Lessons of the Old Masters–Hansen Wheel & Wagon
by Lynn Telleen
published in The Draft Horse
Journal, Summer 2001
The hitch wagons used by several of the
famous teams of “Packingtown” have
influenced the “modern” draft horse wagons more
than you may know. Armour Packing Company, Wilson & Company
and Swift & Company, among America’s most famous
commercial hitches in the first half of the 20th century, all
used vintage heavy express trucks built by Studebaker Brothers & Company,
South Bend, Indiana. Each wagon was built between 1899 and
1905 and each possessed the “swale back” design,
or curved box, setting it apart from other freight vehicles.
Anheuser-Busch currently owns two of the original “meatpacker” wagons.
The Studebaker owned by Swift & Company, Kansas City,
Missouri was built in 1899 and was used with their prominent
six-up of grey Percherons until the mid-1930s. At that time,
August A. Busch, Jr. purchased it as the post-Prohibition
advertising campaign came into full swing for Budweiser.
It was used only as a spare until Budweiser’s East
Coast hitch came about in 1972, where it found full-time
service. That is where you will find it in use to this day.
Wilson & Company had three such Studebaker wagons produced
in three different sizes. When Prohibition ended in 1933,
August A. Busch, Jr. purchased the largest of the three,
which is thought to have been built in 1903. This is the
famed wagon which he presented as a gift to his father, along
with a six-up of Clydes, thus creating one of the most enduring
corporate icons of all time. It is the same one displayed
at the St. Louis brewery today. Incidentally, Anheuser-Busch
also acquired the smallest of the three Wilson wagons, but
it has since been sold.
Another original Studebaker was used by the Lang Brewery
of Buffalo, New York. Anheuser-Busch also acquired this one
and it is used by their West Coast hitch. It is one of few,
if not the only one, constructed with the springs under the
axles rather than over them.
Yet another of these magnificent vehicles was built in 1904
and owned by the Pabst Brewing Company in Milwaukee. They
used it to show and exhibition their six of grey Percherons.
Craig Grange, hitch manager for Cape Cod Percherons, tells
that when Pabst won the six at the 1904 Chicago International,
all with American-bred horses, it was the inspiration for
the title, “Blue Ribbon Beer.” Craig says he’s
not certain as to the accuracy of it, but we agreed that
it is a good story (see sidebar). The wagon was later acquired
by Brooklyn Farm in Minneapolis. When they sold out in the
1940s, Menzie Dairy of McKeesport, Pennsylvania, took ownership
of it. They used it for exhibitioning their six of Belgians
in the late 50s and early 60s. From there, it went to hitchman
Ray Wegman, Cincinnati, Ohio. Dennis Barry of Lakeville,
Massachusetts bought it from Ray and restored it. It is used
today with Barry’s Hallamore Hitch of Clydes.
Hawthorn-Mellody Dairy Farms, Libertyville, Illinois, had
several hitch wagons over the course of their tenure with
exhibition hitches. One in particular was yet another original
Studebaker. It was sold to Albert Payne, Galien, Michigan,
who sold it to Ray Wegman. Wegman sold it to Budweiser and
it is now at Disneyland.
The Armour Packing Company had one of the most striking
of hitch wagons, used behind their successful six of greys
and piloted by the well-known teamster Billy Wales. They
used that same wagon for the duration of their hitching activities.
Some say it went to the Omaha Stock Yards when Armour hung
it up. The wagon eventually ended up at Hawthorn-Mellody.
In 1968, when Hawthorn-Melody was calling it quits, the late
Rolland Ruby of Brookfield, Wisconsin, made a swift deal,
preventing the vehicle from going to a museum. He refinished
it and used it for several years with his own hitch of Belgians.
Jake Ruby, Rolland’s son, retains that great wagon
today. The Curtiss Candy Company owned still another that
also went to Ruby. That wagon, smaller than Armour’s,
was recently sold from Ruby’s estate to Cal Larson
of Wisconsin.
These few remaining originals represent more than just the
historical means of transporting meat, beer and other freight
throughout America’s cities. They symbolize an era
when the horse was so vital to the growth of this country,
bringing to mind both the horsemen that used these extraordinary
vehicles and also the craftsmen that built them. For some,
they serve as a guide to building new vehicles
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Blacksmith Jerome
Evans concentrating on the ironwork for Cape Cod’s wagon. |
Obtaining one of these originals and restoring it has been
the teamster’s favored means of realizing a show hitch
wagon for the past half century. But there are no more originals.
