A four-wheeled horse-drawn vehicle formerly used to transport mail and passengers over a regular route.
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stage·coach (stāj'kōch') ![]() |
A four-wheeled horse-drawn vehicle formerly used to transport mail and passengers over a regular route.
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Quotes from Mao, Castro, and Che Guevara . . . are as germane to our highly technological, computerized society as a stagecoach on a jet runway at Kennedy airport.
— Saul David Alinsky (1909-1972)
| Wikipedia: Stagecoach |
A stagecoach is a type of four-wheeled closed coach for passengers and goods, strongly sprung and drawn by four horses, usually four-in-hand. Widely used before the introduction of railway transport, it made regular trips between stages or stations, which were places of rest provided for stagecoach travelers. The business of running stagecoaches or the act of journeying in them was known as staging.[1]
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The stagecoach was supported on thoroughbraces, which were leather straps supporting the body of the carriage and serving as springs (the stagecoach itself was sometimes called a "thoroughbrace").[1] The front or after compartment of a Continental stagecoach was called a coupé or coupe. An inside passenger or seat was an inside, while an outside passenger or seat was an outside. On the outside were two back seats facing one another, which the British called baskets. In addition to the stage driver who guided the vehicle, a shotgun messenger, armed with a coach gun, often rode as a guard.
The stagecoach was also called a stage or stage carriage. Types included:
A stage wagon was sometimes used as a stagecoach, especially in thinly settled areas.
Familiar images of the stagecoach are that of a Royal Mail coach passing through a turnpike gate, a Dickensian passenger coach covered in snow pulling up at a coaching inn, a highwayman demanding a coach to "stand and deliver", and a coach being chased by American Indians in a Western movie. The familiar "yard of ale" was, by tradition, a beer drinking glass long enough to be handed to a stagecoach driver without his having to dismount.
The first crude depiction of a stagecoach was in an English manuscript from the 1200's.[2] The stagecoach was first developed in Great Britain during the 1500s and continued in use up to the early 1910s. Coaching inns opened up throughout Europe to accommodate stagecoach passengers. Shakespeare's first plays were staged at coaching inns such as The George Inn, Southwark. The Royal Mail stagecoach, a mail coach introduced in 1784, hastened the improvement of the road system in the British Isles through the turnpike trust system. In addition, the stagecoach was vital in the colonization of North America.
In 1784,a mail stage did the 120 mile journey from London to Bristol in seventeen hours.[3] The diligence, though not invariably with four horses, was the continental analogue for public conveyance, especially as formerly used in France, with other minor varieties such as the Stellwagen and Eilwagen. Stagecoaches could compete with canal boats, but they were rendered obsolete in Europe as the rail network expanded in the nineteenth century.
The first Concord stagecoach was built in 1827. Abbot Downing Company employed leather strap braces under their stagecoaches which gave a swinging motion instead of the jolting up and down of a spring suspension. The company manufactured over forty different types of carriages and wagons at the wagon factory in Concord, New Hampshire. The Concord Stagecoaches were built so solidly that it became known that they didn't break down but just wore out. The Concord stagecoach sold throughout South America, Australia, and Africa. Over 700 Concord stagecoaches were built by the original Abbot Downing Company before it disbanded in 1847. Mark Twain stated in his 1861 book Roughing It that the Concord Stagecoach was like "a cradle on wheels".
The ballad, "The California Stage Company"[4] only slightly exaggerates the travel conditions of the stagecoach passengers on the bad roads of early California. In coaches with three bench seats, the passengers rode three abreast squeezed into a space of 15 inches apeice. Back and middle rows, both faced forward, and a forward row, faced rearward. Those in the forward and middle rows had to ride with their knees dovetailed. On the center seat passengers had only a leather strap to support their backs on a long journey. Passengers rode with baggage on their laps and sometimes mail pouches beneath their feet. Some travelers suffered from motion sickness due to the motion of the coaches, aggravated when the coach traveled over a section of rough road, adding the torment of bouncing on the hard seat, against the roof, or against the side of the coach.
Coaches on the Overland stages traveled continuously for twenty two days, day and night, through dust or blowing sand, in intense heat or cold, sometimes tormented by insects, with only brief stops at way stations to change teams, passengers often had poor food and no rest. If a passenger got off the stage to rest, he might be stuck in that place for a week or more, and only if the next stage had a seat not occupied by another. Passengers were sometimes compelled to walk to relieve the fatigued teams or when the coach had to be lightened to make it over a streach of sand or to help push coaches up hill or extricate them when bogged down in mud or sand.[5] Passengers crowded into coaches caused conditions that prompted Wells Fargo to post these rules in each coach for passenger behavior:
Passengers for the long haul overland coaches were given recomendations of equipment to be taken. For the earliest line that traveled through New Mexico Territory, the Jackass Mail, it was suggested: "One Sharps rifle and 100 rounds, a Colt (revolver) and two pounds of lead, a knife, a pair of thick wool pants, a half dozen pairs of thick socks, six undershirts, three overshirts, a wide-awake hat, a cheap sack coat, an overcoat, one pair of blankets in summer and two in winter, gauntlets, needles, pins, a sponge, hair brush, comb, soap, two pairs of thick drawers, and three or four towels.[7] The later Butterfeild line suggested passengers take a pistol or a knife.
