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Wheels of Change: How Women Rode the Bicycle to Freedom (With a Few Flat Tires
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Wheels of Change: How Women Rode the Bicycle to Freedom (With a Few Flat Tires Along the Way) [signed] Hardcover - 2011

by Macy, Sue

  • Used
  • Hardcover
  • Signed
  • first

Take a lively look at women's history from aboard a bicycle, which granted females the freedom of mobility and helped empower women's liberation.

Description

Washington D.C.: National Geographic, 2011. First Edition. Hardcover. Fine in near fine jacket with very minor edge-wear; now in archival mylar.. Small quarto in jacket; 96 pages: illustrations (some color), color map; 27 cm. Heavily illustrated. Signed by author. Numerous color illustrations & b&w photo reproductions of historic interest. "Explores the role the bicycle played in the women's liberation movement." / Contents: Foreword / Lean Missback Day. Introduction. Inventing the bicycle. Feature: celebrity cyclists. "The devil's advance agent". Feature: cycling slang. Fashion forward. Feature: cycling songs. Fast and fearless. Feature: the cycling press. New freedoms. Feature: selling with cycles. Highlights in cycling and women's history. Resources. Sources of quotes. Index.
Used - Fine in near fine jacket with very minor edge-wear; now in archival mylar.
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Details

  • Title Wheels of Change: How Women Rode the Bicycle to Freedom (With a Few Flat Tires Along the Way) [signed]
  • Author Macy, Sue
  • Binding Hardcover
  • Edition First Edition
  • Condition Used - Fine in near fine jacket with very minor edge-wear; now in archival mylar.
  • Pages 96
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher National Geographic, Washington D.C.
  • Date 2011
  • Illustrated Yes
  • Features Bibliography, Dust Cover, Illustrated, Index, Price on Product - Canadian, Table of Contents
  • Bookseller's Inventory # 102208
  • ISBN 9781426307614 / 1426307616
  • Weight 1.09 lbs (0.49 kg)
  • Dimensions 10.27 x 7.9 x 0.5 in (26.09 x 20.07 x 1.27 cm)
  • Ages 10 to 13 years
  • Grade levels 5 - 8
  • Reading level 1280
  • Themes
    • Chronological Period: 19th Century
  • Library of Congress subjects Bicycles and bicycling, Cycling for women - United States - History
  • Library of Congress Catalog Number 2010027141
  • Dewey Decimal Code 796.608

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Excerpt

“Many a girl has come to her ruin through a spin on a country road.” – Charlotte Smith, Brooklyn Eagle, August 20, 1896
 
It was June 29, 1896, and Charlotte Smith was beside herself with concern for the young women of the United States. Smith, the 55-year-old daughter of Irish immigrants, had spent the last decade and a half fighting for the rights of female workers. But now all of her worries about their health and well-being were focused on one wildly popular mechanical object: the bicycle.
 
“Bicycling by young women has helped to swell the ranks of reckless girls who finally drift into the standing army of outcast women of the United States,” wrote Smith in a resolution issued by her group, the Women’s Rescue League. “The bicycle is the devil’s advance agent morally and physically in thousands of instances.” Smith’s resolution called for “all true women and clergymen” to join with her in denouncing the bicycle craze among women as “indecent and vulgar.” She set her sights on New York City as the laboratory for her reform efforts, opening a branch of her Washington-based organization there with the goal of ultimately limiting the use of the bicycle by women.
 
Smith blamed the bicycle for the downfall of women’s health, morals, and religious devotion. Her accusations brought a swift and impassioned response. The Reverend Dr. A. Stewart Walsh, a respected clergyman in New York City and a cyclist himself, wrote a letter to the editor of the Brooklyn Eagle declaring. “I have associated with thousands of riders...and I have not seen among them . . . anything that could begin to approach the outrageous and scandalous indecency of the resolutions of the alleged rescue league.” 
 
Ellen B. Parkhurst, wife of another New York minister, celebrated the advantages of bicycle riding in Washington’s Evening Times. “Of course I do not believe that bicycling is immoral,” she said. “A girl who rides a wheel is lifted out of herself and her surroundings. She is made to breathe purer air, see fresher and more beautiful scenes, and get an amount of exercise she would not otherwise get. All this is highly beneficial.”
 
In fact, the impact of the bicycle on the health and welfare of its riders was the subject of a great deal of discussion in the 1890s. At first, the popularity of the safety drew mostly praise as its use seemed to usher in a new era of robust living. Medical literature linked cycling to cures for everything from asthma and diabetes to heart disease and varicose veins, while one study credited the decreasing death rate from consumption (tuberculosis) among women in Massachusetts to their increasing use of the bicycle. Cigar sales took a hit — one industry estimate suggested people were buying as many as one million fewer cigars per day — because cyclists were too busy exercising to indulge in the smoking habit. And in Chicago, bicycling evidently caused a drop in the use of the painkiller morphine. “The morphine takers have discovered that a long spin in the fresh air on a cycle induces sweet sleep better than their favorite drug,” reported the British Medical Journal in November 1895.
 

Media reviews

Citations

  • Booklist, 02/15/2011, Page 64
  • Bulletin of Ctr for Child Bks, 03/01/2011, Page 0
  • School Library Journal, 04/01/2011, Page 193
  • Shelf Awareness, 01/01/0001, Page 0
  • Voice of Youth Advocates, 08/01/2011, Page 0

About the author

SUE MACY is the author of Bulls-Eye: A Photobiography of Annie Oakley; Swifter, Higher, Stronger: A Photographic History of the Summer Olympics; Freeze Frame: A Photographic History of the Winter Olympics; Play Like A Girl: A Celebration of Women in Sports; Winning Ways: A Photohistory of American Women in Sports; and A Whole New Ball Game: The Story of the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League. She brings a consciousness of the history of women in sport to the story of sharpshooter Annie Oakley and carries this mythic and historic figure gracefully into modern light. She has won numerous awards and starred reviews for her books. Winning Ways and A Whole New Ball Game were both named ALA Best Books for Young Adults and NCSS-CBC Notable Children's Trade Books in the Field of Social Studies.