Alberta family auctioning off over 2 dozen carriages and sleighs - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 09:12 AM | Calgary | -16.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

Alberta family auctioning off over 2 dozen carriages and sleighs

A Calgary auction starting Saturday will feature a variety of rare items that were part of Canada's early transportationhistory.

Lee Bowie, a collector of horse-drawn carriages, had some dating to the 1800s

Sleighs and carriages will be auctioned off as part of the estate sale of a collector from Penhold, Alta. (Prairie Auctions)

A Calgary auction starting Saturday will feature a variety of rare items that were part of Canada's early transportationhistory.

A collection of 27 carriages and sleighs will go up for auction aspart of the estate sale ofLee Bowie, a collector from Penhold, Alta., located 120 kilometres north of Calgary.

His daughter, Kim Bowie, says her dad gathered the sleighs and carriagesfor more than five decades and that some are from the late 1800s.

"Dadalways had a love of horses, all animals really, but he was interested in horse-drawn vehicles. He started buying old ones that somebody had stored behind their barn and fixing them up and bringing them back to their original glory," shetoldThe Homestretch.

From there,her dad created a rare collection of vehicles that are in incredible shape, she says.

"He built a building for them and they've always been stored inside," she said. "We will usually have family get-togethers to polish them all up every couple of years, get the dust off them."

She adds that the carriages were predecessors of the automobile industry, so each has some interesting innovations attached to it.

"These were the original cars," she said."And a lot of the manufacturers of carriages went on to move into the motor car industry."

For example, one of the carriages up for sale is an original McLaughlin carriage. The company was the largest manufacturer of horse-drawn buggies and sleighs in the British Empire.

The company later went into automobiles and became McLaughlin Motor Car Company, and then subsequently General Motors of Canada.

The one that Bowie'sdad purchased is what she callsa "one-horse open sleigh."

Pictured above is an original McLaughlin cutter from McLaughlin Carriage Co., produced in 1869. Kim Bowie says the cutter was the race car of its time. (Prairie Auctions)

"It's got an upholstered seat in it," she said. "So really Christmassy. And the one that dad has is one of the original ones. It was built in 1869."

Anothervehicle for sale is aNewfoundland Taxi Sleigh, which was built in 1890 inSt. John's, she said.

"It sort of looks like a couch on wheels," she said. "They were only used in that province, and very few of them have survived."

She says buggies can range from $300 to tens of thousands of dollars, depending on how rare they are.

Growing up, she says, they used the carriages for all sorts of things like sleigh and wagon rides.

"Mum and dad used to go for rides out on the country roads around their place. All the neighbours thought he was a big romantic guy," she said.

Despite thefamily needing to auction off the pieces, Bowiesays it will bea good feeling to know they'll go to people interested in preserving the history.

"I think (my dad) would have liked his collection to stay together and go to a collector that could manage to house and look after the whole thing," she said.

You can check out the family's collection online.The auction will runfrom June 12 to 21.


With files fromThe Homestretch.