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Jaunting car

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(Redirected fromLong car (carriage))
Irish horse-drawn vehicle for hire

Outside jaunting car Ireland, c. 1890–1900

Ajaunting car, also known as ajaunty car orside car,[1]: 98  is a light two-wheeledcarriage for a single horse, with a seat in front for the driver. The outside jaunting car commonly holds up to four passengers seated back to back, with the foot-boards projecting over the wheels. It was a typical public conveyance for people inIreland in the 1800s, and continues in use today as a tourist attraction. Variations have passengers seating facing each other (inside jaunting car), having a cover, and an elongated version. The driver of a jaunting car is called ajarvey.

Design and variations

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Outside of Ireland,jaunting car usually refers to the "outside car"; within Ireland it mostly means a horse-drawn vehicle for hire for passengers, especially tourists, and is driven by ajarvey who is usually the proprietor.[2][3][4]: 165 

Theoutside car is a high light carriage for a single horse. There are two seats placed lengthwise with the passengers sitting back-to-back and facing outward (left or right of the car). Sizes have varied, but the typical outside car holds four adult passengers. The foot boards are outside of the wheels, and are hinged so they can be folded up over the seats to make the carriage narrower, protect empty seats from bad weather, or to grease the wheels. The driver has a separate center-front seat, but may drive from the right or left side passenger seat to balance the load if there is only one other passenger.[2][3]

Theinside car is an enclosed carriage where up to six passengers sit face-to-face with their backs to the sides of the car. It enters from the rear and is much like thetub cart, but differs in that there is a small seat up front for the driver outside the tub.[5]Anthony Trollope described the "inside jaunting-car" as "perhaps the most uncomfortable kind of vehicle yet invented."[6]

A simple distinction is that an outside car has passengers facing out with their feet outside the wheels, and an inside car has passengers facing inside with their feet inside (between) the wheels.[7]: 25 

Thecovered inside car orjingle, is an inside car with an oiled canvas cover and sides to protect the passengers from the weather; the driver sits outside.[8][a] It is used mainly as an in-townhackney cab since the passengers have no view.[3]

TheBian orlong car is a four-wheeled variation of the outside car which can hold 6-10 passengers per side.[1]: 15  It was invented byCharles Bianconi to carry more passengers as demand for his transport business grew.[b] A long car with six passengers on each side would weigh 1,800 pounds (820 kg).[10]: 81 

Thejaunting wagon was similar to the Bian long car and popular in the US from the 1890s, especially for sight-seeing.[1]: 99 

  • Variations of 1800s jaunting cars
  • Outside car
    Outside car
  • Inside car
    Inside car
  • Long car
    Long car

Historical context

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Jaunting cars lined up to transport members of aconvention in Dublin (1894)

Predecessors to the jaunting car are the cart-car (mid-18th century northern Ireland), and the trottle cart made from rough carved timbers and lacking springs.[1]: 40–41, 98, 165 [11]: 176, 280  According to D. J. Smith, the jaunting car "first appeared in the streets of Dublin, as a means of public transport, about 1813".[1]: 98 

In 1815,Charles Bianconi, an Italian-Irish entrepreneur, established a transport business in southern Ireland areas not served by stagecoaches.[9]: 84–85  In the early 1800s, the British government levied a tax on every "jaunting car or pleasure car",[12][13] providing an opportunity for Bianconi to cheaply purchase family outside cars to start hiscar-for-hire business. At one point he had 140 agents across Ireland running parts of his horse and car business.[9]: 85 [10]: 76ff 

Modern usage

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Jaunting cars remain in use for tourists in some parts of the country, notablyKillarney inCounty Kerry where tours of thelakes andnational park are popular. Many types of modern carriages are used including outside cars, tub carts,wagonettes, and others.

In literature and popular culture

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Valentine Vousden wrote the songThe Irish Jaunting Car in the 1850s, andPercy French wrote his own version of the song for his comic operaThe Knight of the Road (1891). French edited a weekly comic magazine calledThe Jarvey from January 1889-January 1891 based on the adventures of a jaunting car driver and published byRichard J. Mecredy.The Jarvey was a highly literary and lavishly illustrated weekly comic paper, considered to have been the best comic paper of the 19th and 20th century in Ireland.

The outside car was featured in the 1952 movieThe Quiet Man starringJohn Wayne, withBarry Fitzgerald as the jarvey.Val Doonican recorded the songThe Jarvey Was a Leprechaun in the 1960s. In Disney's 1967 filmThe Gnome-Mobile, DJ Mulroony tells his grandchildren about the jaunting car he owned in his youth, and sings a song about it.

Notes

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  1. ^Quote: "Seated in the indescribable native vehicle of Cork, which whirls one through the town with unexpected lightness and speed, you converse with the affable driver through a small hatchway, open in fine weather and closed in wet, and flanked on each side by a glass port-hole."[7]: 25 
  2. ^Quote: "A long Bian was a long car carrying nineteen passengers — eight on each side, two on the well, and one on the high seat next to the driver. It was drawn by three horses, two wheelers and a leader, to which another horse was added when the roads were heavy."[9]: 134–135 

References

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  1. ^abcdeSmith, D.J.M. (1988).A Dictionary of Horse Drawn Vehicles. J. A. Allen & Co. Ltd.ISBN 0851314686.OL 11597864M.
  2. ^abWikisource One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in thepublic domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Jaunting-Car".Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 15 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 283.
    Wikisource One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in thepublic domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Car".Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 5 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 297.
  3. ^abcStratton, Ezra M. (1878).The World on Wheels; or, Carriages, with their Historical Associations from the Earliest to the Present Time, Including a Selection from the American Centennial Exhibition. New York: The author. pp. 354–356.OCLC 3570369.OL 7004294M.
  4. ^Walrond, Sallie (1979).The Encyclopaedia of Driving. Country Life Books.ISBN 0600331822.OL 4175648M.
  5. ^Ware, John (1880).Memoir of the Life of Henry Ware, Jr. Vol. II. p. 51.OL 19384464M.
  6. ^"Can You Forgive Her?" byAnthony Trollope, Chapter XXXI.
  7. ^abMansfield, M. F. (1905).Romantic Ireland. Vol. II. Boston: L. C. Page & company. pp. 22–25.
  8. ^"Hand-books for Ireland", by Samuel Carter Hall, 1853, pp. 83 ff.
  9. ^abcO'Connell, Morgan John (1878).Charles Bianconi: A Biography, 1786-1875. Chapman and Hall.OCLC 7106157.
  10. ^abGilbey, Walter (1905).Modern carriages. Vinton & Co. pp. 73–81.OCLC 1295465.OL 23619083M.
  11. ^Berkebile, Donald H. (1978).Carriage Terminology: An Historical Dictionary. Smithsonian Institution Scholarly Press.ISBN 9781935623434.OL 33342342M.
  12. ^1813 Act of Parliament,53 Geo. 3. c. 59)
  13. ^"Ireland - Jaunting Cars" byClive Akerman inThe Revenue Journal, Vol. XXII, No. 4, Whole No. 88, March 2012, p. 175.

External links

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