only business travellers but also tourists and social commentators were coming to marvel at the novel concentration of factories using fossil fuels in an urban setting in and around Manchester, and at the sheer scale of urban maritime and manufacturing activity in the other towns which were cohering and coalescing. The great industrial and commercial centres gathered up systems of satellite towns in their surrounding districts, conjuring up in one visiting mind the telling image of Manchester as a ‘diligent spider’ at the heart of its web of communications. These were accelerating developments, and they reached their most dramatic, interesting and historically important phase between the late eighteenth century and the mid-nineteenth, when these new towns were at their most raw, untrammelled, dramatic, exciting and threatening: ‘great human exploits’ which produced and distributed a cornucopia of goods under a shroud of infernal smoke and under conditions which visibly threatened life, health and social and political stability. Provincial urban developments within the North had turned it into a symbol of the future, which might or might not work in the longer term, and by the 1840s the urban concentrations of the region had become the cynosure of the informed contemporary gaze. It therefore makes sense to begin this survey with an analysis of the scale and scope of urbanization within the region in 1840, and then to examine the roots of these unprecedented phenomena and attempt to describe and explain their development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. England: Midlands.
- Abstract
The historical Midlands is a concept which is difficult to pin down; to some extent it amounts to that area which is left when more distinctive provincial blocks are removed. For the purposes of this volume the Midlands is defined as the West Midland counties of Herefordshire and Shropshire, Worcestershire and Warwickshire, combined with the East Midland shires of Derby, Leicester and Rutland, Northampton, Nottingham and Lincoln. There do exist some natural features which help to define this region: uplands to the west and north and the Lincolnshire seacoast, but the southern border can only be defined in our period in terms of the weakening fringe of London's primary commercial region. This is shown by analysis of the bases of Londonbound carriers in 1684 where there is a marked reduction at about a ninety mile radius from the capital, leaving Worcestershire, mid Warwickshire and mid Leicestershire outside, but Northamptonshire within, London's region. It is no surprise to find that the major Midland towns all lie beyond this frontier. Yet the urban networks of the Midlands do have a self-contained and consistent character which justifies thinking in these terms. While the Midland towns by their very location had vital external links, most of them looked primarily to London or to other towns within the region. And they had a great deal in common, for much of the region suffered from poor communications in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, and it was a truism of contemporary thought that distance from navigable water necessarily discouraged economic growth: thus in 1722 it was said of Leicestershire that ‘being the most inland county in England, and consequently far from any sea or navigable rivers, you must not suppose it a county of any trade’. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The development of stage coaching and the impact of turnpike roads, 1653-1840.
- Author
-
Gerhold, Dorian
- Subjects
TOLL roads ,STAGECOACHES ,NEWSPAPER advertising ,MODERNIZATION (Social science) ,ECONOMIC development ,ROADS ,TRANSPORTATION ,HISTORY of London, England ,HISTORY - Abstract
This article uses newspaper advertisements to chart the changes in speeds and fares of stage coaches, identifying the main periods of increasing speeds among London coaches as the 1760s-80s and 1810s-20s, separated by a period when speeds declined. It then measures productivity growth. Fares of London coaches in 1835-6 were about 27 per cent of what they would have been but for improvements in horses, vehicles, and roads from 1750, and the two main periods of productivity growth correspond to those of rising speeds. Speeds and productivity of regional coaches increased more smoothly. The rising productivity firmly identifies road transport as one of the modernizing sectors of the economy. New figures are put forward for the growing number of London and regional coaches, indicating rapid growth in passenger miles. While turnpike trusts had little impact before the 1750s, their increasing effectiveness, together with the use of steel springs and improved horses, was crucial to the rising productivity of the 1760s-80s, and even more so to that of the 1810s-20s. The cross roads were apparently poorer than London roads in the late eighteenth century, but thereafter the gap narrowed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. STAGE FRIGHT: THE WICKENBURG MASSACRE.
