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Bike Invention Pedals in New Era of Freedoms

by Womens eNews | Womens eNews
Friday, 18 March 2011 21:28 GMT

* Any views expressed in this article are those of the author and not of Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Causing a Stir In August 1895, a cyclist named Ann Strong caused a stir when she compared the value of a bicycle to that of a husband in the Minneapolis Tribune. "I can't see but that a wheel is just as good company as most husbands," she declared. "I would as lief [sic] talk to one inanimate object as another; and I'd a great deal rather talk to one that can't answer than one that won't." Strong then contrasted the joy of cycling with the challenges of raising a family. "You can make your wheel tidy over night," she said, "and it never kicks off its shoes the very last minute, and never smears itself with molasses. When you are ready you can start. No little elbows are stuck in your ribs; there is no wiggling; screams at the cars; or at the candy stores. You glide along, silently, smoothly, swiftly." In 1898 the L.A.W. Bulletin and Good Roads magazine summed up the liberating effects of the bicycle this way: "The bicycle has brought to women a healthful, wholesome means of securing a degree of freedom and independence that no amount of discussion regarding 'women's rights' would ever have produced." Munsey's Magazine assessed the subtly transforming effects of the bicycle on women. "If she has ridden her bicycle into new fields, becoming in the process a new creature, it has been gradually and unconsciously," the editors wrote. "She did not have to be born again in some mysterious fashion, becoming a strange creature, a 'new woman.' She is more like the 'eternal feminine,' who has taken on wings, and who is using them with an ever increasing delight in her new power." Women Taking Flight Many bicycle companies at home and abroad did put wings on the women in their advertisements, emphasizing that they had taken flight. Not all publications treated the emergence of the "new woman" with the same level of approval. Some mocked her, while others just seemed baffled by her. Her new way of dressing, in bloomers or divided skirts or skirts with shortened hems, certainly disturbed the old social order, but so did her confidence and daring. These traits led commentators to worry that the difference between the sexes were being blurred, a fear that was reinforced as the four newest states--Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, and Idaho--granted women the right to vote in the 1890s. Would the bicycle help bring about a new kind of equality between men and women? Elizabeth Cady Stanton and her colleagues certainly hoped so. At any rate, the image of a female cyclist quickly became associated with efforts to win more rights for women. Would you like to Comment but not sure how? Visit our help page at http://www.womensenews.org/help-making-comments-womens-enews-stories. Would you like to Send Along a Link of This Story?http://www.womensenews.org/story/our-history/110318/bike-invention-peddles-in-new-era-freedoms Reprinted with permission of the National Geographic Society from the book "Wheels of Change: How Women Rode the Bicycle to Freedom" by Sue Macy. Copyright 2011 Sue Macy. Available wherever books are sold. Sue Macy spent 23 years as an editor of children's magazines before leaving to write books on sports and women's history full time. This month also saw the publication of her first picture book, "Basketball Belles: How Two Teams and One Scrappy Player Put Women's Hoops on the Map" (Holiday House). For more information: "Wheels of Change: How Women Rode the Bicycle to Freedom":http://shop.nationalgeographic.com/ngs/browse/productDetail.jsp?productId=6300761&code=MR20667 Sue Macy's Web site:http://www.suemacy.com

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