Bicycling for Ladies

Bicycling for Ladies

by Maria E. Ward

22 chapters5h 43mEnglish1896

About this book

Written in 1896, at the height of the bicycle craze, Bicycling for Ladies is addressed to the large numbers of women interested in the new "art of wheeling" and wondering how to begin. The book's author, Maria Ward, knew her subject. She was the co-founder of the Staten Island Bicycling Club, and an advocate for women's athletics in general, at a time when women were first emerging from the era of corsets and petticoats. In this book, she delves into the issues of appropriate dress for cycling, endorsing loose practical clothing, shorter skirts, breathable waists, and even knickerbockers. She clearly explains the mechanics of the bicycle, encouraging women to undertake their own bicycle maintenance, and explaining the use of various tools. She encourages women to venture out and explore the world, extolling the pleasures of cycling holidays on the open road with groups of friends, and the sense of independence and confidence to be found in such adventures. The same year that this book appeared in print, famed woman's suffrage leader Susan B. Anthony said that bicycling "has done more to emancipate women than anything else in the world. It gives women a feeling of freedom and self-reliance.” It is that very attitude of freedom and self-reliance that Maria Ward sets out to convey in this practical beginner's guide to cycling.(Summary by Maria Kasper)

Chapters (22)

1Preface; Possibilities
905
2What the Bicycle Does
612
3On Wheels in General and Bicycles in Particular
851
4For Beginners
707
5How to Make Progress
794
6Helping and Teaching; What to Learn
976
7A Few Things to Remember
869
8The Art of Wheeling on a Bicycle
1533
9Position and Power
1158
10Difficulties to Overcome
1090
11Dress
741
12Watch and Cyclometer
1228
13Women and Tools
665
14Tools and How to Use Them
750
15Solving a Problem
1360
16Where to Keep a Bicycle
715
17Tires
1130
18Mechanics of Bicycling
654
19Adjustment
600
20Exercise
553
21Training
1437
22Breathlessness; The Limit Mechanical
1280

Comments

Sign in to leave a comment