The dray horse, or draft horse as it is more commonly known, is bred in the Shire. They are used for heavy work of pulling. They provide a great deal of "Horse Power".
They were bred in England, Wales, Ireland... but I believe they officially came from England.
The Clydesdale horses are just one type of dray horse.
A dray is a cart with no sides, essentially. An example sentence would be: The horse pulled the dray all the way to town.
A draft horse (US), draught horse (UK) or dray horse (old english)
No but there are champion bred horses
Draft horse
A dray is a horse drawn cart, used for hauling people or goods.
Common transportation to the goldfields included * walking * horseback * horse and dray * horse and coach
A draft horse is a large horse bred for hard, heavy tasks such as ploughing and farm labour. It is called the draught horse in the United Kingdom. The Anglo-saxon called the Dray horse meaning to haull. They weigh 1,600 pounds or better and stand at least 16 hands high from ground to withers. The ancestors of the draft horse came from Europe. Remeber the names I gave you and the countries. The draft horse is the American breed of this horse.
a Thoroughbred
Draught horse
No. The horse has been selectively bred.