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[[Image:Dogcart3.jpg|thumb|right|250px|A [[Belgium|Belgian]] dogcart from the late nineteenth century used for milk vendors.]]
[[Image:Dogcart3.jpg|thumb|right|250px|A [[Belgium|Belgian]] dogcart from the late nineteenth century used by milk vendors.]]
A '''dogcart''' is a [[cart]] or [[carriage]] (light wheeled vehicle):
A '''dogcart''' is a [[cart]] or [[carriage]] (light wheeled vehicle):
*a light, usually one-horse carriage that is commonly two-wheeled and high, with two transverse seats set back to back. It was known as a '''bounder''' in British slang (not to be confused with the [[cabriolet (carriage) | cabriolet]] of the same name). In India it was called a '''tumtum''' (possibly an altered form of ''[[tandem]]''). A dogcart having four wheels and seats set back to back was a '''[[dos-à-dos (carriage) | dos-à-dos]]'''. Another four-wheeled dogcart was called a '''game cart'''.<ref>[http://www.caaonline.com/seabrook/gamecarttrap.html Seabrook Coaching Stable Dispersal Auction: Game Cart Trap.] The Carriage Association of America, Inc.</ref> A young or small groom called a ''tiger'' sometimes rode, usually standing, on a platform at the rear of a dogcart driven by the person on whom he was in attendance.
*a light, usually one-horse carriage that is commonly two-wheeled and high, with two transverse seats set back to back. It was known as a '''bounder''' in British slang (not to be confused with the [[cabriolet (carriage) | cabriolet]] of the same name). In India it was called a '''tumtum''' (possibly an altered form of ''[[tandem]]''). A dogcart having four wheels and seats set back to back was a '''[[dos-à-dos (carriage) | dos-à-dos]]'''. Another four-wheeled dogcart was called a '''game cart'''.<ref>[http://www.caaonline.com/seabrook/gamecarttrap.html Seabrook Coaching Stable Dispersal Auction: Game Cart Trap.] The Carriage Association of America, Inc.</ref> A young or small groom called a ''tiger'' sometimes rode, usually standing, on a platform at the rear of a dogcart driven by the person on whom he was in attendance.

Revision as of 16:23, 24 January 2009

A Belgian dogcart from the late nineteenth century used by milk vendors.

A dogcart is a cart or carriage (light wheeled vehicle):

  • a light, usually one-horse carriage that is commonly two-wheeled and high, with two transverse seats set back to back. It was known as a bounder in British slang (not to be confused with the cabriolet of the same name). In India it was called a tumtum (possibly an altered form of tandem). A dogcart having four wheels and seats set back to back was a dos-à-dos. Another four-wheeled dogcart was called a game cart.[1] A young or small groom called a tiger sometimes rode, usually standing, on a platform at the rear of a dogcart driven by the person on whom he was in attendance.
  • an open, often horse-drawn cart designed to carry hunting dogs in a cage between two cross-seats back to back; the dogs could be penned between the rear-facing seat and the back end. Frequent references to dogcarts are made by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle in his writings about fictional detective Sherlock Holmes.[2]
  • a cart with light loads, pulled by one or more dogs. Dog carts pulled by a single dog were sometimes used by peddlers; dog carts pulled by two or more dogs were historically used in Belgium and The Netherlands for delivering milk).[3] Dog-drawn carts were prohibited in Britain in the early 1900s on animal welfare grounds, but some still exist (mainly for reasons of novelty) in France and Belgium for delivering churns of milk from small farms to the dairy. Compare dog sled (pulled by a team). The modern-day sport of carting is an entertainment involving large dogs pulling dog carts.

References

  1. ^ Seabrook Coaching Stable Dispersal Auction: Game Cart Trap. The Carriage Association of America, Inc.
  2. ^ Dogcart - Things in "Speckled Band". Melançon Enterprises | • a multidivision multinational since 1980.
  3. ^ Dogcarts & Lioncarts. The Messybeast.