Runabout (carriage)
A runabout is an American light, open, horse-drawn vehicle with four large wheels.[1] Similar to a buggy, the runabout was used for informal, utilitarian travel or "running about" on errands.[2] One type was also called a "driving wagon", made very light in order to be easily hitched by one person, and easily pulled over long distances by a single horse.[3]
A typical example was the light buggy used in the 1890s for daily duties by senior staff of the San Francisco Fire Department.[4] Runabouts could be either fancy or plain, but not encumbered with fenders, heavy tops or optional accessories that added weight.[3]
Notes and references
- Haajanen, Lennart W. (2003). Illustrated Dictionary of Automobile Body Styles. Illustrations by Bertil Nydén. Jefferson, NC USA: McFarland. p. 115. ISBN 0-7864-1276-3. LCCN 2002014546.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Haajanen 2003, p. 115.
- The Carriage Museum at Historic Washington, Kentucky. Accessed 17 April 2015
- "Museum Collections: Apparatus - 1892 Chief's Buggy". Guardians of the (San Francisco) City Museum and Memorial.
gollark: But they're generally horrible and big.
gollark: `greenery` can do the complement/inverse of regexes, at least.
gollark: Interesting question. Probably. I don't know how you could construct that.
gollark: I think that technically makes it not a *regular* regular expression.
gollark: My thing works by building a weirdly structured finite-state machine which matches permutations of "regex", then converting it to a different flat one usable by the `greenery` library, then using it to very slowly convert that into a regex.
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