Swift Walking Down the Street
Transcription
Swift Walking Down the Street
Swift Walking Down the Street by Mary Evelyn McCurdy Karl Drais was born into an influential German family in 1785. As a teen, he began studying at a private school for forest administrators. At the age of twenty he left that school to study mathematics, physics, and architecture at a university in Heidelberg. He later went back to forest administration, but left it again to work as a teacher and inventor. Drais invented two four-wheeled human-powered vehicles in 1813 and 1814. A few years later he invented a two-wheeled vehicle that has been called many names: velocipede, Draisine, hobby-horse, dandy-horse, and swift walker. When Drais invented his velocipede, horses were the primary mode of transportation in Europe. During this particular time, however, horses were needed for more than work and transportation. In 1815 there was a major volcanic eruption in Indonesia that put so much ash into the air, it caused snow to fall in Europe during the summer of 1816. This sudden dip in temperatures caused crops to fail and people went hungry. Many people had to slaughter their horses to survive. The new velocipede devised by Karl Drais was a promising alternative to horse travel. The velocipede had no pedals. To ride it, a person straddled the seat and propelled himself along with both feet, similar to the way a person uses one foot to propel a scooter. Drais demonstrated the marvels of his machine on June 12, 1817, when he set out from Mannheim, Germany, and rode towards the town of Schwetzingen. He Karl Drais on His Velocipede, 1819 rode for a little less than five miles, then turned around and headed home. The monumental trip took him a little over an hour. Two years later, on May 21, 1819, the velocipede was introduced to Americans in New York City. Notgrass History Bites: Swift Walking Down the Street © 2015 Notgrass Company The velocipede caught on with some, but it was downright scary for others. Riders of this new-fangled apparatus moved a little too fast through the streets. Authorities in Germany, Great Britain, and the United States banned them for a time saying they endangered pedestrians. Karl Drais was never able to market his invention successfully and make money from it. He died a poor man in 1851. Ten years later, a French manufacturer attached pedals to the front wheel of a velocipede. The idea caught on. Even though our bicycles today are different from and more complex than the swift walkers of two hundred years ago, we can appreciate the ingenuity of Karl Drais who had an idea and did something about it. Maybe someday you’ll have an idea and you’ll do something about it. The possibilities are endless! 1869 Version of the Velocipede Table Talk Use these ideas to start some fun conversations around the dinner table. 1. Share a bicycle memory. 2. Add up how many different types of human-powered vehicles your family has ridden in all. 3. If you could go on a bike ride anywhere in the world, where would you go? Notgrass History Bites: Swift Walking Down the Street © 2015 Notgrass Company Can You Ride a “Bike”? by Albert Rochefort The following excerpt is taken from Rochefort’s 1910 book entitled Healthful Sports for Boys. To begin with, I am not going to tell you how to ride a bicycle. The only way to learn that is to get a wheel, and if it bucks you off, mount again and keep on trying until you master the machine. I have heard folks say that the bicycle is going out of fashion. That is sheer nonsense! What have boys, or sturdy young men, or sturdy old ones for that matter, to do with fashion? The bike is here, and it has come to stay and to go on revolving as long as folks live on a revolving world. . . . The pathway of the biker is not always straight and smooth, as every boy who has ridden a wheel knows. The collision can always be avoided by good eyes and reasonable speed, but no eyes are keen enough to note, and no skill alert enough to avoid the broken glass, or the bits of scrap iron that beset the path and puncture the tire. A friend assures me that he has mended a punctured tire with chewing gum. Now I do not think well of the chewing gum habit, but if the stuff can be found to have better uses, I am not the one to discourage it. So it might be well to carry a supply to fill punctured tires. This is said to be the way to use it. Let all the air out of the tire, then with a flat piece of wood force the gum into the hole—of course the gum must be “chewed” first to make it soft. Plaster some over the hole, then bind the place with a strip of rag or your handkerchief. This done, pump in the air and ride with care. A broken handle bar is bad, but a substitute that will work can be made if you have some strong string and a stout pocket knife. Cut two sections of a springy sapling, and bind them securely to the front fork, one on either side, and sufficiently long to reach just above the broken bar. Next tie securely a stout stick of proper length to the broken bar, and tie to this the end of the uprights. If properly done, this will enable you to finish your journey, which for a long distance is much pleasanter than walking and leading your wheel. . . . Have a stand for your bicycle when not in use, and keep the wheel clean and well oiled. No boy is worthy to own a tool or a toy, or anything else that is perishable, if he is too lazy or too careless to have a pride in it, and to keep it in the highest state of efficiency. The very best time to make needed repairs is when the need is discovered. Never wait until the time comes to use the thing again. The boy who gets into that habit is disqualifying himself for the battle of life, in which promptness, accuracy and energy are the prime requisites to success. If you cannot take care of your things, or prefer to resign that duty to others, then resign your ownership too, and let some more deserving comrades own them. Children on Bicycles and a Tricycle, c. 1915 Image Credits: Karl Drais (Wikimedia Commons); 1869 Velocipede (Library of Congress); children (Detroit Publishing Co., Library of Congress) Sources: Karl Drais: The New Biography by Dr. Gerd Hüttmann (Allgemeiner Deutscher Fahrrad Club, Kreisverband Mannheim); The Bicycle Museum of America Notgrass History Bites: Swift Walking Down the Street © 2015 Notgrass Company On Two Wheels Accordion Book Directions: 1. Print the following pages on heavy paper. Color if desired. 2. Cut off the right and left margins and cut along the dotted lines. 3. Tape the sections together in order, making one long strip. 4. Accordion fold the sections at the solid lines. Note: This can also be displayed as a wall timeline. Notgrass History Bites: Swift Walking Down the Street © 2015 Notgrass Company by Bethany Poore Notgrass History Bites: Swift Walking Down the Street © 2015 Notgrass Company Notgrass History Bites: Swift Walking Down the Street © 2015 Notgrass Company Notgrass History Bites: Swift Walking Down the Street © 2015 Notgrass Company Notgrass History Bites: Swift Walking Down the Street © 2015 Notgrass Company