horseless$35961$ - meaning and definition. What is horseless$35961$
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What (who) is horseless$35961$ - definition

FORD HORSELESS CARRIAGE
Horseless Carriage
  • Patent diagram of the 1899 [[Horsey Horseless]], a vehicle meant to resemble a horse and carriage so it wouldn't frighten horses on the road. It is unknown whether it was ever built.
  • Trevithick's [[London Steam Carriage]] of 1803

horseless carriage         
¦ noun archaic or humorous a car.
Horsey Horseless         
The Horsey Horseless was an early automobile created by Uriah Smith, a Seventh-day Adventist preacher, in Battle Creek, Michigan. It contained a wooden horse head and neck attached to the front of the car, intended to make it resemble a horse and carriage so it won't frighten horses on the road.
The Great Horseless Carriage Company         
  • Pennington Autocar 1896<br>by The Great Horseless Carriage Company
  • Terah Hooley<br>company promoter
  • Motor Mills, Daimler's office block<br>Sandy Lane, Coventry (with a power station) all that was left standing after 1941 air raids<br>built in the 1860s for Coventry Cotton Spinning & Weaving Co
UK AUTOMOBILE MANUFACTURER
The Great Horseless Carriage Company Limited was formed in May 1896 with a capital of £750,000 in shares of £10 each "of which £250,0000 was for working capital". The company was formed to carry on the horseless carriage industry in England and works with railway and canal adjoining were secured at Coventry.

Wikipedia

Horseless carriage

Horseless carriage is an early name for the motor car or automobile. Prior to the invention of the motor car, carriages were usually pulled by animals, typically horses. The term can be compared to other transitional terms, such as wireless phone. These are cases in which a new technology is compared to an older one by describing what the new one does not have.

Most horseless carriages are notable for their similarity to existing horse-drawn carriages, but with some type of mechanical propulsion. Features of the first horseless carriages include tiller steering, an engine under the floorboards, and a high center of gravity.

In the 19th century, steam engines became the primary source of power for railway locomotives and ships, and for powering processes in fixed installations such as factories. In 1803, what is said to have been the first horseless carriage was a steam-driven vehicle demonstrated in London, England, by Richard Trevithick. In the 1820s, Goldsworthy Gurney built steam-powered road vehicles. One has survived to be on display at Glasgow Museum of Transport. In the United States, a four-wheel steam carriage was made by Sylvester H. Roper in 1863.

The 1896 Armstrong horseless carriage is notable as an early hybrid vehicle, which combined an electric motor with battery and gasoline-fueled internal-combustion engine.

In 1893, Frank Duryea is reported to have made the first horseless carriage trip on U.S. roads, in Springfield, Massachusetts, traveling approximately 600 yards (550 m) before engine problems forced him to stop and make repairs. He went on to found the first U.S. car company, the Duryea Motor Wagon Company, with his brother.

In April 2016, horseless carriages from the turn of 19th and the early 20th centuries were featured in a re-creation of the first London Motor Show in 1896.