1 Jul: The First Tour De France đ˛
Around sixty cyclists set off from a cafĂŠ in Montgeron, just outside Paris, on 1st July, 1903: the start of the first ever Tour de France.Â
The event began as a circulation-boosting scheme by newspaper L’Auto; struggling to compete with its rival Le VĂŠlo, they launched the race as a publicity exercise. But the challenge facing riders was extraordinary: the original route covered roughly 2,400 kilometres in six stages, with each stage far longer than those seen in the modern race. Competitors rode heavy single-speed bicycles with minimal technology and often travelled through the night. And, although professional cyclists entered, many participants were just enthusiastic amateurs attracted by the prize money and the possibility of fame. Of the sixty riders who started, only twenty-one completed the race.
In this episode, Arion, Rebecca and Olly explain how the stunt evolved into the quintessentially French festival of cycling it became; consider the role of anti-semitic sympathies inspiring LâAutoâs advertisers; and discover the dark side of Maurice Garin, the raceâs heroic first winner, nicknamed “The Little Chimney Sweep”…
Further Reading:
⢠âWorth a (bike) trip, 100 years laterâ (The New York Times, 2003): https://www.nytimes.com/2003/06/26/news/worth-a-bike-trip-100-years-later.html?searchResultPosition=4
⢠âA ride into the pastâ (Financial Times, 2003): https://www.ft.com/content/ad90409a-de47-11e2-9b47-00144feab7de
⢠â20 Great Tour de France momentsâ (8 Seconds Of Cycling, 2022): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PEmHe19epmg
#France #Sport #1900s #Publishing
