A large wagon with broad wheels and an arched canvas top; used by the United States pioneers to cross the prairies in the 19th century.
1That wagon back there-behind the potato cart-the thing that looks like a Conestoga wagon.
2The green canvas awning was smoking, and the canvas of the Conestoga wagon was already aflame.
3In a few moments Samson and Peasley arrived, with the latter's team hitched to a Conestoga wagon.
4And as they made their way thither Mr. Lincoln passed them in a Conestoga wagon drawn by six milk-white horses.
5You saw a beat-up old Conestoga wagon or something; and you saw a thousand other things that just don't make any sense!
6In another he saw a flying creature as big as a Conestoga wagon fold its wings and plummet earthward like a hawk.
7On the building's roof was a full-sized old Conestoga wagon, and printed in big red letters on the wagon's side was PAWPAW'S.
8There were two classes of Conestoga wagons and wagoners.
9They were kids when their two families started West over the big prairies in Conestoga wagons.
10Goods from Philadelphia and Baltimore were hauled in great Conestoga wagons drawn by four and six horses across the mountains to Pittsburg.
11A history of Ireland in 100 objects: Conestoga wagons were first made by German immigrants in eastern Pennsylvania in the 1730s.