Benjamin Spraggins Carriage on Duke of Gloucester Street (2024) by Brendan SostakThe Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
The wheels of the city
In 18th-century Williamsburg, the colonial capital of Virginia, skilled trades were the city’s engine. While shoemakers crafted custom footwear and apothecaries provided medical care, wheelwrights made the wheels and vehicles essential for daily life.
Interpreter Pulls a Cart (2025) by Brian NewsonThe Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
The wheelwright
The wheelwright crafted wheels and vehicles such as carts, plows, wagons, and carriages. In Virginia’s agrarian economy, farmers, merchants, tradespeople, and the gentry relied on sturdy vehicles to transport people and goods across Virginia.
Wheelwright Shop (2024) by Brendan SostakThe Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
A diverse workforce
The wheelwright workforce was diverse, and the trade was practiced by people from across colonial society: men and women, free and enslaved people. Shops were run by master craftsmen and relied on a workforce of journeymen (skilled tradespeople), apprentices, and enslaved laborers.
Wheelwright Woodworking (2024) by Brendan SostakThe Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
Apprenticeship
The wheelwright trade, like all colonial crafts, was learned through a formal apprenticeship. During training, apprentices learned basic math, developed an eye for shaping wood to be flat or round, and eventually mastered complex woodworking techniques.
Tap to explore
The Elkanah Deane Shop
The trade is preserved by The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation at the Elkanah Deane Shop.
Click into the image to explore the wheelwright shop today.
Wheelwright Tools (2024) by Brendan SostakThe Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
A prominent enterprise
Deane, an Irish immigrant trained in Dublin, established a prominent coachmaking enterprise in Williamsburg in 1772. Operating a complex shop with a team of skilled artisans, he specifically recruited specialized wheelwrights to craft his carriage wheels.
Red Wagon (2022) by Wayne ReynoldsThe Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
A range of vehicles
In 18th-century Williamsburg, wheelwrights primarily built and maintained essential work and freight vehicles used around the city and on the plantations surrounding Williamsburg.
Painting the Carriage of a Cannon (2025) by Brian NewsonThe Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
These included two-wheeled carts, wagons, wheelbarrows, and farm equipment like plows. Wheelwrights also built and maintained coaches and military items such as cannon carriages.
Cart on a Misty Morning (2022) by Jerry McCoyThe Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
The essential cart
Simple two-wheeled carts were the essential work vehicles of early Virginia. Built to withstand unpaved roads and open fields, these sturdy carts filled the streets, moving between businesses and households. Often manned by enslaved workers, they hauled supplies between plantations and towns.
Fitting a Heated Tire (2024) by Brendan SostakThe Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
Crafting the wheel
Wheelwrights’ central and complex task, though, was crafting the wheels themselves, which required expert woodworking skills. Constructing a reliable wheel demanded precise mortise-and-tenon joinery (joining two pieces of wood) and a sophisticated understanding of hardwoods.
Wheelwright Shop (2022) by Brendan SostakThe Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
Selecting the hardwoods
Regional hardwoods were carefully selected for specific wheel parts due to their unique properties. The hub was made from elm (which resists splitting), the spokes from oak (for compressive strength), and the rim from ash (for flexibility).
Wheelwright Painting a Blue Wheel (2025) by Brian NewsonThe Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
Engineering the central hub
The heart of the wheel was the hub, which had to be completely flat and properly prepared for the spokes to slot in, which tradesmen considered one of their hardest tasks. To craft the heavy wooden hubs, wheelwrights used a lathe that was often powered by a massive, hand-cranked "great wheel."
Red Devon Milking Shorthorn Oxen (2023) by Brendan SostakThe Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
Shaped for the Virginia landscape
Colonial wheels were not simply flat wooden discs; they were carefully engineered to survive the rugged Virginia landscape. Cart wheels were deliberately designed to be “dished,” or bowed outward from the vehicle, to reduce the strain placed on the wheels caused by the swaying gait of working animals.
Painting a Wheel (2025) by Brian NewsonThe Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
Maintenance and repair
Due to vehicles’ regular use and the rough conditions of colonial roads, wheels and axles were under constant stress. A consistent portion of a wheelwright’s daily business involved repairing broken wheels and vehicle bodies.
Master Wheelwright at the Workshop (2020) by Wayne ReynoldsThe Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
A rare survival
The wheelwright shop at The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation is unique. Recognized as perhaps the only operating shop preserving 18th-century wheelwright techniques, Colonial Williamsburg’s tradespeople ensure this lineage of craftsmanship is not lost.
Wheelwright Demonstration (2024) by Brian NewsonThe Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
Keeping the trade alive
Today, the tradespeople in the shop don’t just demonstrate work for visitors; they maintain a functional fleet of vehicles. The carts, wagons, carriages, and cannon carriages seen throughout Williamsburg’s Historic Area are handcrafted using 18th-century techniques, bringing the historic wheelwright trade to life.
Learn more about the Wheelwright, other Historic Trades & Skills, what travel was like in colonial America, the importance of paint for 18th-century vehicles, and more at colonialwilliamsburg.org.
This story was created by Google Arts & Culture in partnership with The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation. The Google AI tool NotebookLM was used to draft initial text based on existing research and scholarship. To ensure accuracy and quality, all content was reviewed and edited by The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation’s experts.
You are all set!
Your first Culture Weekly will arrive this week.