| BAROUCHE | A four-wheeled horse-drawn carriage, popular in the 19th century, with a retractable hood over the rear half |
| SCOWLS | Lowers small hood over son (6) |
| PHAETON | Type of open carriage popular in the late 18th and early 19th centuries (7) |
| RATHA | A four-wheeled, horse-drawn carriage in India (5) |
| CLARENCE | A four-wheeled horse-drawn carriage (8) |
| DYNAMICAL | Backward boy, about first century, with a lot ... with a lot of energy (9) |
| KINGLEAR | Tragedy by William Shakespeare rewritten by poet laureate Nahum Tate later in the 17th century with a happy ending |
| CRIBBAGE | Card game originating in the 17th Century, with a target of scoring 61 or 121 points (8) |
| ATTIC | Room with a retractable ladder, often |
| SSR | Chevy model with a retractable hardtop |
| CLICKYPEN | Writing implement with a retractable nib, cutely |
| BROUGHAM | Four-wheeled horse-drawn closed carriage with a raised open driver's seat in front |
| SHAKO | Tall cylindrical military hat with a short peak and a plume, popular in the 19th century (5) |
| WELSH | The ___ hat became popular in the 19th century in Wales; it is a sort of top hat for women. |
| LANDAU | Four-wheeled horse-drawn carriage named after a town in Bavaria (6) |
| LANDIU | Four-wheeled horse-drawn carriage named after a town in Bavaria (6) |
| PUNCH | ___ and Judy comedy duo had their origins in 16th-century commedia dell'arte and were still in popular in the 19th century as puppets. |
| CARRIAGE | Four-wheeled horse-drawn vehicle; a railway coach; or, part of a typewriter that holds the paper (8) |
| FIACRE | Small four-wheeled horse-drawn carriage named after a Paris hotel (6) |
| PENNYDREADFUL | Nickname for any of the cheap serial novels popular in the 19th Century (5,8) |