| DOUBLETREE | Crossbar on a wagon |
| RAKER | One who scrapes together grass, hay, leaves, straw etc with a comb-like crossbar on a long handle; said implement used; or, a scavenger (5) |
| STRETCHER | Horizontal crossbar on a chair (9) |
| RUNG | Crossbar on a ladder |
| RUNGS | Crossbars on a ladder (5) |
| OUTSPAN | A place for grazing or camping on a wagon journey (7) |
| HAYRIDE | Joyous journey for those on a wagon, hosted by a kindly farmer |
| GETHITCHED | Say "I do" on a wagon? |
| AXLE | Wheel connector on a wagon |
| WHEEL | Roller on a wagon |
| ATTRACT | Appeal to get back on a wagon cheers up (7) |
| ATTENDANTS | Members of staff on a wagon-lit, for example (10) |
| BEAM | A sunray or other shaft of light; a radiant smile; a stream of particles; a rafter; or, the crossbar of a balance (4) |
| ANKH | A device consisting of a looped bar with a shorter crossbar, used in ancient Egypt as a symbol of li |
| LYRE | Instrument of Sumerian origin having a yoke, or two arms and a crossbar, projecting out from and level with the body. The strings run from a tailpiece on the bottom or front of the instrument to the c |
| DINK | Scots dialect for something neat and trim; a soft drop-shot in pickleball and other sports; or, in Australia, a lift on the crossbar or front of a bike (4) |
| COROT | Son of a textile merchant and a milliner who painted the landscapes A Wagon in the Plains of Artois, Evening on the Lake and Summer Morning (5) |
| CART | A horse-drawn vehicle; a shopping trolley; a wagon; or, a wheelbarrow (4) |
| RAKE | An implement consisting of a pole with a crossbar, toothed like a comb at the end for drawing together leaves, hay, etc., |
| CANCELLI | Latin "crossbars" of a lattice or grating that gave us "cross out" and a word for an exchequer official, originally a porter behind a screen (8) |