- Author
-
Wilson, R. Michael
- Subjects
- *
MURDER , *APACHE (North American people) , *SHOOTINGS (Crime) , *STAGECOACHES , *MASSACRES - Abstract
The article discusses the ambush of a California-bound coach in Arizona Territory in 1871 in which six of eight passengers were murdered. Topics covered include the question on whether the attackers were Apaches or Yavapais, the attack's presumed aim of retaliation for the recent shooting of an Indian, and the possibility of Mexican stagecoach robbers being responsible for the Wickenburg massacre. Also mentioned are the circumstances behind the passengers' deaths. INSETS: WHERE ARE BURIED?;STAGECOACH TO STAGECOACH.
- Published
- 2015
23. Making the Scene.
- Author
-
Panken, Ted
- Subjects
JAZZ musicians ,STAGECOACHES ,MASTERS of ceremonies ,EARLY memories - Abstract
The article focuses on singer Michael Mwenso who played a role in the evolving movement of the jazz music industry in New York City. Topics mentioned include the personality imprinted in singing, stage coaching, and emceeing, the hiring by jazz director Wynton Marsalis at Lincoln Center in New York, and his insights on his childhood experience which he experienced the loneliness without his mother around.
- Published
- 2015
24. THE FIRST STAGES TO DENVER.
- Author
-
LEHMAN, DORMAN
- Subjects
STAGECOACH lines ,STAGECOACHES ,GOLD mining ,HISTORY of transportation ,POSTAL service ,COLORADO state history to 1876 - Abstract
The article discusses historic stagecoach travel through southeastern Colorado, in the vicinity of the South Platte River and Cherry Creek, along the Leavenworth and Pike's Peak (L&PP) Express. The transportation route was developed as a means to reach Denver, Colorado as a result of the discovery of gold in California. The author emphasizes the role of businessman William H. Russell in the development of the passenger and express service. The importance of the L&PP Express to the development of Denver, then a relatively small mining outpost, is examined as well. The carrying of mail along the line is described, as are the experiences of newspaper editor Horace Greeley on the trail.
- Published
- 2011
25. EXCAVATING THE PREHISTORY OF TIME-SPACE COMPRESSION.
- Author
-
WARF, BARNEY
- Subjects
- *
SPACETIME , *HISTORY of transportation , *HISTORY of telecommunication , *HUMAN geography , *HISTORY of steamboats , *HISTORY of railroads , *STAGECOACHES - Abstract
An essay on the intellectual history of the idea of time-space compression, a concept in the field of human geography, is presented. It examines the impact of innovations in transportation technologies and telecommunications. The author comments on observations on space-time compression since the eighteenth century and explores reductions in travel times. Modes of transportation discussed include stagecoaches, railroads, and steamships.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Communicating with Jane Eyre: Stagecoach, Mail, and the Tory Nation.
- Author
-
Livesey, Ruth
- Subjects
- *
REGIONALISM in literature , *STAGECOACHES , *NINETEENTH century , *MANNERS & customs - Abstract
Critics have long read Jane Eyre as an exemplary account of liberal individualism and self-expression. This essay instead argues that the novel, written in the 1840s and depicting the 1820s, employs the stagecoach as a Tory emblem of a Britain unified through the preservation of regional customs, against an increasingly dominant railway network. Radical though Jane Eyre's claims to speak and feel may be from the perspective of liberal narratives of progressive individualism, they are best understood in this Tory context of anti-metropolitan regionalism and preservationism. Jane's self-assertions are momentary staging posts in a journey that preserves customary regional community. The stagecoach knits the smallest, most remote places and persons into the nation while preserving their distinct identities. It is a resistant Tory mode of inscribing an alternative modernity in the era of progress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Industry, trade, and communications.
- Author
-
Stephens, W. B.
