Page:The fastest bicycle rider in the world - 1928 - Taylor.djvu/134

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112
AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR TAYLOR

1895 at which time he weighed 118 pounds. At present he weighs 160 pounds.

“In racing Taylor rides very low, his back arched over his handlebars which offers but little chance for the wind to impede his progress. Major Taylor’s father, Gilbert Taylor, a veteran of the Civil War, having served with the Union Army, is still living in Indianapolis. Taylor finds the racing and record-breaking business profitable, and has cleared several thousand dollars out of 1it.

“Despite the pleas of the race track managers and the bicycle riders Major Taylor has refused for years to compete on Sunday, as he has felt that all should rest on the Lord’s Day. He has held strictly to that theory and in 1898 his decision to refrain from riding on Sunday almost cost him the American championship title.

“Major Taylor has never ridden on Sunday and says he does not intend to. When the International Cyclists’ Association was formed in September 1898, Major Taylor went with the other riders in order to finish out the championship series in which he had been competing with the other fast men. Taylor claimed the N. C. A. promised not to hold any races on Sunday if he went with them, but this agreement was not kept, and later the colored boy sought reinstatement in the League of American Wheelmen. The colored champion does not say in so many words that the N. C. A. took this action in order to force him out of taking a big slice of the honors, but that he believes as much cannot be doubted.”

The Official Bicycle Record Book gives the following chronological order of my achievements in the year of 1899:


Date Race City Place
May 27 One-third-mile open Philadelphia First
30 One-mile open Boston First
30 Two-mile handicap (scratch) Boston First
June 10 One-mile match Boston Lost
(vs. Tom Butler)
June 16 One-third-mile open Boston First
" 16 Twenty-five-mile match Boston Won
(paced vs. Eddie McDuffee)
July 1 One-mile match Boston Won
(vs. Tom Butler)
8 One-mile Championship Chicago First
12 One-mile Championship Janesville Second
12 Two-mile handicap Janesville First
16 One-mile Championship St. Louis First
26 Two-mile Championship Ottumwa Second
26 One-mile open Ottumwa First