Bicycling
Related: About this forum'It was a spectacle': the forgotten era of women's bicycle racing
It was a spectacle: the forgotten era of womens bicycle racing
Roger Gilles tells the story of the 1890s women who fought stereotypes to become professional cyclists in his new book Women on the Move
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Lissette (Amélie le Gall) in 1898. Photograph: UNP
A new book tells the story of the most popular arena sport in America in the 1890s: womens bicycle racing. Women on the Move: The Forgotten Era of Womens Bicycle Racing by Roger Gilles covers the short-lived heyday of womens professional bike racing, from 1895 to 1902. At a time when women were still actively discouraged from taking up sports, these women bucked norms and got in the saddle. This part of the history of womens cycling is relatively unknown. The perfect storm of conditions came together to create this seven-year period where the sport of womens bicycle racing could thrive. It was largely thanks to the invention of the safety bicycle, which look much like the bikes we ride today, in contrast to the high-wheeled bikes that were dangerous for riders. So during the mid-1890s everybody who could afford a bicycle basically bought one, and by 1897, in terms of bicycle manufacturing, the industry basically collapsed because everybody had their bicycles, so the bicycle boom itself was short lived, says Gilles. Bicycles are also associated with providing women a freedom they had never known before, allowing them the ability to move around the world unattended and to congregate with their friends, often without chaperones.
The bicycle boom drove the interest in racing so men and women started to race. At the time, mens races were around-the-clock affairs. They were six-day races, 24 hours a day, based on the model of competitive walking races and the high wheel races of the old days. They were essentially just endurance tests, and there was drug use and other things to make the races doable, but it was a spectacle, Gilles says. In contrast, people at the time thought women were too weak to compete in these kinds of endurance races (which is ironic, knowing that modern day science actually shows that womens bodies are built for endurance sports and excel at them), so the races were shortened from 24-hour affairs to two or three hours a day over the course of several days. And that had the effect of creating a fun viewing experience for fans, who could go to the track for a couple of hours to watch. It also allowed women to go faster, because they only had to push for a couple of hours a day, which meant that their speed was on par with the men. As a result, the womens races became wildly popular, even more so than the mens races.
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The athletes made good money, and most even became the breadwinners for their family, something that was virtually unheard of in the Victorian era. Women were also still expected to wear the large hoop skirts and conservative clothing, but these cyclists were athletes who took themselves seriously. They trained hard, and are likely some of the first American women to have committed themselves to a sport, even if the results of their training made them look unfeminine, which would have been incredibly controversial at the time. They also realized that having these costumes flapping and hats blowing had a negative effect on their speed, so they began to modify their clothing to make it more conducive to racing competitively. This would have been seen as incredibly radical, particularly at a time when even women who played baseball were expected to do so in full skirts.
To their credit, these women said: As best we can, were going to wear the same uniforms as the men, says Gilles. They werent able to expose their arms and legs, so they had to wear tights or hose or long-sleeved woolen tops. So it obviously had the residual effect of attracting some of the men and boys to the races because they were able to see womens bodies on display, which was quite rare, but again I feel proud of these women because from their perspective it was just, Hey, we want to go fast, so were going to wear the outfit that makes us go fast.
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https://www.theguardian.com/books/2018/oct/11/roger-gilles-women-on-the-move-bicycle-racing-1890s
Croney
(4,918 posts)TexasProgresive
(12,280 posts)I am the man I am because I have been surrounded by strong confident women and I am thankful.
niyad
(119,650 posts)women in your life, and to you.
TexasProgresive
(12,280 posts)But this one is special to me. Last year they shipped their bikes to Seattle and rode to Pueblo, CO. Some guy wheedled himself into their group and the let him tag along. That tour is on this facebook page if you are interested.
https://www.facebook.com/AnAmericanBicyclingAdventure
They shipped their bikes to Vermont a week ago and are finishing up a 6 day tour of the Autumn leaves in New England. I don't see taht they have posted any pics yet.
Amazing, amazing women.
TexasProgresive
(12,280 posts)If I don't get lazy I will post a review here on Bicycling and X-Post it to History of Feminism (Group) if that is OK. The later because these women are some of the 1st feminists. Gilles quotes Susan B. Anthony in his introduction, "Let me tell you what I think of bicycling. I think it has done more to emancipate women than anything else in the world."
niyad
(119,650 posts)posted articles on that very subject--utterly fascinating, when you think about it.
you can also x-post the review in Women's Rights and Issues.