- Abstract
INDUSTRY AND INTERNAL TRADE Before the eighteenth century the records of individual craftsmen or firms are very rare, and local historians must rely on information culled from a variety of sources too wide for all to find mention here. For medieval and modern times evidence for local extractive-industries and for manufactures generally is likely to be found in deeds or charters, especially leases, in manorial court rolls, and in manorial and other financial accounts. Many of these records will be found in local record offices, but since the Crown was so often involved in the control and taxation of industry generally, and more directly with mining and metal working, the collections of such records in the Public Record Office must be tackled by the serious investigator. These include the Classes S.C.6 and D.L.29 (ministers' accounts), S.C.2 and D.L.30 (manorial rolls), and, especially for the aulnage tax on cloth in various counties and the royal mines of Devon and Cornwall, E.101 (Exchequer accounts various). Customs records can also throw light on local industry, as can the Exchequer special commissions and depositions mentioned below, the memoranda rolls, and the ancient correspondence of the Chancery and Exchequer. Not all the other collections at the Public Record Office which may contain information on local industry and trade in the medieval and early modern period can be noted here. For some, however, there are published calendars with indexes, and this will facilitate research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Mail Coaches ON THE Santa Fe Trail.
- Author
-
WHEELING, KEN
- Subjects
STAGECOACHES - Abstract
Discusses three Vermonters, Mahlon Cottrill, Bradley Barlow, and Jared L. Sanderson, who operated stagecoaches in Vermont before shifting their operations to mail route 10547 on the Santa Fe Trail after 1862.
- Published
- 2007
29. CHAPTER XLIV: A REMINISCENCE OF THE EAST.
- Author
-
Lever, Charles James
- Subjects
TRAVELERS ,STAGECOACHES ,IRISH people ,VOYAGES & travels - Abstract
Chapter XLIV of the book "The Confessions of Harry Lorrequer," Volume 6, is presented. It focuses on the protagonist's observations of his fellow travelers riding the stage-coach who joined for breakfast in a mixed assemblage of ranks, ages and countries. It narrates his encounter with an Irishman whom he found to be not displeased at the manner in which his acquaintance had been made with him.
- Published
- 1839
30. Traversing Otira in 1900-1923
- Author
-
Mahoney, Jack
- Published
- 2010
31. Cobb & Co?
- Author
-
Harris, Jan
- Published
- 2010
32. "Quotable'' John Wayne.
- Subjects
STAGECOACHES ,COWBOYS - Published
- 2014
33. RUNNING HORSE AND RED STAGECOACHES.
- Author
-
Addy, Sharon Hart
- Subjects
STAGECOACHES ,POSTAL service - Abstract
The article offers information on stagecoach services for traveling and mail delivery from the eastern U.S. to the western U.S. during the 1850s.
- Published
- 2014
34. Mansion House 1757...
- Author
-
Dolan, Michael
- Subjects
- *
STAGECOACHES , *RAILROAD stations - Abstract
The article reports that Mansion House 1757 in Fairfield, Pennsylvania, had its origins in a grant of 247 acres Declaration of Independence signer Charles Carroll of Carrollton made in 1755 to John Miller known as the Mansion House with a stagecoach stop and later an Underground Railroad station.
- Published
- 2022
35. Beginnings
- Author
-
Wolfinger, James, author
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. On the Road with Professor Wilson.
- Author
-
Chartres, J. A.
- Subjects
HISTORY of roads ,TRAFFIC engineering ,HIGHWAY engineering ,TRANSPORTATION engineering ,STAGECOACHES ,TRAFFIC regulations - Abstract
In this article, the author responds to criticisms received by his article on the history of roads and road traffic from Professor Wilson. The author deals with the criticisms which fall into six categories: his sketch of the historiography of the subject; his emphasis on traffic rather than road surfaces; the interpretation of the figures in tables; the reality of the published carrying schedules; the selection of some literary evidences against others; and his apparent confusion over stage-coaches. In so far as Wilson's authorities support his views, they do so only in showing that his use of them was somewhat incautious.
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. BANE OF THE BADMEN Boone May.
- Author
-
DeArment, R. K.
