A wagon pulled by horses is typically referred to as a "wagon" or "horse-drawn wagon." It is not a tow greed, which is not a standard term in this context. While a "coach" can also be horse-drawn, it usually refers to a more enclosed vehicle designed for passengers, whereas a wagon is generally used for transporting goods.
mules horses and pony (ocasionally)
Usually it was two horses that pulled the covered wagon. ----- There were different kinds of covered wagons. The small ones might have been pulled by two horses, but the large ones needed more than that. The Conestoga wagons were big enough to carry six tons of cargo, and were pulled by teams of as many as eight horses, or a dozen oxen. There are links below.
The wagon trains would be pulled by horses so that is how people were able to use the wagon train as transportation for both people and supplies needed for war.
If the Conestoga wagon was fully loaded with 12,000 pounds, adding the 3,000 lb wagon would make a total load of 15,000 pounds. You would need 10 horses on a flat road; 14 horses on a rough, slightly sloped road.
The colonials moved West in a covered wagon being pulled by either oxen or horses.
The Vikings used wagons/carts pulled by horses apparently...... I think, sorry if it was no help..... c:
In Britain, an open (flat bed) wagon pulled by a horse is known as a cart.
To pull their wagons, trfthe Mormon Pioneers used horses, mules, oxen and sometimes even pulled them by hand!
its a wagon
A wagon, depending on its size, might be a cart, carriage, or coach.
The plural of wagon is wagons. As in "the wagons were drawn by horses".
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.