An exclusive inside look at the New York City Horse and Carriage Association
The Central Park horse carriage controversy as the drivers see it
Last weekend New York City’s Horse and Carriage Association hosted ClipClop NYC to educate people about the carriage industry. MOLLY MULDOON explores the daily routine of the industry which has received increasing opposition from animal rights activists in recent years.
Emerging from the subway at Central Park South, the smell of horse drawn carriages stirs your senses before any animals are in sight. On a mild afternoon, Stephen Malone, president of the
Horse and Carriage Association, is casually brushing his horse, Paddy, as the large white-haired steed stands poised on the edge of the park.
This has been Paddy’s existence for over a decade. He hauls enthusiastic tourists around Central Park, typically for 20-minute intervals at $50 a pop.
Last year, Paddy had a VIP passenger when the 2011 St. Patrick’s Day parade grand marshal, Irish American author Mary Higgins Clark, led the parade in a black vis-à-vis horse drawn carriage up Fifth Avenue.
But after 12 years of life in Manhattan, the 19-year-old horse is set to retire to Blue Star Equiculture Draft Horse Sanctuary in Massachusetts, the new official retirement venue for horses in the Horse and Carriage Association of New York City.
Paddy is one of an estimated 215 horses that comprise New York City’s licensed carriage horse industry -- a business that has long been the target of animal rights activists, eager to ban horses from the city’s streets.
Malone told the Irish Voice he has known no other job in his adult life and that his career as a New York carriage driver is something he inherited from his father, an Irish immigrant.
“My dad taught me -- you put on your top hat and your bow tie. If you’re a big man, you have a big horse,” Malone said of his father, who came from Co. Louth as a blacksmith in 1964.
Carrying on his father’s tradition, Malone displays his 25-year experience as he seizes a sale opportunity as two approaching tourists admire Paddy.
“Hi ladies, want a horse and carriage ride?”
Moments later the two female passengers are perched in the carriage, awaiting their amble through New York City’s most famous park, as Paddy trots on.
Like many of the city’s industries, the horse and carriage trade is almost entirely reliant on tourists. And many of those who work in the industry are Irish.
“The tourists love them,” Mayor Michael Bloomberg has remarked in the past. “They are well treated, and we’ll continue to make sure that they are well treated.”
TESTAMENT to their popularity among the city’s tourists, the Irish Voice observes a couple and their two children descending from their carriage ride on 59th street, as the two flame-haired daughters feed the horse a carrot.
On vacation from Orlando, Florida, they request to be simply referred to as the Bedford family. The husband and wife don’t think there is anything wrong with having horses in Manhattan.
“I think they treat the animals well; it gives them a different opportunity to do something unique,” the mother told the Irish Voice.
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