Wagon Explained

A wagon or waggon is a heavy four-wheeled vehicle pulled by draught animals or on occasion by humans, used for transporting goods, commodities, agricultural materials, supplies and sometimes people.

Wagons are immediately distinguished from carts (which have two wheels) and from lighter four-wheeled vehicles primarily for carrying people, such as carriages. Animals such as horses, mules, or oxen usually pull wagons. One animal or several, often in pairs or teams may pull wagons. However, there are examples of human-propelled wagons, such as mining corfs.

A wagon was formerly called a wain and one who builds or repairs wagons is a wainwright. More specifically, a wain is a type of horse- or oxen-drawn, load-carrying vehicle, used for agricultural purposes rather than transporting people. A wagon or cart, usually four-wheeled;[1] for example, a haywain, normally has four wheels, but the term has now acquired slightly poetical connotations, so is not always used with technical correctness. However, a two-wheeled "haywain" would be a hay cart, as opposed to a carriage. Wain is also an archaic term for a chariot. Wain can also be a verb, to carry or deliver, and has other meanings.

Contemporary or modern animal-drawn wagons may be of metal instead of wood and have regular wheels with rubber tires instead of traditional wagon wheels.

A person who drives wagons is called a "wagoner",[2] [3] a "teamster", a "bullocky" (Australia), a "muleteer", or simply a "driver".

Wagons have served numerous purposes, with numerous corresponding designs. As with motorized vehicles, some are designed to serve as many functions as possible, while others are highly specialized.

Terminology and design

The exact name and terminology used are often dependent on the design or shape of the wagon. If low and sideless it may be called a dray, trolley or float. When traveling over long distances and periods, wagons may be covered with cloth to protect their contents from the elements; these are "covered wagons". If it has high sides, with or without a permanent top, it may be called a "van". A wagon might be unsprung if ordinarily used over rough ground or cobbles.

A front axle assembly, in its simplest form, is an assembly of a short beam with a pivot plate, two wagon wheels and spindles as well as a drawbar attached to this. A pin attaches the device to a chariot, a wagon or a coach, making the turning radius smaller.[4]

Types

Farm wagon

Farm wagons are built for general multi-purpose usage in an agricultural or rural setting. These include gathering hay, crops and wood, and delivering them to the farmstead or market. Wagons can also be pulled with tractors for easy transportation of those materials.

A common form found throughout Europe is the, a large wagon the sides of which often consisted of ladders strapped in place to hold in hay or grain, though these could be removed to serve other needs. A common type of farm wagon particular to North America is the buckboard.

Freight wagon

Freight wagons are used for the overland hauling of freight and bulk commodities.[5]

In the United States and Canada, the large, heavily built Conestoga wagon was a predominant form of freight wagon in the late 18th and 19th centuries, often used for hauling goods on the Great Wagon Road in the Appalachian Valley and across the Appalachian Mountains.

Even larger wagons were built, such as the twenty-mule team wagons, used for hauling borax from Death Valley, which could haul 36ST per pair.[6] The wagons' bodies were 16feet long and 6feet deep; the rear wheels were 7feet in diameter, and the wagons weighed empty.[7]

Freight wagons were designed for hauling loads, not people, and were not built for comfort. In many cases there was no driver's seat or bench, leaving the driver to walk alongside the wagon or ride atop of one of the horses. As a result, many freight wagons had a "lazyboard," a plank that could be pulled out for sitting upon then pushed back when not needed. In America, lazyboards were located on the left side and close to the brake because carts were steered from the left side; the opposite was practiced in Great Britain.[8]

Delivery wagon

A delivery wagon was used to deliver merchandise such as milk, bread, produce, meat and ice to residential and commercial customers, predominantly in urban settings. The concept of express wagons and of paneled delivery vans developed in the 19th century. By the end of the 19th century, delivery wagons were often finely painted, lettered and varnished, serving as image-builders and rolling advertisements.[9] [10] Special forms of delivery wagon include an ice wagon and a milk wagon.

Tank wagons carried liquid cargoes. Water wagons delivered to areas without piped water and for military camp use. In the early 1900s, the American street flusher used a gas-powered pump to clean city streets of litter or mud, and to wet down dust in dry seasons. Liquid manure wagons were low tank vehicles for spreading manure on fields in the 1860s-1900s. Oil wagons operated from the 1880s to 1920s and held up to 500 gallons of oil or spirits.

