The World's Fastest Man
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The World's Fastest Man

The Extraordinary Life of Cyclist Major Taylor, America's First Black Sports Hero

Michael Kranish

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eBook - ePub

The World's Fastest Man

The Extraordinary Life of Cyclist Major Taylor, America's First Black Sports Hero

Michael Kranish

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In this "sharp-eyed account of a nearly forgotten African-American sports legend" ( Publishers Weekly )—the remarkable Major Taylor who became the world's fastest bicyclist at the height of the Jim Crow era—"Kranish has done historians and fans a service by reminding us that such immortals as Joe Louis, Jesse Owens, Serena Williams and Tiger Woods all followed in Major Taylor's wake" ( The Washington Post ). In the 1890s, the nation's promise of equality had failed spectacularly. While slavery had ended with the Civil War, the Jim Crow laws still separated blacks from whites, and the excesses of the Gilded Age created an elite upper class. When Major Taylor, a young black man, announced he wanted to compete in the nation's most popular and mostly white man's sport, cycling, Birdie Munger, a white cyclist who once was the world's fastest man, declared that he could help turn the young black athlete into a champion.Twelve years before boxer Jack Johnson and fifty years before baseball player Jackie Robinson, Taylor faced racism at nearly every turn—especially by whites who feared he would disprove their stereotypes of blacks. In The World's Fastest Man, years in the writing, investigative journalist Michael Kranish reveals new information about Major Taylor based on a rare interview with his daughter and other never-before-uncovered details from Taylor's life. Kranish shows how Taylor indeed became a world champion, traveled the world, was the toast of Paris, and was one of the most chronicled black men of his day.From a moment in time just before the arrival of the automobile when bicycles were king, the populace was booming with immigrants, and enormous societal changes were about to take place, "both inspiring and heartbreaking, this is an essential contribution to sports history" ( Booklist, starred review). The World's Fastest Man "restores the memory of one of the first black athletes to overcome the drag of racism and achieve national renown" ( The New York Times Book Review ).

