Buckboards are pulled by one or two horses and, depending on the length, can accommodate 1, 2 or 3 seats. The primary characteristic of the buckboard is that the body of the vehicle is made by one or more thin boards spanning from the front to the rear axle. These boards act as the method of suspension, and it has been said that the buckboard is as comfortable to ride as a similar vehicle of rigid floor and steel springs for suspension. Early versions have seats mounted on risers attached to the floor, and no sideboards, or tailgate. Later versions sometimes include a dashboard made of wood,
elliptic springs mounted to the bottom of the seats, and other metal springs between the body-floor and axles. Modern versions may be built with readily available buggy-construction parts, such as a dashboard made of
leatherette upholstery on an iron frame.
Variations The
buckboard wagon is a type of
buggy based on the springboard floor plan, but shortened in length, and sometimes has a rail around the bed to contain loads. The word "buckboard" became as common as the word "buggy" and has been used to describe all manner of horse-drawn vehicles that are
not buckboards. When a vehicle is built with solid, rigid sideboards and a tailboard or tailgate, it is not a buckboard. Vehicles that are commonly mistaken for buckboards include the
American buggy, spring wagon,
runabout, and many ranch wagons with high sides. == Historical context ==