There are no more wagons with a story to tell and a history
of Packingtown or brewery owners.
Ross Creelman, one of the owners of Cape Cod Percherons
based out of Nova Scotia, wanted a wagon about which people
could only say, “That’s the Cape Cod wagon!” He
wanted a new original with a history unsupplied. So, his
hitch manager, Craig Grange, said, “Let’s go
to Hansen and have them build an exact reproduction of Budweiser’s
big 1903 Studebaker.” Ross agreed and the wheels were
put into motion.
Doug Hansen, founder and operator of Hansen Wheel & Wagon
Shop, Letcher, South Dakota, says the engineers and craftsmen
at Studebaker were building the top of the line in that era,
in that industry. “They not only had an eye for aesthetics,” says
Doug, “but were true craftsmen and engineers.” Every
detail about these wagons was done for a reason, be it functional,
logical or aesthetic. Doug has learned much from studying
their designs and he considers the old masters’ attention
to detail an excellent guide in the design of wagon elements.
Hansen Wheel & Wagon Shop is a family owned and operated
carriage and wagon manufacturer located in southeast South
Dakota. Doug established the business in 1978. Only in his
early forties, he has already worked as both a wainwright
and wheelwright, specializing in the building and restoring
of heavy wagons and wheels. Doug has made a point of studying
the original, authentic vehicles to learn how the original
craftsmen went about their profession. With over 20 years
of experience in blacksmithing, hand-forging and metalwork,
he is dedicated to the authenticity of each vehicle, using
traditional joinery (“Traditional joinery” is
the term Hansen uses in referring to the joints used to join
wood frame members, mortise and tenon, miter, laps, butt,
rabbet, dado, etc.) and hand-forged hardware to replicate
wagons of the past. Doug believes that what worked in the
days when wagons were used on a daily basis, will prove to
be the most durable in today’s world.
Hansen and his crew of master craftsmen handle all aspects
of wagon production. The complete job requires the skills
of the wheelwright, the knack of the machinist, the adroitness
of the blacksmith, the talents of the finish carpenter and
the flair of an artist. Maybe most importantly, it requires
the eye and judgement of the wagon master. It takes someone
like Doug Hansen, who considers wagon design to be no less
than a form of art. Doug takes great pride in the fact that
very little of the work is jobbed out, giving him and his
staff full control over quality. Steel springs and bearings
are about the only things not actually crafted in the shop.
Most springs that go on Hansen vehicles are made in Ohio
by Amish craftsmen to Doug’s exacting specs.
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Without doubt,
this is the largest
fifth wheel assembly that Hansen
has produced. It’s easy to recognize
that the Cape Cod wagon is the kind
of challenge that he and his staff thrive on.
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In the days of old, fifth wheel wagons could be purchased
ready-made, but a good many were also built by local blacksmiths
or in
company shops using running gears supplied by a number of
manufacturers. Firms such as Selle & Cray Brothers offered sets of springs,
axles, fifth wheel assemblies and wheels in various weights
and sizes. Even Studebaker Brothers sometimes used wheels made
by Archibald Wheel Works, St. Mary’s Wheel and Spoke,
Muncie and other manufacturers. But that’s not Doug Hansen’s
protocol. On the Cape Cod wagon, only the springs and forged
brass hubs were not made in-house.
Hansens produce roughly 30 vehicles in a year’s time
including covered wagons, chuckwagons, hitch wagons, stage
coaches, buggies, sleighs, prairie schooners and sheep wagons.
New vehicle production accounts for around 80% of their vehicle
projects with only 20% to restoration jobs. Doug prefers
it that way. He says, “I like to document and build
reproductions of historic vehicles, more so than restoring
them.” In addition, wheel production accounts for about
30% of their business.
Hansen’s customers include museums, collectors, the
show crowd, family/pleasure drivers, the family heirlooms
and the commercial operators that provide horse drawn tours.
Most are from a distance, in fact worldwide. Doug says his
favorite projects are stagecoaches, “because they are
quite a challenge and are a very beautiful vehicle.”
Some of their more recognizable customers include Wells
Fargo Bank, for which they’ve built three stage coaches
and several wheels; Walt Disney of Tokyo, for which they
built a revolutionary cannon and wheels; Warner Bros., for
which they built hitch equipment; the Henry Ford Museum,
a cut under delivery wagon and omnibus; Anheuser-Busch, hitch
wagon wheels; Bob Johnson’s Wheels Unlimited, for which
they’ve built stage coach wheels; a museum in Denmark
for which they made an immigrant wagon; and several other
museums for which they’ve made prairie schooners, a
child’s wagon, gypsy wagon and various other vehicles.
