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The Bicycle
derives its origin to the Year 1779 when Blanchard and Margrier
invented 'Velocifere'. Its name was published in the Journal De
Paris on 27th June 1779. "Velocifere' which differed from the Calerifera
said to be proposed by another Frenchman De Sivral much earlier,
stated another authority on the subject - invented a Bicycle that
could neither be pedalled nor steered; later a German mechanic named
K.L. Draise is reported to have designed a Bicycle in the last decade
of 18th Century called the 'Laufmachine'. It was capable to achieving
a speed of 16 km. (10 miles) per hour. Velocifere consisted of a
wooden bar rigidly connecting two wheels placed one in front of
the other was propelled by the rider, seated astride the bar pushing
against the ground with his feet. The first Bicycle was presented
in the Court of Louis XVI in 1779.
The first real
Bicycle in 1838 by Kirk Patrick MacMillan of Dunfries. A Scottish
Blacksmith, he affixed pedals with connecting rods working on the
real wheel to a tricycle in 1834 and then to a Draisene in 1840.
He also fixed a comfortable seat and built a handlebar and an armset.
Then Mr. Gavin Dalzall, who worked in collaboration with Mr. MacMillan
introduced further improvements to the machine and both of them
brought out some popular models. These models, however, remained
unchanged for nearly two decades.
In 1864, Pierre
Lallement of Paris constructed a Bicycle in which the front wheel
was driven by pedals and cranks attached direct to its axle through
a freewheel. This machine consisting of a wooden frame supported
on two wooden wheels was called Bysicle or a 'Boneshaker'. Another
source claims that Rowley B Turner introduced the celebrated 'Boneshaker'
in the year 1860. Nevertheless this contraption became the sensation
of the 1865 Paris Exposition and can claim to be the direct ancestor
of the modern day Bicycle.
In 1868, rubber
tyres replaced iron tyres. The front wheel of the 'Boneshaker' then
measured around 36/38''. A little later 'High' Bicycle was introduced.
Its front wheel was 54" in diameter. Between 1870 and 1879, but
finally in 1885, James K. Starley, aged above 70 who later came
to be known as 'Father of the Bicycle Industry', made 'Rover' Safety
bicycles in England - weighing about 50 lbs. In this, the chain
and chainwheel were fixed and the sizes of the wheels reduced and
their gap narrowed down. This safety Bicycle, more famous as 'Ariel'
monopolised the field for sometime. Mr. Starley made many improvements
over the French machine and patented the tangented wheel. It was
nicknamed 'Penny - Farthings'. In 1874 the first chain-driven bicycle
was designed by H.J. Lawson. In 1876 Co. Albert Pope of Boston (USA)
set up the Pope Manufacturing Company to produce cycles. Ball bearings
were introduced in the year 1877.
The real break
came in the year 1889 when John Boyd Dunlop, son of a Belfast Surgeon,
introduced the first pneumatic tyre. By putting these tyres in the
Bicycle, a great gain in comfort, with remarkable increase in speed,
was secured. The height of the bicycle was reduced by 40 per cent.
This was a revolution in the history of a Bicycle. The safety bicycle
with pneumatic tyres made cycling universally popular, not merely
as a pastime but also as a convenient mode of transport for everyday
use. Made with the drop frames, it also enabled women to cycle without
being confined to a heavy tricycle or otherwise compelled to assume
irrational dresses. In Britain the demand of machines had become
very great and the makers were unable to meet it.
Tandem (Cycle
for two) was originated in England in 1894. It was popularly known
as a vehicle of romance - a lovers' bicycle. These were followed
by Bicycles for three and even four but all these went off the road
leaving the Bicycle for one only as we see it today. So it was in
the year 1893 - 94 that the Bicycle design stabilised to a stage
at what we find it today.
The Bicycle
in India
Bicycle was
first seen in India in the year 1890. Import of cycles, however,
started in 1905 and continued for more than 50 years. Complete ban
on imports was announced by the Government in July, 1953, but cycles
kept on simmering in the country till 1961. In 1890, selling price
of an imported bicycle was around Rs. 45/-; in 1917, during the
First World Was the price jumped to Rs. 500/- but dropped considerably,
month by month and came down to Rs. 35/- or so (U.K. makes) and
Rs. 15/- or so (Japanese models).
It would be
interesting to mention that in 1919, 5 persons in Punjab imported
cycles and used them on The Mall, Simla. These included one Bishop,
two military men and two contractors including S. Pala Singh Bhogal
(Grand Father of Mr. M.S. Bhogal of Ludhiana). Under special permission
of the Governor, they were allowed to use cycles on 'The Mall' only
for one hour in a day. They imported B.S.A. Cross Bar Cycles from
U.K. and it used to be a kind of Mela at that particular hour on
the Mall in Simla, the scene watched by hundreds of people everyday.
Later, a firm was formed under the name of Singh & Co. with
shops on Railway Road, Jalandhar and Bazar Vakillan, Hoshiarpur,
which imported bicycles in the year 1930 onwards.
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IMPORT
OF COMPLETE CYCLES
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Year
1942 - 43
1943 - 44
1944 - 45
1945 - 46
1946 - 47
1947 - 48
1948 - 49
1949 - 50
1950 - 51
1951 - 52
1952 - 53
1953 - 54
1954 - 55
1955 - 56
1956 - 57
1957 - 58
1958 - 59
1959 - 60
1960 - 61
1961 - 62
1965 - 66 |
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-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- |
Cycles
imported (Nos.)
16, 000
28, 000
37, 000
76, 000
2, 12, 000
2, 61, 000
2, 64, 000
2, 63, 000
1, 66, 000
2, 83, 000
1, 98, 000
90, 000
89, 000
1, 30, 000
1, 56, 000
49, 000
7, 321
896
492
477
3
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