- Brake (carriage)
A brake, also spelled break, was a type of horse-drawn
carriage used in the nineteenth and early 20th centuries. It was a large or small, open-topped, straight-bodied pleasure vehicle with four wheels, designed for country use. The commonest form, theshooting brake , was designed to carry the driver and a footman orgamekeeper at the front facing forward, and up to six sportsmen on longitudinal benches, with their dogs, guns and game borne along the sides in slatted racks.In the early 19th century, a break was a large, four-wheeled carriage-frame with no body, used for "breaking in" young horses, either singly or in teams of two or four. It has no body parts except for a high seat upon which the driver sits and a small platform for a helper immediately behind. By the late 19th century the meaning had been extended to mean a large waggonette.
Today the term is sometimes used for an
estate car orstation wagon , especially inFrance .External links
* [http://www.austincarriagemuseum.com Austin Carriage Museum,]
Weirsdale, Florida . Formerly Florida Carriage Museum & Resort. Photos and text: click on "The Carriage Museum", then on "Classification of Carriages", then "Breaks".
* [http://www.caaonline.com/caa_content.asp?PageType=Dept&Key=15&MCat=8 CAAOnline: Carriage Tour] and * [http://www.caaonline.com/seabrook/wagonette.html Seabrook Coaching Stable Dispersal Auction: Wagonette.] Carriage Association of America. Illustrations and text.
* [http://longislandmuseum.pastperfect-online.com/31410cgi/mweb.exe?request=ks The Long Island Museum of American Art, History & Carriages,]Stony Brook, New York : Collection Database. Search "break"; illustrations and text
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