In the city center of Schwäbisch Gmünd, Germany, since 1992 the city's plants are irrigated using a horse-drawn wagon with a water tank.[11]

Living accommodations

Wagons have also served as the first mobile homes, as mobile workshops, and mobile kitchens.

Entertainment and show

Travelling circuses decorated their wagons to be able to take part in the grand parade—even packing wagons for equipment, animal cage wagons, living vans and band wagons. Popular in North America was, and still is, the float or show wagon, driven by six horses pulling a highly decorated show wagon with a token payload, and heavily painted with company or owner advertising. Horse-drawn wagons are popular attractions at tourist destinations for leisurely sightseeing.

Motorized wagons

During the transition to mechanized vehicles from animal-powered, vehicles were built by coachbuilders and the bodies and undercarriages were substantially similar to the horse-drawn vehicles.

In modern times, the term station wagon survives as a type of automobile. It describes a car with a passenger compartment that extends to the back of the vehicle, that has no trunk, that has one or more rear seats that can be folded making space for carrying cargo, as well as featuring an opening tailgate or liftgate.[12]

Modern agricultural wagons

Wagon train

See main article: wagon train. In migration and military settings, wagons were often found in large groups called wagon trains.

In warfare, large groups of supply wagons were used to support traveling armies with food and munitions, forming "baggage trains". During the American Civil War, these wagon trains would often be accompanied by the wagons of private merchants, known as sutlers, who sold goods to soldiers, as well as the wagons of photographers and news reporters.[13] Special purpose-built support wagons existed for blacksmithing, telegraphy and even observation ballooning.[14]

In migration settings, such as the emigrant trails of the American West and the Great Trek of South Africa, wagons would travel together for support, navigation and protection. A group of wagons may be used to create an improvised fort called a laager, made by circling them to form an enclosure. In these settings, a chuckwagon is a small wagon used for providing food and cooking, essentially a portable kitchen.

Draught animals

See also: Ox-wagon. In addition to horses and oxen, animals such as mules and goats have been used as draught animals for appropriately-sized wagons.

Wagons in art

As a common, important element in history and life, wagons have been the subjects of artwork. Some examples are the paintings The Hay Wain and The Haywain Triptych, and on the Oregon Trail Memorial half dollar.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. n. 1.
  2. Web site: Wagoner . Merriam-Webster . 29 January 2017.
  3. Web site: Wagoner . The Free Dictionary . 29 January 2017.
  4. Encyclopedia: 1817–1818 . Waggon . 37 . Rees's Cyclopædia . Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme & Brown . London.
  5. Web site: Gardner. Mark L.. Wagons on the Santa Fe Trail: 1822-1880. National Park Service. 5 February 2013 . September 1997.
  6. Web site: Twenty Mule Teams. Death Valley National Park. National Park Service. 6 February 2013.
  7. Web site: Borax: The Twenty Mule Team . 2008-09-18 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080925004706/http://scvhisto.ipower.com/scvhistory/borax-20muleteam.htm . 2008-09-25 . dead .
  8. Burt, Olive W., John Wanamaker: Boy Merchant, The Bobbs-Merrill, Company, Inc., New York, copyright 1952, 1962, page 62.
  9. Book: Hillick, M.C. . Practical Carriage and Wagon Painting . 1898 . Press of the Western Painter . Chicago. 2, 109–116.
  10. Book: Sanders, Walter R.. Ice Delivery . 1922 . Nickerson & Collins . Chicago . 170–172 .
  11. Web site: Ein PS für 160 Blumenkübel . One horsepower for 160 flower pots . Gmünder Tagespost . 31 July 2015 . de . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20191211205814/http://www.gmuender-tagespost.de/p/825952/ . 11 December 2019 . 25 February 2022.
  12. Web site: Definition: station wagon . Merriam-Webster.com . 9 December 2019.
  13. Web site: Bealton, VA. . O'Sullivan . Timothy . 1863 . Library of Congress Prints & Photographs. 5 February 2013.
  14. Web site: Thaddeus Lowe with his Inflation Wagons. Smithsonian Institution: National Air and Space Museum . 5 February 2013.