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  Thursday  February 19  2004    11: 27 AM

bicycles

Cycling before Lycra

 

 
As we zoom around on our lightweight bicycle frames, tri-bars, 10 speed cassettes, wearing clothing that one minute keeps you dry and the next, wicks the sweat away, it's interesting to look at how it was in the 1930's-1940's.

My father, Les Nelson, was in what was known as a 'reserved occupation' during the Second World War, a riveter in the local Vickers Armstrong Shipyard in Barrow-in-Furness. He started cycling in 1934, and soon became a keen cyclist, who, as well as racing and touring, rode his bike to work from 1936-1947, regardless of the weather.

Well known by the bus drivers on the Shipyard run, he would regularly 'beat the bus' to and from work on his fixed wheel bike, a distance of around 8 miles in each direction. As he says, the roads were a lot quieter then due in no small part to the petrol rationing (now there's an idea!).

These pages 'Cycling before Lycra' are dedicated to both him and my mother, and I thank them for supplying the photo's, and the anecdotes to go with them.
 

 



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