- Subjects
- *
SHOOTERS of firearms , *SHOTGUNS , *STAGECOACHES , *OUTLAWS - Abstract
The article describes the exploits of Daniel Boone May, who was a shotgun messenger on stagecoaches plying the routes between the Union Pacific depots, Dakota Territory and Deadwood. May was a sharpshooter and also was talented in the use of a shotgun. His primary role was to stop outlaws, which resulted in his killing many robbers. The stagecoaches that were the favorite prey of road agent gangs hired shotgun messengers like May to protect gold shipments, the mail, and passengers.
- Published
- 2010
38. Wagon Master.
- Author
-
Markley, Bill
- Subjects
NINETEENTH century ,ARTISANS ,STAGECOACHES ,WAGONS ,VEHICLE design & construction - Abstract
The article focuses on the efforts of Doug Hansen, a 19th-century craftsman and stagecoach owner, to revive the lost art of building heavy duty wagons. Hansen, who owns the Wheel and Wagon Shop neat Mitchell, South Dakota, learned the trade of building and restoring 19th-century wagons from his family. His efforts consist of studying the work of old craftsmen, investigating their design and craftsmanship, and understanding the joinery and engineering. Two of the shop's stagecoaches traveled with the 2008 Fort Pierre to Deadwood Trail Ride.
- Published
- 2010
39. Polvo de aquellos lodos.
- Author
-
Barranco, Alberto
- Subjects
- *
HORSE-drawn vehicles , *STAGECOACHES , *TRAVEL , *HISTORY of transportation ,MEXICAN history, 1821-1861 - Abstract
Se describe el transporte en carruaje en México a mediados del siglo XIX. Se notan los costos, horarios y rutas que tomaban los carruajes. Se explica que los carruajes volcaban debido a las malas condiciones de las carreteras, que los viajes podrían durar hasta más de una semana y que los pasajeros caían víctima de bandidos que los robaban.
- Published
- 2010
40. An incident at Severn Stoke, II September 1830.
- Author
-
Bruce, Robert J.
- Subjects
- *
TRAFFIC accidents , *STAGECOACHES , *HORSE-drawn vehicles , *MUSICIANS , *TRAVELERS , *SONG festivals - Abstract
The article explores the incident of an Aurora stagecoach travelling to the village of Severn Stoke in the evening of September 1830 in Worcestershire, England. It notes that the incident killed two persons, injured seven people and unharmed two persons, who were all musicians planned to attend the triennial Three Choirs Festival. It provides that the incident demised the use of Aurora due to its hazards to travellers.
- Published
- 2009
41. Stage Presence.
- Author
-
Sneed, David
- Subjects
- *
STAGECOACHES , *VEHICLES , *MOTOR vehicle maintenance & repair - Abstract
The article reports on the restoration of the stagecoaches of tour company Yosemite Stage and Turnpike Co. in 2009. It recalls that the company started to offer stagecoach tours to the Mariposa Grove, California in 1877. One of the open-sided, horse-drawn models that is owned by the Madera County Historical Society has been restored by South Dakota-based Hanson Wheel & Wagon Shop owned by the family of Doug Hansen. It is said that it took restorers over 800 hours to reconstruct the coach based on period photographs, patterns and literature.
- Published
- 2009
42. BUTTERFIELD STAGE OVERLAND MAIL ROUTE.
- Author
-
Heck, Larry E.
- Subjects
STAGECOACHES ,FOUR-wheel driving ,POSTAL service - Abstract
The article focuses on four-wheel driving following the route taken by the first stagecoach that delivered mail by crossing the Poteau River into Oklahoma on September 19, 1858. Information on the improvement of the mail service that led to the creation of the Butterfield Overland Mail contract is provided. Details of the coordinates and landmarks encountered in the Oklahoma trip are presented, including the historic marker for the first relay station in Skullyville, Riddle's Station and the Pine Top Cemetery.
- Published
- 2008
43. EL Tejano.
- Author
-
Banks, Leo W.
- Subjects
ROBBERS ,STAGECOACHES ,OUTLAWS ,AMBUSHES & surprises ,DEATH - Abstract
The article discusses the life of the infamous staged coach robber William Whitney Brazelton, known as "El Tejano." The author narrates how Brazelton started his career as an outlaw. It also states how tracker Juan Elias located him. Brazelton was killed by a group of Arizona lawmen through an ambush.
