Some more action from the late 60s cyclocross scene in England ... found here
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Some more action from the late 60s cyclocross scene in England ... found here
Pignut Hill Madison, Northwich 1968
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Doug White in his shop holding his early 20â wheel MountainbikeâŠDoug made this 20â bike in 1977⊠I spent quite a few hours riding with Craig Mitchell, on the bike Doug fabricated just like this one for Ed Christensen, owner of Sunshine bikes in Fairfax where all three of us worked in the late 70âsâŠknobby tires had yet to be invented in 26â sizes⊠Craig Mitchell also built off road 20â bikes⊠Craig and I had a daily lunchtime ride in the hills behind the shop. Dougâs contribution and understanding about useful components for the MTB world comes from lots of riding and vast machining skillsâŠ
(source)
1980-era pictures of the 3 Peaks Cyclo-cross Race, found here
Some pictures from the 1984 USA cyclo-cross Nationals, held in Santa Cruz Universty Campus that year... with some familiar names in the finish list! More info here on Steve Tilford's blog and another treasure on Jim Langley's website
David Kastler, Xavier Redois and Eric Minozzi
French BMX Championships, 1986
(pic is from Bicross Magazine, Dec. 1986)
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Denton (Manchester area) around 1967/68, Barry Davies and Eric Stone before the famous 45 steps! (source)
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Stuart Durrant, Romford Skatepark (UK) circa '88-'89.
Cyclo-cross in the Netherlands, 1930s
1957 cyclo-cross World Championships, Edelaare (Belgium) 1 - André Dufraisse (FRA) 2 - Firmin Van Kerrebroek (BEL) 3 - Georges Meunier (FRA) The Horton Collection recently uploaded a serie of cyclo-cross pictures check them on their Facebook page or their website!
Wide lenses aren't particularly a big deal or new. Most cameras and phone cams come with them as standard to get those family group shots an
I've been following Geoff Waugh's Exposure for a while, not only because he's into cyclo-cross or other similar hobbies than the ones shared here, but I love the way he writes, and as they say, roads are pages for cyclists to write their stories!
 Ride on the Wide Side by Geoff Waugh on on Exposure
Graves Park CX, Sheffield circa 1989. There was a grass mound and just couldnât resist as I was just in the transition from bmx to "adult" bikes! Frame was a Reynolds 653 and they were tough as old boots, I was always jumping them, the Vitus and Alan frames always snapped at this altitude...
Chris Potts in Paris, 1988
Jo (Georges) Routens, winning "Randonneur" examining the bike he built and assembled by himself.
Jean-Paul Routens, George's son, has a nice Facebook page where he shares memorabilias about The Hugonnier Routens / Jo Routens / JPR / Routens decades, from post-WWII touring bikes to 90s mtb! More here
The dudes were outnumbered on the 1991 Specialized Team! We had a lot of fun, racing primitive bikes (state of the art) and traveling the world. With Joanie Thompson (Soigner), Sara Ballantyne, Daryl Price, Elladee Brown, me, Lisa Muhich and Team manager Gabe Foo The second photo is the team touring Rome at the end of the season, after the World Championships in il Ciocco Italy.
We came across this old photo of John Tickle calling at our house in Hornsey, north London, to enquire whether my older brother John Stevens was available to act as his mechanic for a trip to a race circuit in Spain. My brother was at work at the time but our Dad used this as an opportunity to practise his newfound retirement hobby of photography. John Tickleâs business career in later years is reasonably well documented but I thought it might be useful to fill in a little of the earlier years. I asked my brother for memories of the Tickle connection and this is how he recollects the events of 60 years ago. John Tickle was born 1936 and the 1939 register shows the family in Sutton Road, Muswell Hill N10. He attended Tollington Grammar School and was in the school swimming set, as was my brother. John Tickle was so good that he was selected for the British swimming team at the 1952 Olympics but unfortunately a bout of influenza put paid to that. My brother didnât get to know Tickle then, because they were in different year groups and of course a lower year wouldnât presume to talk to a higher year and an upper year wouldnât deign to converse with a lower year. It was only after schooldays were over that a mutual friend introduced them, because John Tickle needed a mechanic for his Manx Norton and brother John was an engineering apprentice with the Napier company that made the Deltic engines that the diesel railway locos got their name from. Brother John helped Tickle out at various English circuits at weekends, then used a summer holiday to accompany Tickle to some continental circuits, Mouscron, Mettet and Zandvoort. Up till then, John Tickle had raced a solo bike but striking up a friendship with a Dutch sidecar racer converted him to chair racing, with his wife Cathy as passenger. In those days it was still mostly a matter of bolting a sidecar chassis onto a solo bike. The sleek purpose-built integral racing outfits were yet to appear on the scene. Thereafter, John Stevensâs mechanicking tailed off, as he now had a fulltime job. John & Cathy Tickle became well known round the circuits, home and abroad, as a privateer. He developed a business supplying Manx Norton spare parts, initially from premises at 163 Potters Bar High Street and subsequently expanding to a factory in St Neots, Cambridgeshire.