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Information

Verlag
Scribner
Jahr
2019
ISBN
9781501192616

PART ONE

Image

Acceleration

CHAPTER 1

Birdie Takes Flight

Louis de Franklin Munger, a lean, blond seventeen-year-old living in Detroit in 1880, boarded a horse-drawn streetcar, and, as he did most days, joined the masses on their way to work. Nearly half of Detroit’s 116,000 residents at the time were immigrants, including many from Germany, Poland, and Ireland, and these strivers and dreamers streamed into the city’s belching industrial quarters, a bastion fed by copper smelters and ironworks. Detroit could hardly keep up with its own prosperity, and Munger steadily rose in the midst of an ambitious, confident city. He had been born on an Iowa farm, moved with his family to eastern Canada, and then settled in Michigan, where his father worked in a patent office. All around Munger swirled invention and commerce and movement, the very future that America saw for itself.
Hopping off the streetcar, he headed to a sash and blind factory, filled with the hum of machinery and clouds of sawdust, as the trees of the great northern forests were planed and sanded into window coverings. A typical six-day, sixty-hour workweek paid six dollars. Munger was a laborer at first, then a carpenter, and, by the time he was twenty-one years old, a foreman.
Detroit’s population boomed, but not all shared in the prosperity. Even as he rose through the ranks, Munger was little more than a minion in the machinery of an industrial revolution that greatly profited the few at the top. The titans William Henry Vanderbilt and J. P. Morgan had made Detroit a focal point of their control of the railroads, installing tracks and stations across Michigan; it was said they were determined to serve every town with a thousand people in an area stretching eight thousand square miles. As Munger turned twenty-one, in 1884, he watched the construction of the “pride of Detroit,” the Michigan Central Railroad depot, a Romanesque Revival building that seemed as much like a castle as it did a train station, with its three-story tower, turrets, and marble floors. The gentry from New York City and Chicago, as well as the immigrant laborers, were whisked into Detroit, and the city welcomed them into an architectural wonderland of fast-growing neighborhoods.
Munger’s life seemed on a straight course of slow, steady progress until one day he saw a local group of men on bicycles racing along a Detroit road. He had always been an athlete, running and rowing. He had ridden an early version of the bike, with iron tires and a frame of wood and steel, known as a “boneshaker” due to its discomfort. (Air-inflated rubber tires were years away.) The Detroiters who caught Munger’s eye were atop more sophisticated “high wheel” bicycles, swift but dangerous conveyances that required a rider to hop onto a high seat, balance on a great front wheel and a small rear one, and pedal mostly over roads of dirt and mud. A strong rider could average eighteen miles an hour, surveying the world from the height of a horseman’s perspective. Munger bought a high-wheeler and, nine weeks later, after innumerable crashes that would become his hallmark, he was champion of Detroit (although there were not, to be sure, many competitors in these early days). A doctor urged Munger to rest and let his injuries heal, but, as often would be the case, he rejected the advice. He learned that a race to determine the state’s fastest rider would soon be held. He bandaged his wounds, entered the race, and won. Then he heard of plans for what was billed as the first one-hundred-mile race on a straightaway course in North America—a “century” in cycling parlance.
On July 10, 1885, Munger and five other men lined up to race along the Canadian shore of Lake Ontario. It was ninety-five miles from Cobourg to Kingston, with a five-mile loop added near the beginning to make it an even century. The usual warning was issued to watch out for sudden obstacles, such as cows and horses, a constant danger for riders going full tilt. A half-mile after the lap’s first turn, Munger saw ahead of him a farm wagon drawn by two horses, with a mare and colt hitched to the back. The mare gave “a snort of terror” and shoved the first rider off the road. Munger, who usually was the loser in such encounters, saw it unfold in an instant and managed to jump off his bicycle to avoid the collision. Midway through the race, Munger arrived at a hotel for a short rest, meal, and a massage. He downed steak and potatoes, got his rubdown, exited the hotel after seventeen minutes, and, as a journalist on the scene noted colorfully, “kicked off a man’s hat” as he vaulted onto his saddle. Within minutes a horse lunged into the road and struck Munger, who was thrown from his saddle to the back of his wheel and then to the ground, where he lay “knocked out” for ten minutes. The race was lost, but Munger eventually climbed back on his bike and, impressing everyone with his grit, finished in second place. The one-hundred-mile contest had been, according to Canadian Wheelman magazine, “in many respects the most remarkable race ever run.”
Munger was enthralled with it all—the crowds, the brass bands, the newspaper coverage. The Canadian race was the first leg of a grand tour that he was invited to join, connecting by steamer to the Thousand Islands in Upstate New York, and then to Buffalo, and by bike and train down the eastern United States, through the towns of the Hudson River valley. At each burg, some old soldier would bring out a cannon and light a gunpowder charge to greet the riders. Locals put on their Sunday best, waving flags and cheering, while young ladies pinned boutonnieres to the riders’ jackets. Munger soaked it up. A reporter along for the ride recounted that Munger was “an odd genius, brimming over with fun and frolic, and his pranks on the road, on train and on steamer, added greatly to the pleasure of all parties.” Munger attached a hose to a water pump and let loose on unsuspecting victims, rang cowbells at all hours, and generally lightened the mood through days of competition, winning him the title of “funnyman of the tour.” Yet it was also Munger who, in the middle of a race, would stop to offer help to a rider with a damaged wheel, even if it meant hurting his own chances at victory.
The touring bicyclists ended their journey in New York City, where they checked into the Grand Central Hotel in mid-July. Munger’s racing form had improved each day, and he now entered a series of competitions that would raise him to the highest ranks, even as accidents kept coming. A common headline about Munger was “Suffered a violent collision,” as one story put it about his encounter with a horse-drawn carriage. He won as often as he flew over the handlebars. In a matter of just a few months, Munger had gone from the factory floor to his first taste of fame. “Birdie,” fleet and seeking freedom, was born, and so the nickname would stick. He headed to Boston, where a race was to be held between some of the nation’s fastest men.
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Munger drew much attention as he arrived in Massachusetts, the hub of the nation’s cycle manufacturing. The Boston Globe described the twenty-three-year-old racer as a strong, supple, handsome man, weighing one hundred and sixty pounds, and riding a fifty-four-inch-high bicycle called an Apollo. “He is of very merry disposition and everyone he meets is sure to become his friend,” the newspaper said. Initially, Munger had planned to compete in shorter races, training for thirty to forty miles per day and “sleeping all he could.” But he did so well that he decided to enter one of the most grueling competitions of the era: a twenty-four-hour race.
Munger climbed aboard his Apollo with little sense of what lay ahead. The race began at four p.m. as a steady rain pitted the roads; then a downpour turned everything muddy. The mist rose, and darkness descended. It became “impossible to distinguish objects ten feet distant,” the Globe reported. After many miles, Munger felt ill and stopped at farmhouses for assistance. Farmers offered him milk and some bread, and he continued on. At 5:40 a.m., having ridden for more than twelve hours, Munger stopped at a Salem homestead, where he was given a rubdown with sweet oil. Limbered and rested, Munger regained his strength. He began to add miles to the course and asked local riders to accompany him to verify his feat. Twenty-four hours after he began, he ended his epic ride in Dorchester. The distance on his cyclometer measured 211 miles, a new national record.
The Globe was dismayed. How could local riders fail to win on their own course? “Won by a Westerner,” said the headline. “The Twenty-Four-Hour Bicycle Record Broken.”