- Published
- 2006
44. Coaching prints:Winter perils on the road.
- Author
-
Moran, Joe
- Subjects
STAGECOACHES ,TRANSPORTATION ,CARRIAGES & carts ,POSTAL service ,COLD weather conditions ,SNOW - Abstract
The article discusses the usage of stagecoaches as modes of transportation in Great Britain. Stagecoaches had been there for long, but mail coaches came much later, due to the efforts of John Palmer, manager of Bath and Bristol theaters. Mail coaches were used in government postal service. The Royal Mail Service was started in 1784. The roads were improved, so that the mail coach moved comfortably. Safety of mail was given more importance than the safety of the passengers traveling in it. Once there was a heavy snowfall on Christmas Eve in 1836, that continued for five days and nights. This was for the first time when the mail coach services were interrupted for two days due to bad weather.
- Published
- 2005
45. WHEN stagecoaches ROLLED THE WEST.
- Author
-
Lalire, Gregory
- Subjects
- *
COACHING (Transportation) , *HORSE-drawn vehicles , *STAGECOACHES - Abstract
Discusses stagecoaches considered symbols of the Wild West era in the United States. Other considered symbols of the Wild West era; Functions of stagecoaches; Illustration of stagecoaches.
- Published
- 2002
46. THE THIRD VIOLET. CHAPTER I.
- Subjects
STAGECOACHES ,HOTELS ,EASELS ,FICTION - Abstract
Chapter I of the book "The Third Violet" is presented. William Hawker with his clothes case, paint box and easel climbed down the steps of the car into the train station in his hometown. His easel accidentally knocked against the head of a little boy who is accompanied by a nursemaid, a little sister and his young mother who immediately caught his attention. From the station they boarded the same stage coach, the woman and her entourage bound for the Hemlock Inn while Hawker headed home.
- Published
- 1897
47. TRANSPORTATION.
- Subjects
HISTORY of transportation ,PUBLIC transit ,STAGECOACHES ,HIGH speed trains ,SPACE vehicles ,HISTORY - Abstract
This article presents information on the many forms of transportation for mankind starting with animal power. Diagrams are presented showing the history of human transportation and many of the major developments that led to mass transportation such as the steam engine. The drawings follow the course of transportation development from stagecoach service across the U.S. to bullet trains in Asia and on into outer space.
- Published
- 2008
48. A ROCKY RIDE.
- Author
-
Phillips, Laura
- Subjects
STAGECOACHES ,VOYAGES & travels ,CHAIRS - Abstract
The article offers information on stagecoach in 1880s which is a good way for a person to travel out West, but uncomfortable. It states that a stagecoach pulled by four to six horses, carried passengers to towns and most coaches had three seats, with each seat holding three passengers. It further discusses various famous stagecoach drivers including Mary Fields, a black woman who was born a slave in Tennessee and Charley Parkhurst, known as one of the safest and fastest drivers in California.
- Published
- 2014
49. JOHANNESBURG.
- Author
-
Martin, Peter Bird
- Subjects
- *
COMMUNITIES , *CITIES & towns , *STAGECOACHES , *OUTDOOR recreation - Abstract
Features Johannesburg, South Africa. Description of the Sophiatown and Moroka communities; Popularity of stagecoach-stopping as an outdoor sport in the city; Background on the beginning of a conflict between English speaking and Afrikaans African people in Johannesburg.
- Published
- 1955
50. WILD-WEST BANK.
- Author
-
Taylor, Frank J.
- Subjects
- *
RELICS , *REVOLVERS , *STAGECOACHES , *GOLD - Abstract
Focuses on the History Room of Wells Fargo Bank in San Francisco, California which exhibits and accepts historical items that are associated with the bank. Number of Colts revolvers that were collected by the bank; Story behind the acquisition of the red Concord stagecoach of the History Room; Gold collections of the room.
- Published
- 1950
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