The 7,200 square-foot shop housing the business is only
three years old. Prior to that, the crew worked out of a
comparatively smaller shop nearby, where everything had to
be shuffled around to move any single vehicle. The new facility
is spacious, efficient and impressive with plenty of room
for several different projects underway at once. During a
recent visit, a stage coach was being assembled for Wells
Fargo, a covered wagon was receiving its bows and the Cape
Cod hitch wagon was the center attraction. Craftsmen were
sanding the framework, putting the wheels together and constructing
the fifth wheel assembly.
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Hansen’s
third stage coach for Wells Fargo
Banks. You may see this
one in a TV commercial sometime
soon.
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Hansens have built show wagons for draft horse exhibitors
such as Rocking Horse Ranch (which was selected for the NABC
IV “Dream
Team”) and Express Clydes, in addition to Sugar Ridge
Belgians in Danville, Vermont, but the Cape Cod wagon is, by
far, the most challenging project they have undertaken. Not
only is it the largest hitch wagon they’ve worked on,
the exacting specifications to the old Wilson wagon present
untold obstacles not encountered by other jobs. To research
it, Doug flew down to St. Louis and spent hours measuring,
photographing and inspecting the Budweiser wagon. The 3-1/2” springs
required are not of standard making. Nor are the wheels or
fifth wheel assembly. They are simply larger than anything
that has been produced in almost a century. The body will
be over fourteen feet long and is expected to weigh over
7,000
pounds. It is expected to be completed and in use this summer.
Doug says, “I’ve learned a lot about wagons
by restoring them. When I wondered how in the world a wagon
was put together, I just looked at the wagon. I’m studying
the authenticity of it. My research has been hands-on research,
for the most part. When you tear apart a wagon, the question
always arises, ‘Why did they do it this way?’ Then,
you enter the engineering aspects. Look at all the old Studebaker
wagons that Budweiser has been using for years and years
and years. They’re a hundred years old and they’re
still holding up. A new wagon that’s not made following
the old standards has to be re-done after a few years. Understanding
the engineering of what went into these wagons and following
the design of the authenticity is what we try to do. Following
authenticity means we have a good practice of following design
standards of that era, and they are safe standards. The people
that designed these wagons were the industry leaders in their
time. Their modern day counterparts are the ones designing
the automobiles and trucks of today.
“This is evident in the 1903 Studebaker wagon from
Bud’s collection that we are reproducing for Cape Cod.
This wagon has been in use for nearly 100 years and much
of the structure is original. It shows very little breakdown
of any type. This can be attributed to its more than 70 accurately-fitted
tenon joints, dozens of half laps and decorative structural
iron work. While on the subject of iron work, if we do a
comparison of a steel support today, it is typically a chunk
of square tubing or straight unformed structure. If we look
at any piece of iron on the Studebaker or any other vehicle
of that era, it not only has function but form as well. This
is what intrigues me when I study the works of the old masters
and this is what we attempt to replicate.
“While walking by the rows of hundreds of horse drawn
vehicles at the recent Waverly Sale, many of new manufacture
or restoration, you’ll notice that it is only the unblemished
originals that will turn your head. The new vehicles have
nice, shiny paint, bright colors and chrome, but they are
lacking the flowing lines, the shapely curves and the nice
construction details that lend to an attractive vehicle as
well as to its durability...all this accomplished while still
maintaining a balance throughout. That is what I have learned
from the old masters.
“If we design a wagon, we are very much influenced
by the old wagons.”
When Doug was growing up, his family kept a few saddle horses
and his mother did leather work and made saddles. When Doug
was in high school, a west-bound trucker broke down at nearby
Mitchell. In order to repair his truck, he had to auction
off his load, which consisted of buggies and carriages. Doug’s
mother purchased a couple of old buggies and Doug says, “Restoring
them became a family project.” Doug had taken both
woodworking and welding in school and his dad’s shop
was well-equipped for the task. In addition, his grandfather
had worked in a blacksmith shop and had wheel work know-how,
which came in very handy. After completing work on these
vehicles to the satisfaction of everyone involved, his grandfather
purchased a team of mules and a wagon which also needed work.
