Table of Contents
| PAGE | |
|---|---|
| Introduction | [iii] |
| Carriages for an Owner’s Driving | |
| Mail Phaeton | [1] |
| Spider Phaeton | [2] |
| Cut-under Phaeton | [3] |
| George IV Phaeton | [4] |
| Basket Phaeton | [6] |
| Miniature Phaeton | [7] |
| Curricle | [8] |
| Chaise | [9] |
| Doctor’s Gig | [10] |
| Dog Cart | [11] |
| Tandem Cart | [12] |
| “Going-to-Cover” Cart | [14] |
| Shooting Cart | [15] |
| Non-Sporting Carriages | |
| Brougham | [16] |
| Landau | [18] |
| Panel-boot Victoria | [19] |
| Skeleton-boot Victoria | [20] |
| Vis-à-Vis | [22] |
| Private Omnibus | [23] |
| Calèche | [24] |
| Berlin | [26] |
| Carroll Coach | [28] |
| Formal Coach | [29] |
| Irish Jaunting Car | [30] |
| Hansom Cab | [31] |
| Coaching and Other Four-In-Hand Vehicles | |
| Road Coach “Liberty” | [32] |
| Park Drag | [34] |
| Road Coach “Defiance” | [36] |
| Skeleton Break | [37] |
| Body Break with Perch | [38] |
| Carriages of American Origin | |
| Three-seat Surrey | [40] |
| Extension-top Surrey | [41] |
| Depot Wagon | [42] |
| Coupé Rockaway | [43] |
| Six-passenger Rockaway | [44] |
| Buckboard Phaeton | [45] |
| Pony Buckboard | [46] |
| Double Buckboard | [48] |
| Triple Buckboard | [49] |
| Unclassified Vehicles | |
| Racing Sulky | [50] |
| Skeleton Wagon | [51] |
| Tub Cart | [52] |
| Kentucky Breaking Cart | [54] |
| Concord Wagon | [55] |
| Pleasure Wagon | [56] |
| Canadian Calèche | [57] |
| Mountain Wagon | [58] |
| Barge | [59] |
| Schroon Lake Concord Coach | [60] |
| Concord Mud Wagon | [62] |
| Highland & Alpine House Concord Coach | [63] |
| Bibliography | [64] |
| Catalog | [65] |
HORSESHOE BARN
This barn was the first structure erected on the Shelburne Museum grounds. Copied from a barn located in the northern part of Vermont, it was built of timbers from eleven different old Vermont barns and two grist mills. It now houses the collection of carriages and is the only building on the grounds that is not a preservation.
Each of the other twenty-four structures located on the twenty-five acres has been chosen for its individual beauty or interest. Although the buildings have been restored architecturally, they now serve as the background for the lifetime collections of the founders and it is only in the five homes that contemporary household furnishings have been displayed.
Shelburne Museum is essentially a “collection of collections” and is one of the newest of the outdoor country museums. It was founded in 1947 by Mr. and Mrs. J. Watson Webb, and has been chartered by the State of Vermont as a non-profit educational institution.
Located on Route 7, just seven miles south of Burlington, Vermont, the Shelburne Museum is open each year from May 15th to October 15th.