A real danger for stagecoach travellers on local or long haul lines was the risk of robbery by highwaymen, road agents or bandits, right up into the early twentieth century. Cash payrolls and bank transfers were regularly carried by these scheduled stage lines, which operated without a telephone service to report robberies. Tom Bell was the first outlaw to organize a stagecoach robbery gang in the United States. He was soon followed by many others. One of the more successful individual road agent was Charles Bolles aka "Black Bart" known to have robbed California stages from 1875 to 1883.
Worse yet was the danger of indian attack on coaches or the way stations. There were some indian attacks on coaches and on the stations of the central overland route and Pony Express stations. The worst attack was in New Mexico Territory in 1861. Until the February Bascom Affair, relations of the Giddings Line, (successor of the San Antonio and San Diego Line), with the Apache in New Mexico Territory were good. The Apache provided most of the hay for their stations between Mesilla, New Mexico and Tucson, Arizona. Afterward Cochise began his war to drive all the Americans out of Apache lands. This resulted in the deaths of the crews and passengers of six coaches (which were then burned) and destruction of all but one of the way stations and their station keepers. An attempt to find and pacify Cochise by James Giddings, brother of the general manager, resulted in the death of Giddings and a dozen more men. This loss and the begining of the Civil War ended overland stagecoach service on the southern overland route.[8]
At a time when sectional tensions were tearing the United States apart, stagecoaches provided regular transportation and communication between St. Louis, Missouri, in the Midwest along the Mississippi River, and San Francisco, California, in the West. Although the Pony Express is often credited with being the first fast mail line across the North American continent to the Pacific Coast. However the San Antonio-San Diego Mail Line, known as the “Jackass Mail”[9][10] of
Butterfield Overland Stage began rolling on September 15, 1858, when the twice-weekly mail service began. A Butterfield Overland Concord Stagecoach was started in San Francisco and another Overland Stage in Tipton, Missouri, they ran over the better roads. As the going got rougher, the passengers and mail were transferred to "celerity wagons" designed for the roughest conditions. Each run encompassed 2,812 miles and had to be completed in 25 days or less in order to qualify for the $600,000 government grant for mail service.
In March 1860, John Butterfield was forced out because of debt. The beginning of the American Civil War forced the Stage Company to stop using the ox bow route and to use the central overland road instead. The Eastern end of the central route, St. Louis to Denver, Colorado was taken over by Ben Holladay. Ben Holladay is characterized as a devoted, diligent, enterprising man who became known as the Stagecoach King. At the western end, Denver to San Francisco, the Stage Company was taken over by Wells Fargo due to large debts that Butterfield owed. Wells Fargo commandeered the monopoly over long-distance overland stage coach and mail service with a massive web of relay stations, forts, livestock, men, and stage coaches by 1866. Transcontinental stage-coaching came to an end with the completion of the transcontinental railroad in 1869.
The last American chapter in the use of the stage coaches took place between 1890 and the late 1920s, when the road to Young, AZ was paved and the stagecoach was replaced with a Ford. In the end, it was the motor bus, not the train, that caused the final disuse of these horse-drawn vehicles, and many "automobile stage companies" were established in the early 1900s. After the main railroad lines were established, it was frequently not practical to go to a place of higher elevation by rail lines if the distance was short. A town 10 to 25 miles off the mail rail trunk, if it were 1000 or more feet higher, would be very difficult and expensive to serve by rail due to the grade incline. This final portion of the trip, during that 25-year period, was usually served by local stage lines, with a ride of less than a half day being typical. Once the mainline rail grid was in service, the railroad actually stimulated stage line operations well into the twentieth century. These were eventually replaced by motorbuses, and so many local private bus lines were early-on called motor-stage lines. By 1918 stage coaches were only operating in a few mountain resorts or western National Parks as part of the "old west" romance for tourists.
Some bus lines still have the word "stages" in their names, though it's difficult to say whether such usages come from actual corporate descent from predecessor stagecoach operators, or is just a marketing strategy.
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| Translations: Stagecoach |
Dansk (Danish)
n. - diligence, postvogn, dagvogn
Français (French)
n. - diligence
Deutsch (German)
n. - Postkutsche
Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - ταχυδρομική άμαξα
Português (Portuguese)
n. - diligência (f)
Русский (Russian)
почтовая карета, дилижанс
Español (Spanish)
n. - diligencia
Svenska (Swedish)
n. - diligens, postvagn
中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
驿马车, 公共马车
中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 驛馬車, 公共馬車
한국어 (Korean)
n. - (예전의) 역마차, 승합 마차
العربيه (Arabic)
(الاسم) عربه لنقل الركاب و البريد قديما
עברית (Hebrew)
n. - כרכרת-נוסעים
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