The Lost Trotting Parks Storyboard Archives

The Lost Trotting Parks Storyboard Archives

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Buying Trotting Horses on the Androscoggin


Buying Trotting Horses On The Androscoggin [Maine].--Drawn by J. E. Kelley.

"It is my opinion," said Mr. Bishop, the well-known Bull’s Head dealer, who has been for forty years in the Business, "that there are no horses in this country to be compared with those that come from Maine..I’d rather have just the tail of a Maine horse than a whole horse from anywhere else....Androscoggin is situated with Auburn on one side of the river, and Lewiston on the other.... Sometimes a fellow rides in what they call a ‘jumper.’ It is nothing but a crockery crate lashed on a frame-work pinned into two hickory saplings nicked and bent up for shafts and runners. Not a nail used. It is made in two or three hours, and serves only to carry the man to town. If he sells his horse, he throws his jumper away, and rides home with the man who didn’t sell his." Harper’s Weekly. March 20, 1880, page 180; story page 183.

The image and text was e-mailed to me by Susan Green. Susan and Michael P. D'Amato are the authors of the book, Carriages Sulkies Harness Racing Carts History. If you would like to purchase this book, contact Susan Greene at the address below.

Susan Green
455 Coal Mountain Road
Orwigsburg, Pennsylvania 17961
email: segreen@fastcable.net

No comments:

Post a Comment