The glory didn’t last. A local rider upped the record to 255 miles, and a cycling journal taunted Munger, writing, “Boston wheelmen are wondering why Munger does not come on from Detroit and smash the 24-hour record, as he claimed he would.” Munger showed up for another try. All seemed to go well until he collided with some horses, putting him in such pain that he was forced to quit after 17 miles. A few weeks later, “plucky Munger,” as the Globe now called him, tried again. There was no moonlight, so Munger rigged two lanterns to his handlebars and a third to the hub of his front wheel. The rains were too heavy, and Munger quit after 130 miles. As he left a hotel in Brighton, Munger said he was “not at all disheartened.” Two weeks later, he had another chance.
A large crowd gathered outside Faneuil House, a four-story hotel in Brighton. Munger pushed off at 5:00 p.m. on wet roads lit only by the moon. Munger learned a competitor registered a record of 257 miles. All seemed lost as Munger, “by an unlucky accident,” fell from his bike and injured one of his knees. He put bandages on his bleeding leg, adjusted his pedals to accommodate his now-altered pace, and climbed back on the cycle. At 4:58 p.m., with two minutes to spare, he registered 259 miles, reclaiming the American record. He dashed up the steps of Faneuil House, stood under the two-story portico, and waved to “the delighted howl of his friends.” Newspapers across the country, including the New York Times, heralded the news. Munger’s name, his pluck, even his disastrous tendency to take “headers” over the handlebars, became the talk of the sporting press.
Munger’s victories coincided with the emergence of bicycle racing as a popular sport. Racing ovals, or “velodromes,” would soon be constructed across the country, with grandstands for ten thousand people or more. The press devoted several pages of coverage every day to the exploits of top riders. With winter’s arrival in Boston, a publicity-seeking bicycle manufacturer, Everett & Co., which made the Apollo at its Boston factory, offered to pay Munger’s expenses to New Orleans, where the nation’s best riders were training. Munger took the money and headed south.
‱ ‱ ‱
New Orleans was a booming port city when Munger arrived in 1886, boasting one of the nation’s finest networks of asphalt roads. A reporter for the New Orleans Daily Picayune told his readers about the “sun-burned, blond young man, weather-beaten and athletic looking,” the holder of the twenty-four-hour American cycling record, who had become “a sort of bicycle missionary, travelling around to encourage the sport.” Munger predicted that the bicycle would replace the horse as common transportation, telling how riders in places such as St. Louis “use the machine for their regular daily travel, and do not regard it merely as an amusement.” The Picayune said Munger “has ridden thousands of miles and is one of the finest long-distance riders in the world.” He is “the life of every tour” who planned to popularize bicycles in the South, which was well behind the North in adopting the sport. Munger planned to stay in the South for a month or two, during which he hoped to go beyond winning a national title; he wanted to win races that would certify him as a world champion, too.
Munger got his chance two months later. Early on the morning of March 27, 1886, cyclists lined up on St. Charles Avenue, proclaimed by a local promoter to have the nation’s smoothest surface, all the better for achieving a world record in a twenty-five-mile contest. Munger mounted his bike and barreled past churches and squares and riverfront. He completed the course in one hour and twenty-four minutes, shattering the world record by nine minutes. For the next two weeks, speculation filled the press about whether Munger could capture the fifty-mile title. Again, he demolished the record. The word spread: Munger was “wonderful,” a marvel, one of the greatest sportsmen and competitors. Drawings of Munger atop his Apollo appeared in newspapers across the country.
The only question was what he would do to top it. Then he heard about a trio of local bicyclists preparing to ride from New Orleans to Boston. They planned to grind out nearly two thousand miles in thirty days, an audacious goal considering the challenge of riding high-wheelers and the dearth of good roads, not to mention the difficulties of staying supplied, keeping dry, and finding shelter. They aimed to arrive in time for the opening of the national meeting of the League of American Wheelmen, a powerful group behind the push for paved roads. The three riders—Henry W. Fairfax, C. M. Fairchild, and A. M. Hill—each placed ten-pound bundles over their handlebars that contained clothing, lotions, chain lubricant, needles, thread, and, of course, plenty of bandages. They followed alongside the railbed of the Louisville & Nashville railroad, reached Atlanta, and then took a series of paved, muddy, or sandy roads near the coast, headed through Virginia’s Shenandoah River valley, and then toward New England. Often, they pushed their bikes for miles through sand and muck and swamp. They telegraphed ahead and were met along the way by cycling groups, culminating in Boston, where they joined a parade of eight thousand riders of the League of American Wheelmen, one of the biggest gatherings of the nascent sport that had yet been held.
Munger would not be one of those in attendance in Boston. Shortly after winning his races in New Orleans, the League of American Wheelmen conducted an investigation into whether racers who had won records were paid professionals, instead of “amateurs” as the League required. Munger had not received a salary and thus believed he was not a professional. But he had traveled to New Orleans at the expense of Everett & Co., which wanted to capitalize on Munger’s fame. To the League, that made Munger a professional. He was suspended, and his latest records were marked with asterisks. When Munger tried to compete in a Detroit race, a group of riders from Cleveland said they would refuse to race against him for fear of being tainted by competing against a professional, and threatened to sue Munger for damages. He had effectively been blackballed from a sport he had done so much to popularize.
As the controversy over his racing status was fanned by the papers in the late summer of 1886, Munger told friends he just wanted to keep on riding and exploring. But how and where? The answer must have gradually dawned on him. On the same page of the cycling journals that had extolled his New Orleans victories, he read about the exploits of an Englishman named Thomas Stevens, who two years earlier had been the first person to cycle across America. Indeed, as Munger was pondering his future, Stevens was in Kolkata, India (called Calcutta by the British), on his way to completing the even more audacious goal of traveling across the world by bicycle. Munger decided that he would be among the first to ride across America, starting in San Francisco, just as Stevens had done two years earlier, taking advantage of wind that generally blew west to east.
While Munger pondered his trip, the literature of cross-country travel spread a romantic vision. A railroad company published a guidebook filled with flowery prose about majestic peaks, towering forests, fast-flowing streams, and endless prairies. Full-page illustrations were published of scenes such as the Great Falls of the Yellowstone River, in the recently created Yellowstone National Park. Munger would have read such volumes with awe and anticipation. Surely the guidebook’s prose would make any adventurous soul want to go west, particularly a man whose other option was to return to a sash and blind factory: “Beyond the Great Lakes, far from the hum of New England factories, far from the busy throng of Broadway, from the smoke and grime of iron cities, and the dull prosaic life of many another Eastern town, lies a region which may be justly designated the Wonderland of the World.”
This was Munger’s kind of world. That year, a new title appeared by Birdie’s name in Detroit’s city directory: “travel agent.” The job description might have been entered humorously, but it fit. Munger would, as the guidebook said, explore the country “with his own eyes upon its manifold and matchless wonders.”
Munger would use Stevens’s daunting descriptions as a guide. Stevens had taken a steamship from San Francisco to Oakland and worked his way across the Sierra Nevadas by following the tracks and trestles of the railroad. Stevens had hauled his bike up mountainsides and inside snowsheds that covered tracks in particularly treacherous areas. He pressed against the inner walls of the tunnel with his bike to avoid oncoming trains. Stevens had even hoisted his thirty-four-pound bike on his shoulder and traversed railroad bridges high above raging rivers, once dangling the bike over the edge while a train came alongside. He shot at mountain lions and bears, befriended Native Americans, and bunked with Mormon families in which there were multiple wives.
‱ ‱ ‱
Munger arrived in San Francisco late in that summer of 1886. Californi...

