
A post-chaise is a travelling
carriage
A carriage is a two- or four-wheeled horse-drawn vehicle for passengers. In Europe they were a common mode of transport for the wealthy during the Roman Empire, and then again from around 1600 until they were replaced by the motor car around 1 ...
operated in the 18th and early 19th centuries, travelling from
post-to-post, and changing horses at each stage. With a closed body on four wheels, seating two people, and drawn by two or four horses, it is basically a
chariot
A chariot is a type of vehicle similar to a cart, driven by a charioteer, usually using horses to provide rapid Propulsion, motive power. The oldest known chariots have been found in burials of the Sintashta culture in modern-day Chelyabinsk O ...
with the
coachman
A coachman is a person who drives a Coach (carriage), coach or carriage, or similar horse-drawn vehicle. A coachman has also been called a coachee, coachy, whip, or hackman.
The coachman's first concern is to remain in full control of the hors ...
's seat removed. Riders, called
postilion
A postilion or postillion is a person who rides a harnessed horse that is pulling a horse-drawn vehicle such as a Coach (carriage), coach, rather than driving from behind as a coachman does. This method is used for pulling wheeled vehicles tha ...
s, rode the near-side (left) horse of each pair pulling the carriage.
Purpose
Hired when long-distance travel at speed was very important, a post chaise would be taken with its own
postilion
A postilion or postillion is a person who rides a harnessed horse that is pulling a horse-drawn vehicle such as a Coach (carriage), coach, rather than driving from behind as a coachman does. This method is used for pulling wheeled vehicles tha ...
s and horses. At the next
posting station the postilions would most likely return to their base with their own horses but might continue the journey with fresh horses.
Private posting was expensive, and passengers — particularly if the only passenger was a woman — would be accompanied by one or two of their own
footmen riding behind the body of the post chaise. The footmen would be responsible for making all travel arrangements.
Private individuals did own their own post chaises; some had their
light chariots made with the coachman's seat removable. Designed to withstand rapid long-distance travel, the post chaise should have been utilitarian, but private vehicles might be extravagantly decorated and finished.
[Paul H. Downing. A History of Carriages, ''The Carriage Journal,'' Page 160, Vol 4, No 4, Spring 1967, Carriage Association of America]
Posting
In a 1967 article in ''The Carriage Journal'', published for the
Carriage Association of America, Paul H Downing recounts that the word post is derived from the Latin ''postis'' which in turn derives from the word which means to place an upright timber (a post) as a convenient place to attach a public notice. The words ''postal'' and ''postage'' follow from this. Medieval couriers were ''caballari postarus'' or riders of the posts. The riders mounted fresh horses at each post on their route and then rode on. The word ''post'' came to be applied to the riders, then to the mail they carried, and eventually to the whole system. In England regular posts were set up in the 16th century.
[
The riders of the posts carried government messages and letters. The local postmasters delivered the letters as well as providing horses to the royal couriers. They also provided horses to other travellers.][
]
Post chaise
The system of "posting" was common in France. An artillery officer, John Trull, entered business in England in 1743 hiring out travelling carriages. At first these carriages had two wheels but they were soon replaced by four wheel carriages given the same name, Post-chaise.[
The original French design was amended, a conventional pole was fitted, no driver was provided for — leaving a view through the front window for the passengers — and the horses were ridden by postilions or post-boys. The postilions went from post to post, stayed with their own horses and took them back home at the end of that stage.][
]
America
At that time there was no perfected posting system in America. George Washington's tour of the South in 1791 had a target (when there were no other commitments) of an average a day whereas in England an average speed of might be achieved right round the clock.[
An actual ]chaise
A chaise ( ), sometimes called shay, is a light two-wheeled carriage for one or two people. It may also have a folding hood. The coachmaker William Felton (1796) considered ''chaises'' a family of vehicles which included all two-wheel one-hor ...
is an open two-wheeled carriage with a crosswise seat for two passengers. Given two more wheels it would have been, if the name had been used then, a phaeton. A phaeton was for the owner to drive and generally drawn by one or two horses. A four-wheeled chaise would be drawn by at least four horses.[
Around the time Trull was introducing post-chaises to England, Americans began to use the same name for what had been called a four-wheeled chaise.][
File:Samuel Howitt - A Chaise and Pair, With Post-Boy - B2001.2.936 - Yale Center for British Art.jpg, Samuel Howitt (1756–1822)
File:Possibly Samuel Howitt - The Departure of a Post-Chaise From the (^) Red Lion Inn, Bagshot - B2001.2.902 - Yale Center for British Art.jpg, Samuel Howitt (1756–1822)
File:Agreeable Companions in a Post Chaise MET DP871984.jpg, ]Thomas Rowlandson
Thomas Rowlandson (; 13 July 1757 – 21 April 1827) was an English artist and caricaturist of the Georgian Era, noted for his political satire and social observation. A prolific artist and printmaker, Rowlandson produced both individual soc ...
(1790)
References
{{Horse-drawn carriages
Carriages
Coaches (carriage)
History of road transport
Horse transportation