- Two dogs and a horse
Two dogs and a horse - Two horses
Two horses - Two horses looking at their food
Two horses looking at their food - Waggon of the second half of the Seventeenth Century
(From Loggan's 'Oxonia Illustrata.') - Washington's Coach
We must remember that travelling was no such simple and easy matter then as it is now. As the planters in Virginia usually lived on the banks of one of the many rivers, the simplest method of travel was by boat, up or down stream. There were cross-country roads, but these at best were rough, and sometimes full of roots and stumps. Often they were nothing more than forest paths. In trying to follow such roads the traveler at times lost his way and occasionally had to spend a night in the woods. But with even such makeshifts for roads, the planter had his lumbering old coach to which, on state occasions, he harnessed six horses and drove in great style. - ‘Dymoke of Scrivelsby’