Inhaltsverzeichnis

  1. Cover
  2. Dedication
  3. Prologue: Madison Square Garden, 1896
  4. Part One: Acceleration
  5. Part Two: The Jump
  6. Part Three: The Finish
  7. Appendix 1: Major Taylor’s Cycling Records
  8. Appendix 2: Major Taylor’s Training Regimen
  9. Photographs
  10. Acknowledgments
  11. About the Author
  12. Notes
  13. Bibliography
  14. Index
  15. Image Credits
  16. Copyright
Zitierstile fĂŒr The World's Fastest Man

APA 6 Citation

Kranish, M. (2019). The World’s Fastest Man ([edition unavailable]). Scribner. Retrieved from https://www.perlego.com/book/1455756/the-worlds-fastest-man-the-extraordinary-life-of-cyclist-major-taylor-americas-first-black-sports-hero-pdf (Original work published 2019)

Chicago Citation

Kranish, Michael. (2019) 2019. The World’s Fastest Man. [Edition unavailable]. Scribner. https://www.perlego.com/book/1455756/the-worlds-fastest-man-the-extraordinary-life-of-cyclist-major-taylor-americas-first-black-sports-hero-pdf.

Harvard Citation

Kranish, M. (2019) The World’s Fastest Man. [edition unavailable]. Scribner. Available at: https://www.perlego.com/book/1455756/the-worlds-fastest-man-the-extraordinary-life-of-cyclist-major-taylor-americas-first-black-sports-hero-pdf (Accessed: 14 October 2022).

MLA 7 Citation

Kranish, Michael. The World’s Fastest Man. [edition unavailable]. Scribner, 2019. Web. 14 Oct. 2022.