POWERHOUSE COLLECTION

Michaux-type Velocipede boneshaker bicycle

Object No. B1258

This bicycle is a good example of a Velocipede or Boneshaker and was one of a collection of nine early machines acquired by the Museum in 1954 from an English collector based at Brooklands in Surrey, to show the technological development of the bicycle. It was made in about 1869 and is known as a Michaux type after Pierre Michaux who made the first commercial crank operated bicycles in Paris in 1864. The Velocipede was a step forward from the Hobby Horse or "running machine" of 1817 which was propelled by the rider's feet striking the ground. Nevertheless, the Velocipede was difficult to mount, requiring the rider to run along beside the machine and vault into the saddle! It weighed about 60 pounds (27 kg) and could travel at 8 mph (13 kph). Braking was achieved by back pedalling with the assistance of an unreliable spoon brake on the rear wheel activated by a cord while the front wheel tended to clean itself on the rider's trousers when turning corners. The Velocipede was part of the developmental process in the search for an efficient form of personal transport made from about 1864 until 1871. Like the Hobby Horse, it was very popular for a short time with some 50 firms in England and over 100 in France making the machines. By 1870 public interest had waned, the heavy iron frame and wooden wheels did not make it a practical form of transport and after that interest in boneshakers was confined to racing and touring club enthusiasts. As the machine began to be used increasingly for longer distances and faster speeds, consumers demanded better efficiency, which led to product improvements. At the same time, production shifted from the blacksmith and individual craftsman to the professional builder using precision engineering techniques. One design trend at this time was increasing the diameter of the front driving wheel so that more ground could be covered with each revolution of the pedal. The stage was now set for the next cycling development, the high wheeled Ordinary bicycle or "penny farthing". The Velocipede did remain in use a bit longer in riding schools, being less intimidating than the penny farthings. Beeley, Serena. "A History of Bicycles", Wellfleet Books, New Jersey, USA, 1992. Information supplied by Paul & Charlie Farren Margaret Simpson Assistant Curator, Science & Industry August 2008

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Summary

Object Statement

Bicycle, Velocipede, boneshaker, Michaux-type, metal, maker unknown, c. 1869

Physical Description

Bicycle, Velocipede, boneshaker, Michaux-type, metal, maker unknown, c. 1869 The bicycle comprises a wrought iron frame, with iron-tyred wheels and wooden non-dished radial spokes in two rows. The cranks and pedals, are attached directly to the front wheel spindle. The pedals have a narrow flat profile with small hanging "acorn"-shaped plumb bob on the underside which always presented a flat face to the rider's foot. The Michaux-type Velocipede, of which this bicycle is an example, combines the straight backbone and rear forks in the one forging, running diagonally from the front socket to the rear axle. The saddle, comprising a padded leather seat, is mounted on a long, single, leaf spring which is secured to the backbone of the bicycle by a pair of curved stays from the rear axle. A lever shoe brake acts on the rear wheel and is operated by rotating the handlebars and tightening a length of metal wire. The handle bars are fitted with wooden hand grips. There are curved leg rests projecting over the front wheel for raising the feet from the fast revolving pedals while coasting downhill. These do not appear to be original. The bicycle finished is in black.

