Fashion
October 21, 2022

Vintage Baby Carriages of The Past.

Pram design in manufacture from around 1858 – 1907.

A pram = a baby carriage = детская коляска.

The year was 1847 and Queen Victoria was pregnant with her 6th child, Princess Louise. Hearing about a new type of baby carriage with three wheels which was pushed from behind, she couldn’t wait to see one.

Prams or perambulators date back to around 1733 when the Duke of Devonshire asked English architect and furniture designer William Kent to make a carriage for his children to keep them amused while they played in the grounds of Chatsworth House. Equipped with a harness for a goat or small pony, Kent’s shell-shaped basket-on-wheels even had springs so that children could ride in comfort.

William Kent’s Baby Carriage, 1733.

Riding in goat-powered carts wasn’t new—children had been enjoying that since the early 17th century.

Three Children with a Goat Cart by Frans Hals, 1620.

And it was still fashionable by 1890, as the grandchildren of the 23rd President of the United States, Benjamin Harrison, would attest.

Major Russell Harrison and Harrison children outside the White House, 1890.

But what Kent’s design did was to inspire an entire industry of baby carriage manufacture during the Victorian era. Starting out as three-wheeled versions that were typically pulled along by a Nanny, a later innovation allowed prams to be pushed, making it easier to keep an eye on the baby’s welfare.

Portrait of Henri Valpinçon as a child with governess by Edgar Degas.
Pram with three wheels from the period 1840-1850.
The Champs-Elysees, view on the Arc de Triomphe by Francesco Miralles Galup (1848-1901).

Arriving from France, the wickerwork “Bassinet” style of pram allowed the infant to lie flat within a basket on a wheeled frame.

Pram with mattress and blanket that could be pushed or pulled, 1866.

Royal patronage helped launch a fashionable craze among the well-heeled all over Europe and the United States.

So popular were prams in London by 1855 that the Rev. Benjamin Armstrong from rural Norfolk noted in his diary: «The streets are full of perambulators, a baby carriage quite new to me, whereby children are propelled by the nurse pushing instead of pulling the carriage. Built of wood or wicker and held together with expensive brass joints, baby carriages were sometimes heavily ornamented works of art.»

Pram design in manufacture from around from 1882 until 1919.
Promenade Baby Carriage, 1890.

Patents for new innovations were registered on both sides of the Atlantic.
In 1899, African American William H. Richardson patented a design for a reversible baby carriage, allowing the baby to face either forward or toward the person pushing the carriage.

US Patent for a reversible child’s carriage.

By the late Victorian era, many more people could afford a baby carriage and new coach-built luxury models came onto the market named after royalty—Princess and Duchess being popular names, as well as Balmoral and Windsor.

An early wooden-bodied coach-built pram made by British pram manufacturer Silver Cross, 1880.

The Edwardians made perambulator design a fine art with elaborate decoration, improved maneuverability, rubber tyres, and protection from the elements.

1905 British Perambulator. Metal and wood frame, with leathercloth upholstery and reed-work decoration.

And of course, babies were the big beneficiaries of all this innovation. Peekaboo!

Woman, holding umbrella, pushing baby in carriage equipped with rain cover.
Stroller used by the children of Crown Prince Gustaf Vi of Sweden. Manufactured by Hitchings Ltd London.

It was definitely a baby’s world—even royal babies loved their pram rides to the park. With a commanding position to see all the sites and a comfortable ride with someone else doing all the work, what’s not to love?

Two children of the Crown Prince of Prussia, 1907.

Waiting on them hand and foot, some siblings would go to great lengths to ensure the baby was as comfortable as possible.

Sibling making adjustments to a pram’s sun shade, 1901.

For the wealthier families, it was the Nanny’s responsibility to look after the children while the parents attended the many parties and functions on their busy social calendars.

Child and Nanny walk in the Eilenriede Forest Park, Hanover, 1900.
A pram ride in the French countryside, 1910.
Children with their Nanny on the Paseo de la Concha, Spain, 1917.

Mothers who couldn’t afford or didn’t want a nanny could spend some quality time with their baby dressing them for an enjoyable pram outing.

Woman and infant posed with a baby carriage, 1913.

Admiring glances and polite conversation from passers-by would be all part of the fun of owning a perambulator.

Perambulator. Meissen, Germany, 1913.

Top down, wind in the hair. Nothing quite like it.

Baby Charmain, aged 7 months, seated in an elaborate cane pram, 1914.

Even fathers started to take an interest, but generally only those working in zoos.

Baby gorilla in a pram, 1917.

With the arrival of the 1920s, new technology provided a way of helping to keep babies quiet—namely Radio.

Pram provided with a radio, including antenna and loudspeaker, to keep the baby quiet. United States, 1921.

And for the first time, babies in prams became movie stars.

The baby in the pram falling down the ‘Odessa Steps’ from the movie ‘The Battleship Potemkin’, 1925.

Along came the 1930s and prams took on some design cues from automobiles, with shiny fenders, sports wheels, and even windows.

Baby carriage, Hungary, 1939.
1930s German perambulator. Wickerwork with hardboard, wood, chromium plated metal, rubber composition.

We’re only human and so you never know when we’ll be at war again. Best to be prepared with a gas-proof pram.

Gas war resistant pram. Kent, England, 1938.

Fasten your seatbelts for the 1950s! New lightweight convertible sports and luxury models entered the market.

1953 Baby Carriage.

“Mom, I think we left them for dust.”

A toddler in a lightweight sports pram, 1959.

Companies like A&F Saward and Silver Cross started building custom-made prams in the 1950s that were—and still are—the choice of British royalty.

1959 Baby’s Royale pram made in England by A&F Saward.
A period pram advertisement from the 1950s, produced by British pram manufacturer Silver Cross.
Modern Silver Cross Balmoral Coach-Built Pram wit a vintage style.