Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
A tilbury is a light, open, two-wheeled carriage, with or without a top, developed in the early 19th century by the London firm of Tilbury, coachbuilders in Mount Street, London [1] [2] (see also Stanhope (carriage)). A tilbury rig is little more than a single "tilbury seat"—the firm's characteristic spindle-backed seat with a curved padded ...
The Anchor Buggy Company was an American buggy manufacturer in Cincinnati, Ohio from 1886 to 1917. After 1917, it operated as the Anchor Top and Body Company till 1927. [1] The Anchor Carriage Company also had a short-lived automotive branch called the Anchor Motor Car Company (1910—1911). [2]
Stanhope designed several carriages, each bearing his name as was typical of the time period, and built by the London coachbuilder Tilbury. The first design, the Stanhope Gig built in the 1810s, was a gig with a storage boot under the seat, a crosswise seat for two, no hood or top, bent shafts reinforced with ironwork, and four springs.The next design was the Stanhope Buggy, an English buggy ...
This page was last edited on 29 October 2023, at 05:24 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
An 1856 map of Hamilton County depicting Storrs Township at its original size in yellow. Storrs Township was a civil township in south-central Hamilton County, Ohio.It was established in 1835 and annexed to Cincinnati in 1870 but remained in nominal form until at least 1890 due to an oversight.
Columbia Township is one of the twelve townships of Hamilton County, Ohio, USA.The 2020 census found 4,446 people living in the township. Initially one of Ohio's largest townships by area at its inception in 1791, [6] it gradually shrank to one of the smallest by the early 1950s due to annexations by the City of Cincinnati, Norwood, Silverton, the Villages of Fairfax, Indian Hill, Mariemont ...
The museum owns and maintains a collection of 80 historic railroad equipment located on a 4-acre (16,000 m 2) site. [1]The museum was founded in 1975 when a club of local railroad enthusiasts decided to run passenger cars on Amtrak trains.
Cincinnati, Queen City of the West: 1819-1838 (1942, reprint 1992), online; Beckman, Wendy. 8 Wonders of Cincinnati (Arcadia Publishing, 2017). Birch, Eugenie L. "The imprint of history in the practice of city and regional planning: lessons from the Cincinnati case, 1925–2012." in The Routledge Handbook of Planning History (Routledge, 2017 ...