Happy Trails
As freshly carved toys or treasured heirlooms, well-bred rocking horses ride high in the affections of kids and collectors alike
- By Per Ola and Emily D'Aulaire
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2002, Subscribe
(Page 6 of 7)
Five days a week, the workshop hums with the whir of electric sanders; wooden and cardboard templates of legs and heads hang from hooks on a wall, and heads that didn’t make the grade line a shelf. (One is cross-eyed, another missing an ear.) In the finishing room, assistant Matthew Clift combs real horsehair for manes and tails. Leatherworkers craft bridles, suede saddles and stirrups.
According to the Stevensons, most children prefer the brightly painted dappled horses that were popular during the Victorian era. Adults lean toward natural wood—walnut bays, maple palominos, and the ebonized walnut millennium horse, produced as a limited edition. Some grown-ups have special requests. A customer from Naples, Florida (about 20 percent of the Stevensons’ output goes to the United States), asked for “soft eyes, please.”
In the tiny village of Fangfoss, some 250 miles north of the Stevensons’ workshop, Anthony Dew, 54, employs 12 craftspeople and turns out some 50 beautifully crafted rocking horses a year. As an art student at BingleyCollege near Bradford, West Yorkshire, in 1976, Dew read a newspaper story about the Stevensons’ uncle, James Bosworthick, called him up and arranged a visit to his workshop. “It was hot, and I had to walk ten miles from the bus stop,” recalls Dew, “but once I saw him surrounded by the horses he’d made and talked to him, I knew this was what I wanted to do.”
Unlike the Stevensons, Dew (Web address: rockinghorse.co.uk) specializes in selling blueprints and parts for amateurs who want to make their own horses. “Most people think they can’t do it,” he says, “but with the right tools and instruction, they can.” Dew estimates that some 35,000 people around the world have created rocking horses using his kits and designs. Robert Nathan of the British Toymakers Guild regards Dew as “one of a rare breed of craftsmen” who “not only possesses great talent but is prepared to share his expertise.”
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next »
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (4)
there are many ''faked'' platform/rocking horses which started to appear worldwide about 20 yrs ago-these have carved manes, tooled leather saddles, mouths that look like a 'C' and hooves that look like upturned flowerpots! these have fooled many people, and it is unusual to find a German horse still on it's rocking base, although they do exist-without photographs, it is impossible to say if any horse, particularly a small platform/rocker is original or a far Eastern repro. The rocking horse market is full of traps for the unwary, and replaced parts, even re-carved heads have been put on to make a horse appear more valuable! -internet auction sites sometimes have sellers who tell whoppers like: ''this horse was my grandfather's''-and the horse is an obvious repro. Good old rocking horses can be bought, but like all antique areas, when an object becomes more fashionable/valuable, it is worth the faker's while..usually it is clumpy 1970's English rocking horses which are souped up and sold as ''victorian'', but anyone who researches will hopefully not be caught out. Time spent in old toy museums helps, but the classic English rocking horse is a thing of beauty, even under layers of overpaint, good carving sings out.
Posted by Catherine M on September 27,2011 | 03:26 PM
I have loved rocking horses all my life, and as a child, never had one, despite much longing for one..I would walk past antique shops which had lovely old ones in the window, and wistfully look up at London houses that had them in upper windows.
When I was an adult, i decided to buy a horse-it was a new one, by Collinsons, but then i saw a fantastic old one, a huge F.H,Ayres extra-carved model with removable saddle and bridle, and bought him, then saw another, and they just kept coming..BUT this was the early 1980's and no one was really interested in rocking horses like now, and nowadays the prices asked are alarmingly high, ten times [or in some cases a horse which cost £195 in 1982 now sells for£ 5-7,000 which is crazy. I think the publication of a book about rocking horses in the 1990's created interest, along with the internet.
My advice for someone looking for an antique rocking horse would be:RESEARCH and research again. There are many faked rocking horses out there, and lots of very inferior models[Patterson edwards/leeway] and cheaper models[collinson] which are often ''souped up'' to look older than they are.The resale on these is poor, and it is best to buy a horse that makes your heart sing.I only ever buy a horse which gives me sleepless nights thinking about him..there are very few bargains to be had nowadays, alas, but the right horse is worth waiting for. Let research be your watchword, and avoid eastern imports[common on internet auction sites] and Leeways [or if you do buy one of these, make sure you are not fobbed off with the term ''Victorian'' as these horses are 1950's mainly.A lot of bow-rocker horses have replaced bits, especially new rockers, so just be aware before handing over hard earned cash!
Posted by Catherine M on August 13,2011 | 08:54 PM
Hi Barb, My name is Denise Blaney. My husband and I were interviewed for this article about wooden rocking horses. We are Mountain View Rocking Horse Farm and are located in Canada too. If you haven't found out more about your rocking horse, and you want to send me a photo of your rocking horse, I can look it up in my history books and maybe give you information about it's history.
My email is denise@newrockinghorse.com and my website is www.newrockinghorse.com
Take care, Denise
Posted by Denise Blaney on May 12,2011 | 12:03 AM
I came across your website while serching for some information about rocking horses. My husband bought a rocking horse at an antique auction years ago and it has sparked a great deal of interest from people visiting our home. This rocking horse is set on a small platform with wheels, and then it has been attached, platform, wheels and all, onto two wooden rockers. Was this a prequil to the rocking horse we see today ? Do you have any information about how old it might be or where a styke like this might have originated ? I look forward to your reply. Thank you. Barb Cerniuk Hafford, Saskatchewan Canada
Posted by Barb Cerniuk on September 28,2008 | 06:36 PM