The Seabrook Coaching Stable Dispersal Auction

 

Curtain-quarter Rockaway

 
Curtain-quarter rockaway

Maker not known
Circa 1905

Type:
The rockaway is an American style of carriage that was first built by a carriage builder on Long Island early in the 19th century. The standing top, with its extension over the driver’s seat, is a feature of the rockaway. The lack of a partition between the driver’s seat and the inside seat, with both being on the same level, marks it as a family carriage, a popular style in the U.S. The natural wood finish and the open quarters with curtains indicate that it was intended to be used primarily in the summer months in the country or at a resort.

Provenance:
The rockaway was the gift of Colonel George C. Haas of Mount Kisco, New York, to Mr. Seabrook in May, 1954. The original curtains were made of enamelled leather that had become stiff and cracked. In the 1880s, they were replaced with new curtains made of waterproof laminated duck.


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The auction was held on April 27, 2002. At this time the Seabrook Coaching Stable was completely dispersed.

This site has been archived by The Carriage Association of America in order to provide a record of this event, and to present the extensive documentation of the Seabrook carriages herein as a resource to visitors to our site.