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Bicycling for Ladies: The Classic 1896 Guide to Skills, Exercise, Mechanics, and Dress

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Bicycling for Ladies: The Classic 1896 Guide to Skills, Exercise, Mechanics, and Dress

Contributors:

By (Author) Maria E. Ward

ISBN:

9781948062527

Publisher:

Apollo Publishers

Imprint:

Apollo Publishers

Publication Date:

1st June 2021

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Bicycles and non-motorised transport: general interest and maintenance

Dewey:

796.6082

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

320

Dimensions:

Width 127mm, Height 190mm

Description

Bicycling for Ladies is the trailblazing book that introduced women to bicycling and shocked a Victorian culture on its release in 1896. Today it remains comprehensive and useful, but also celebrates women's advancement in the sport and offers an inspiring, and amusing, look back.

Maria E. Ward let the social norms and gendered expectations of the nineteenth century eat her dust when she wrote the groundbreaking guide to bicycling for women. In chapters such as Women and Tools, Dress, and How to Make Progress, Ward explains the function of wheels, gears, and spokes, gives instruction on how to safely and efficiently ride, and discusses optimal attire (layers and a stretchy corset, of course).

Ward's detailed mechanical and physical instruction, paired with helpful images and charts, makes daunting ordeals like hill climbing, navigating traffic, and bike maintenance a breeze. In modern times, when so much is outsourced, automated, and unreliable, Ward's approach to transportation is refreshing. But while bicycling is rich with health and environmental benefits, male bicyclists still outnumber female riders, most competitive cyclists are male, and women are more likely to report feeling unsafe on a bike. Ward's text gives women the tools they need to claim their stake of the road. For seasoned cyclists or those just starting out, it is a timeless and relevant directive--ideal for today's woman who's ready to take the world by the handlebars.

The photos and instructional images throughout Bicycling for Ladies are the result of a collaboration between Ward and Alice Austin, one of America's earliest and most prolific professional female photographers. The volume has an elegant new design and is small enough to ride with.

Reviews

"Bicycling by young women has helped more than any other medium to swell the ranks of reckless girls, who finally drift into the army of outcast women of the United States."
--Women's Rescue League, 1891

"I think the most vicious thing I ever saw in all my life is a woman on a bicycle-and Washington is full of them. I had thought that cigarette smoking was the worst thing a woman could do, but I have changed my mind."
--The Sunday Herald, 1891

"Over-exertion, the upright position on the wheel, and the unconscious effort to maintain one's balance tend to produce a wearied and exhausted 'bicycle face.'"
--The Literary Digest, 1895

"Have you ever seen anything more off-putting, uglier, meaner than a wench on a bike, wheezing, her face red like a turkey, her eyes reddened by the dust What a horror!"
--Youth, 1897

"Don't cultivate a bicycle face."
--New York World,
1895

"Female bicycling must be sharply looked after and care exercised in its indulgence... bicycling is a leading factor in disturbances of nutrition, in neurasthenia, hysteria, chlorosis, dyspepsia, chronic constipation, anemic amenorrhoea, and nervous dysmenorrhoea."
--The Medical Age,
November, 1897

"It is a fact that so called bicycle schools do tend to foster immorality to individual members of the sex."
--The Medical Age,
January, 1897

Author Bio

Maria E. Ward, known by her nickname Violet, was an avid bicyclist, the cofounder of the Staten Island Bicycling Club, and the author ofBicycling for Ladies. Ward was born in Manhattan, New York, the daughter of General William Greene Ward and Emily Graham Ward, and later lived in Staten Island with her parents and sister. She cofounded the Staten Island Bicycle Club with her friend, the acclaimed photographer Alice Austen, in 1895, and Austen's photographs were used as references for the illustrations inBicycling for Ladies, originally published by Brentanos in 1896.

Ward has been widely celebrated for her contribution to the bicycling world in a wealth of media, including theNew York Timesarticle Bicycle Diaries: Two Centuries of New York City theBustmagazine article First The Bicycle, Next The Vote: The Story Of Bicycles, the bookMothers and Daughters of Invention, andMomentum Mag, which called her one of the three womenwho changed the course of history on bicycles.Ward lived in New York, and died in 1941 at the age of seventy-eight.

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