A persons financial status has almost nothing to do with if they could ride in a carriage unless you are talking about in the past. In the past a persons wealth was often measured by the quality of not just his home or clothing, but by his animals. The wealthier the person the better his carriages/animals would be. That was however in a time when nearly everyone own a horse and buggy/carriage or wagon of some kind. Nowadays however a persons financial abilities or lack thereof do not mean that they can't do something.
They either walked if they were poor or jumped on the back of a cart, where as if you were rich you could have a horse pulled carriage take you. Some people even rode horse-back.
depending on the level of class but a good magority used a common horse and carriage. then the lower class would occasionally have a horse if can afford one if not then a simple mule and their own made carriage used for moving supplies and what they sold around. But most of the poor walked about
The poor would walk (though they tended to stay near where they live). Richer folk would ride on a horse, a stagecoach, or on a horse-drawn carriage. The roads were little more than tracks, dusty in summer, muddy and badly rutted in winter.
they travelled in boats or in carriages but could not travel very far like theUSA they could travel aroundEngland though but that is really it and Europe
Even though there were around 500,000 cars registered in 1910, they were mostly owned by Doctors, Lawyers, Politicians, and the wealthy. Very few middle class people had them and the poor could not afford a car. The vast majority of the poor rode horses, or horse and buggy. The city poor walked or took the trolley or some sort of public transportation.
poor people couldnt afford things that could help them to survive x
alot of horses are scared of cats. because cats have sharp claws, cats could just randomly climb on the horse. poor horse the claws would dig into the horse. that would hurt
make the horse's conditions better.
poor people could not efford things to survive
Political machines became popular in poor immigrant neighborhoods because people who needed help could get it.
Poor people don't play polo because they can't afford a f-ing horse.
None. A villa was a luxurious country estate and poor people could never afford them.