DIMENSIONS

Height

1380 mm

Width

625 mm

Weight

21 kg

PRODUCTION

Notes

After the rise and fall in popularity of the Draisine or Hobby Horse patented in 1818, the idea of a personal form of transport which was inexpensive to buy and maintain and did not bite continued to quietly develop. A number of coachbuilders, blacksmiths, wheelwrights and others contributed to this evolutionary process involving cranks, levers and chains which culminated in the two-wheeled crank driven bicycle, first produced commercially by Pierre Michaux (1813-1883) in Paris. Michaux was a blacksmith and coachbuilder and adapted the Hobby Horse by adding cranks and pedals to the front wheel of a Draisine in 1861 and introduced as the Velocipede at the Paris Exhibition of 1867. As the Velocipede gained in popularity riding schools, clubs and publications on Velocipede-riding were established. Riding a Velocipede was seen as an "art" like riding a horse or dancing. In the United States of America, in 1869 it was even declared the unofficial Year of the Velocipede. Numerous songs were composed including the "Velocipede Galop". In Boston alone there were 20 riding schools operating 24 hours a day. The first recorded track cycle race was ridden on 31 May 1868 at St Cloud, near Paris, followed the next year by the first road race between Paris and Rouen, a distance of 123 miles (198 km). All types of cycles entered including monocycles, tricycles, and quadricycles. Despite this, the Velocipede was not accepted as a road vehicle and was banned from the streets and its use restricted to parks. "The Times" in London described them as the "new terror of the streets". Women also rode Velocipedes but in a side saddle position with a double crank on the front wheel and dress guards added. In France, skirts were soon considered unsuitable and dangerous for riding and instead women wore a "rational dress" of tights and knickerbockers around Paris revealing for the time a scandalous amount of leg. To the English this was seen as both immodest and immoral. The Franco-German War halted production of Velocipedes in France and it was taken up in other countries, especially in England. Velocipedes were not only made in London but especially in Coventry where the Coventry Sewing Machine Co. was among the first to become involved in the new industry. In 1868 the sewing machine trade had slackened off and the city was in a depressed state so the firm decided to make Velocipedes as well, subsequently changing their name to the Coventry Machinists' Company Ltd to account for this diversification. Initially, the Velocipedes were for export but the continuing War saw them sold locally on the British market from 1869 where they became known as a bicycle (or bysicle) by those who took it seriously and boneshaker by those who did not. The best boneshaker wheels had elm stocks, hickory spokes and ash felloes (rims) which were bent in one piece with only one join. Axle bushes were bronze with brass oil reservoirs for lubrication with whale oil. Saddles, pedals, footrests and lamp brackets were sometimes very decorative, despite the added weight, as the manufacturers were often from the horse-drawn vehicle industries. An improvement on the heavy timber wheels were wire spoked suspension wheels patented by Meyer in Paris in 1869. These allowed the spokes to be tightened individually with nuts at the hub. The Boneshaker only lasted until about 1870. Beeley, Serena. "A History of Bicycles", Wellfleet Books, New Jersey, USA, 1992. Clayton, Nick. "Early Bicycles", Shire Publications Ltd, Princes Risbrough, Buckinghamshire, England, 1986.

HISTORY

Notes

The bicycle was purchased by the Museum in 1954. It was one of nine bicycles and tricycles from the collection of Richard G.J. Nash of Weybridge, Surrey, England. Richard Grainger Jeune Nash (1910-1966) was born in Ireland but grew up in Weybridge, Surrey. During the 1920s he became an automobile engineer at the famous Brooklands racetrack nearby. Brooklands was the world's first purpose-built motor racing circuit and opened in 1907. It was also the venue for early bicycle racing and soon attracted pioneering aviation manufacturing companies as well. In 1932 Nash established a hill climb record in his Frazer Nash, "The Terror", up Brooklands Test Hill. During the 1930s he was actively building up a collection of old aircraft, automobiles and bicycles which was known as the International Horseless Carriage Corporation. In 1939 motor racing ceased at Brooklands and during the Second World War the site was taken over for military aircraft production. The collection was even bombed during 1940. In 1952 Nash offered to sell his entire collection of some 23 veteran cars, 46 pre-1900 bicycles and seven pre-1918 aircraft to the Museum for the "interest and education of future generation(s)" … "the Empire or Commonwealth". At that time his address was noted as The Beeches, Hangar Hill, Weybridge, Surrey. Nash had family members in Australia and apparently felt his collection would be of value to show the history of technology in the colonies. Because of the prohibitive transport costs from England to Australia, the Museum was only in a position to purchase 9 bicycles from the Nash collection. The Museum's Director, A.R. Penfold, inspected the bicycles in a hangar/store at Brooklands while visiting England in 1953. The bicycles were subsequently shipped to Australia on board the "SS Orion". Unfortunately, the bicycles came with no provenance. Much of the remainder of the Nash collection appears to have been dispersed to museums throughout Britain. After the War civilian aviation continued at Brooklands with several Concordes later being built on the site. After the British Aerospace factory closed in 1986 the Brooklands Museum Trust was formed and a museum of the site opened in 1991.

SOURCE

Credit Line

Purchased 1954

Acquisition Date

16 August 1954

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