Mancos Livery is a photograph by Janice Pariza which was uploaded on September 20th, 2014.
Mancos Livery
An old Western Wagon or carriage sits in downtown Mancos, Colorado as a decoration for their Art Fest.... more
Title
Mancos Livery
Artist
Janice Pariza
Medium
Photograph - Photography
Description
An old Western Wagon or carriage sits in downtown Mancos, Colorado as a decoration for their Art Fest.
The town of Mancos is a Statutory Town located in Montezuma County, Colorado, United States. The population was 1,336 at the 2010 census.
The Covered wagon, also known as a Prairie Schooner, has become a cultural icon of the American Old West.
Although covered wagons were commonly used for transporting goods within the United States, in the mid-nineteenth century thousands of Americans took them across the Great Plains from developed parts of the Midwest to places in the West such as California, Oregon, Colorado, and Montana. Overland immigrants typically used farm wagons, fitting them with five or six wooden bows that arched from side to side across the wagon bed, then stretching canvas or some other sturdy cloth over the bows, creating the cylindrical cover. Sometimes, these wagons would be as long as 15 ft (4.6 m).
Covered wagons were primarily used to transport goods. Small children, the elderly, and the sick or injured rode in them, but since the wagons had no suspension and the roads were rough, many people preferred to walk, unless they had horses to ride.
Crossing the Mississippi on the ice, 19th century
While covered wagons traveling short distances on good roads could be drawn by horses, those crossing the plains were usually drawn by a team of two or more pairs of oxen. These were driven by a teamster or drover, who walked at the left side of the team and directed the oxen with verbal commands and whipcracks. Mules were also used; they were harnessed and driven by someone sitting in the wagon seat holding the reins.
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Uploaded
September 20th, 2014