He asked his grandson to do it and from there, Doug’s
reputation just grew. Others started hauling old vehicles
to him for restoration and repair. Seeing how much Doug enjoyed
the work, his grandfather suggested that he make a business
out of it. Clients from farther and farther away were acquired
and by 1978, a growing enterprise is exactly what it had
become.
Doug has always been interested in history. He started going
to museums to learn how things were done originally. When
he decided to build new wagons, the Middle Border Museum
in Mitchell, South Dakota, loaned him the wheel building
tools needed to start.
The business started out strictly as wheelwright and restoration
work, but they started getting requests for parts. Today,
parts and custom wheels account for a significant portion
of their revenue. Doug says they stay busy, but “We
are still servicing a quite small market because it’s
hard to build a cheap wagon when you know how to build a
nice one. We’re a niche within a niche because we’ve
centralized our efforts on heavier vehicles, western vehicles–the
vehicles that are indigenous to our area. Doug says he is “definitely
more interested in the heavier work vehicles, more so than
carriages and buggies. For one thing, they are associated
more to my region and heritage. I live in the land of freight
wagons, stages, chuckwagons and western vehicles in general.” He
says Studebaker, Peter Schuttler and many more are of special
interest.
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Hansen’s
shop is truly a family affair.
Daughters Leah,12, and Emily, 8, lend
a hand to their parents, Holly and
Doug, with the business.
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Doug and his wife, Holly, met as teenagers when his family
came to her parents’ place to purchase some furniture
made by her father. Both locals, they moved onto the farm where
Doug grew up, as soon as they were married. The business was
full-time by then, with just the two of them. Demand soon justified
additional employees and Holly’s responsibilities shifted
from that of an upholsterer to upholsterer, bookkeeper and
marketer. Doug says they currently have “about six employees,” meaning
not all are full-time. The remainder of the capable crew
includes: office manager, Jon Christensen; coach maker, Dale
Michel;
wainwright, Brian VanBuren; blacksmith, Jerome Evans; wheelwright,
Tim Hoffman; assistant wheelwright, Joe Knutson; apprentice,
Andy Thuringer; and artist, Wayne Troyer.
Wayne Troyer from Ohio, has been striping and lettering
for Hansen for the last four years. To work on Hansen wagons
and stages, Wayne will fly out to South Dakota and spend
a couple weeks. Hansen says, “He is one of those people
that truly amazes you when you see him work.” In addition
to striping full time as an antique vehicle decorator, Wayne
also does furniture decoration and commercial illustrations.
Doug says, “Lettering and striping is such an important
part of our finish program that we are very happy to trust
this work to such a talented artist.”
Interest in the use, restoration and reproduction of horse-drawn
vehicles has been on the rise in recent times. Doug attributes
it to increasingly modern lifestyles. “The faster our
life gets,” he says, “the more people are reaching
for something nostalgic to take them back.” He’s
seen a considerable increase in demand for horse drawn vehicles
since becoming involved in the business. He attributes it
to several things, including: 1) the people of the horse
driving world are eager to help others get involved in driving,
therefore propagating the interest in horses and the vehicles
they pull; 2) the loss of our rural heritage as we become
a more urban society makes us long for what we once had and
the horse drawn vehicles help to capture that nostalgia;
and 3) word of mouth does travel and satisfied customers
have definitely helped us to broaden our customer base.”
If demand continues to grow, will Hansen Wheel & Wagon
also expand? Doug says, “I think we are as big as I
want to be. Our size still allows me to maintain close contact
with our craftsmen and if we were to increase our production,
we would need to get into multiple production work and I
much rather prefer the diversity of being a custom builder.
There are thousands of different horse drawn vehicles that
were built in that era and we have just touched the tip of
them. So, there are many more new styles of vehicles out
there that we will tackle someday.”
Quality not quantity is the goal at Hansen Wheel & Wagon
Shop. Because of the sheer number of hours required to produce
even one wagon, stage or coach, Hansens produce no more than
30 vehicles in a years’ time. Rather than viewing that
number as humble, this is a point of pride, since it’s
Hansen’s high standards that ensure a quality long-term
investment for their clients. Attention to detail and design,
dedication to traditional joinery and authentic construction
are the standards for each vehicle manufactured. Be it a
yearning for the past, the publicity and attention generated
by it or simply a joy of working with horses and historic
vehicles, definitely more people are pursuing the equine
mode of transportation. For the “world’s foremost
wagon maker,” that’s good for business. |