The Safety Bicycle
By (Author) Ian Jones
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Shire Publications
10th November 2010
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
629.2272
Paperback
32
Width 149mm, Height 210mm
94g
The safety bicycle, with front-wheel steering and pedal-driven rear wheel, has existed in some form since the experiments of Kirkpatrick Macmillan in 1839, but his ideas were almost forgotten when the front-wheel driven boneshakers and penny farthings reigned supreme. Then, in the 1870s, experimental safeties appeared, culminating in Henry Lawsons Bicyclette of 1879. Within ten years the modern bicycle had developed, to remain basically unchanged for over seventy years. Many specialist and experimental designs have appeared since the late nineteenth-century, most of which, if they passed the prototype stage, failed to attract the public and now languish in museums.
After teaching history for ten years, Ian Jones joined the staff of Harlow Museum as Education Assistant in 1974. After becoming Museum Officer in 1980, he became responsible for the setting up of the Mark Hall Cycle Museum to house the John Collins Collection of veteran cycles. The museum opened in 1982 and received a Civic Trust award in the same year. Aided by the detailed knowledge of John Collins, the curator at Mark Hall, the author developed his own considerable interest in the subject.