|
|
|
|
|
|
Yellowstone National Park
Observation Wagons
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
4-Horse
Yellowstone
Observation Wagon,
Yellowstone
Park Company "39". Museum Catalog Number YELL 90065. The wooden body of this stagecoach features a passenger compartment with three forward facing seats. Leather thorough braces are attached below the compartment for shock absorption. The driver's box in front has a seat for the driver on the right side (beside the brake handle). A leather luggage boot is mounted to the exterior aft section of the stage. The body is painted yellow, and the undercarriage is yellow with black pin striping. "YELLOWSTONE PARK CO." is in black along the passenger compartment panels. A YP Co. circular logo decal (red, white and blue with a bear at the center) and "39" painted in black are on each side of the driver's box.
|
This
coach and others like it were custom built by the Abbot-Downing Company for the
YPT Co. specifically for touring Yellowstone
National Park. After the stagecoach
era, it was probably used at Roosevelt Lodge for visitor entertainment and
parts were continuously repaired and replaced over time to keep the vehicle in
service. Non-original components include seat cushions and seat back
upholstery, and numerous segments of the body and hardwood fittings. Despite
these modifications, it still retains a fairly original appearance,
particularly in comparison to other coaches in the collection.
|
Photos:
(YELL 90065) 4-Horse Yellowstone Observation Wagon, Yellowstone Park Company Number 39, in the park's museum collection.
(YELL 36451) Driver and passengers posed with a four-horse Yellowstone Observation Wagon similar to the vehicle in the park's museum collection.
(YELL 36444) The Yellowstone Park Transportation Company stagecoach washing facility in Mammoth Hot Springs. The company also had a blacksmith shop, as well as painting and repair operations at Mammoth.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Did You Know?
There were no wolves in Yellowstone in 1994. The wolves that were reintroduced in 1995 and 1996 thrived and there are now over 300 of their descendents living in the Greater Yellowstone Area.
|
|
|
|
Last Updated: June 26, 2007 at 11:36 EST |