Site icon House Crazy Sarah

Antique Horse Drawn Hearse

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image from: Pixabay.com

It’s kind of morbid, but House Crazy Sarah is smitten with these creepy old things. She’s smitten with most creepy old things (except creepy old men), but she has a soft spot for these relics from the past.

image from: wikimedia commons

She saw her first antique horse drawn hearse in person a few years back when she was visiting a museum in Creede, Colorado.

antique hearse in Creede, Colorado, from: Colorado.com

Her children wanted to climb all over it but of course, House Crazy Sarah threatened their existence/next ice cream cone if they so much as laid a finger on the poor old thing.

Since then, she has kept her eye out for authentic horse drawn hearses (modern reproductions don’t cut it).

Rural Life Museum, Louisiana, from: tripadvisor.com

Most surviving funeral carriage hearses reside in small town museums. Often, such towns had only one cherished horse drawn hearse to transport all the dead people so they were preserved as a local keepsake, like this one below in the small town of Castroville, Texas.

Castroville, Texas Hearse from: http://www.atlasobscura.com/places/castroville-hearse

Isn’t it beautiful?

Perhaps House Crazy Sarah might buy one for herself. But what would she do with it? Her living room is too small and she wouldn’t want to leave it out in the yard where the squirrels and birds would peck away on it.

Norwich, Vermont, image from: https://norwichhistory.org

Heck, that doesn’t keep her from browsing online!

Let’s see what’s on the market these days for horse drawn funeral carriages…

image from: https://hearseforsale.org

This well-preserved hand-carved 1870’s hearse carriage (above) is listed for sale for $7,650.00 in Medford, Oregon.

image from: https://hearseforsale.org

The worn specimen (above) is an 1875 Cunnigham & Sons model for sale for $6,500.00 in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

Prices can go quite high for these things. Look at this one listed for sale (below) on Ebay for $18,000!

image from: https://www.ebay.com/itm/Horse-drawn-hearse

The listing says it comes with the “double-door early 1900’s casket” which can be seen in the photo. Doesn’t say if it’s a used casket or not but, bonus!

And for those unlucky souls who died in snowy season, they also made a sleigh version of the horse drawn hearse with sled runners instead of wagon wheels:

image from: https://www.wisconsinhistory.org

There’s an 1880 sleigh hearse for sale in Angola, Indiana for $16,000.00! (below)

image from: https://hearseforsale.org

If you are dying for a ride in one of these things (a little hearse humor), there are many private operators and even funeral homes who offer the service in modern replica horse-drawn hearses.

image from: https://horse-drawncarriage.com/funerals/

Still, House Crazy Sarah prefers the Victorian-era version, even if they are a little worse for the wear these days.

image from: wikipedia

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