No,
You could get donkeys but a little help with horses.
It is very cruel tho i mean who would want to be tied to a train and someone made you pull it.
No. Mules pull them too.
oxes,horses
The Conestoga wagon was heavier and therefore required a larger number of draft animals to pull it than the Prairie Schooner wagon.
From the region of the Clyde River in Scotland, these horses were bred to pull heavy loads. Most people only know them as the horses that pull the Budweiser Wagon but before machines these horses were what pulled the plows, stumps, and whatever else on the family farm.
I am guessing Yes for the people to ride or pull cart or covered wagon
A Conestoga wagon is a large freight type wagon pull by horses or oxen. They were used to move families across the nation in the western expansion. They were constructed in Conestoga, PA.
A properly made Conestoga Wagon could carry as much as 12,000 pounds of cargo. The main issue for the wagon was not its capability. It was the horses or oxen to pull it.
The Prairie Schooner was lighter and smaller than the Conestoga wagon and so it required less horses to pull it. Both of these wagons had a bonnet that covered the box.
The oldest train is thomas i think the very first train that was invented and the horses had to pull it. ps:King of all kings
To pull their wagons, trfthe Mormon Pioneers used horses, mules, oxen and sometimes even pulled them by hand!
Until the advent of tractors in the late 19 th century, horses were the only means of pulling ploughs or heavy wagons in agriculture.
Yaks are used to pull the wagon, not put into it, but probably only two.