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Fifty Years of Road Racing The History of the North Road
Cycling Club, S H Moxham (1935)
Diemer and Reynolds 178pp
A serious-minded club history that is better on the earlier years
of its canvass
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This solid little tome takes the story of one of Englands most
venerable cycling clubs from its inception in 1885 to its Golden Jubilee.
And its very physical manifestation gives some indication of how seriously
the Club took this anniversary. It has a beautiful mid-blue, grained hardback
cover and the text is printed on handsome, grained paper with more than
a dozen photographic plates.
Little wonder. The date of publication must surely be close to the high
point of voluntary clubs in Britain. Cycling, walking, hostelling, running,
model railways and every other pastime you can think of spawned seriously
marshalled organisations in every town, village and city. Many, like the
Scouts, for example, were Edwardian inventions. But the North Road Club,
like a good many other cycling clubs, traces its origins into the glory
days of Victorias reign.
The book is organised in a year-by-year narrative, which could make
for dry picking. But the author it is credited to Moxham (president
of the club from 1933) and others provides a fascinating
picture of the early days of amateur racing in this country.
At the outset, the very shape of cycle racing has yet to emerge. Time
trials are run on ordinaries (penny farthings), faciles (a hybrid that
looks like a penny farthing albeit without the really dramatic
difference in wheel size), tricycles and safety bicycles. Manufacturers
promoted events for competitors riding only their own machines. And place-to-place
records were in their infancy. In 1882, for example, H R Reynolds recorded
the first recorded London to York attempt managing the journey
in 21 hours and 43 minutes.
There are plenty more delicious details. This season (1890) witnessed
the first appearance of the pneumatic tyre in the Clubs races and
the commencement of the gradual elimination of the sold tyre
The
contrast in appearance between the narrow solid tyres then in common use
and the 2in. pneumatic was so extraordinary that the man in the street
received the latter with jeers and ridicule.
The club played a critical role in the development of time trailing
organising, among other things the first 24 hour event.
Indeed, it championed longer time trails. For many years, it would consider
no distance of less that 50 miles being worth the effort of organising
an event.
As the narrative gets closer to the time of publication, the detail
does get thinner. Once or twice the author mentions that there is little
point in dwelling too much of detail from only a few years ago. This is
a shame, as the age of cycling that is now only just within living memory
seems every bit as interesting as the late Victorian golden days.
Happily, the club continues
to thrive albeit now centred on Hertfordshire, rather than
north London. It is enormously heartening to learn that a second volume
of history was produced in 1985 to mark the clubs centenary. At
the time of writing, however, there are half a dozen copies of the 1935
book available on abebooks.co.uk but not a single copy of the account
of the clubs second half century. That in itself probably tells
you something of the changing size, status and enthusiasm for official
histories that occured in the ensuing period.
PS September 2008
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