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National Road Trip
The evolution of transportation vehicles was accelerated by the development of roadways into the Northwest Territory in the USA.
Rockaway Coupe 1876
Here is a vehicle that is even too old for NowPublic’s Edmund Jenks to remember.
This Rockaway was owned by someone locally in Zanesville Ohio and is now displayed at the National Road Museum.
“Rockaway is a term applied to two types of carriage: a light, low, American four-wheel carriage with a fixed top and open sides that may be covered by waterproof curtains, and a heavy carriage enclosed at sides and rear, with a door on each side. The name may be derived from the town of Rockaway, New Jersey, where carriages were made. It is featured in Melville's short story "Bartleby" as the narrator's mode of escape from the landlords and tenants looking for help in kicking Bartleby out.
But the Long Island Museum of Art, American History and Carriages, located in Stony Brook, New York, has a different explanation of the name. According to the Museum, the carriage was designed and built in Jamaica, Queens -- a major hub for New York City residents traveling to Long Island for recreation -- and was called the Rockaway because it was used to shuttle passengers between Jamaica and the Atlantic Ocean beaches of Long Island's Rockaway Peninsula.”



Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (2)
at 12:05 on August 26th, 2011
Amazing to think that our forefathers were riding around in these.
at 13:20 on August 26th, 2011
They had a horse attached.