Dearborn Wagon

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DEARBORN WAGON

DEARBORN WAGON, a light, four-wheeled vehicle with a top and sometimes side curtains, usually pulled by one horse. Long-standing tradition, dating back to 1821, attributes its design to General Henry Dearborn. It usually had one seat but sometimes as many as two or three, and they often rested on wooden springs. The station wagon of its day, from 1819 to 1850 it was in almost universal use in the United States by truck farmers, peddlers, emigrants, and people traveling for pleasure. Those who traveled by it appreciated its respectable appearance and affordability.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Taylor, George Rogers. The Transportation Revolution, 1815– 1860. New York: Rinehart, 1951.

Stanley R.Pillsbury/a. e.

See alsoTransportation and Travel ; Wagon Manufacture .