Difference between revisions of "Alameda County Wheelmen"
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Next Sunday a run of the new club, the [[A. C. W.]], will be held. All the members are expected to be in readiness to participate. | |||
A certain member of the A. C. W. struck a game in San Leandro, yesterday, that nearly bankrupted, him. It was two bits a chance and a present guaranteed every time. He spent three dollars and six-bits trying for a gold watch, and when he left he had two pairs of tin bracelets, one ten-cent bottle of perfumery, a cigar, a lead pencil and a bottle of ink. | |||
... | |||
[[W. J. Bowman|Bowman]] is a member of the new club. | |||
[[Alexander S. Ireland|Ireland]] has developed signs of "poecy," and it is understood he will be asked to resign from the A. C. W. | |||
There is talk of a race meet to be held at Pleasanton, given by the A. C. W. and [[Livermore Bicycle Club]]. | |||
... | |||
The new club, [[A. C. W.]], will admit of lady and associate members. | |||
</blockquote> | |||
[[THE WHEELMEN. - Oakland Tribune, 11 Oct 1886]] | |||
''<nowiki>[Were there two versions of this club, in two different time periods? - MF]</nowiki>'' | |||
<blockquote> | <blockquote> |
Latest revision as of 16:38, 5 January 2023
Place
Emblem
Members
- J. D. Arkison
- W. J. Bowman
- J. A. French
- W. W. Haralson
- Charles Havens
- Ed Hinckley
- Henry Hutchinson
- Alexander S. Ireland
- Wilbur Johnson
- F. Kenna
- Robert H. Magill, Jr.
- A. L. Reichling
- Alex J. Rosborough.
- Theodore A. Schlueter
- Lewis Sears
- William H. Seaver
- Geo. H. Strong
- William A. Sutherland
- Frank Willis Sharpe
Next Sunday a run of the new club, the A. C. W., will be held. All the members are expected to be in readiness to participate.
A certain member of the A. C. W. struck a game in San Leandro, yesterday, that nearly bankrupted, him. It was two bits a chance and a present guaranteed every time. He spent three dollars and six-bits trying for a gold watch, and when he left he had two pairs of tin bracelets, one ten-cent bottle of perfumery, a cigar, a lead pencil and a bottle of ink.
...
Bowman is a member of the new club.
Ireland has developed signs of "poecy," and it is understood he will be asked to resign from the A. C. W.
There is talk of a race meet to be held at Pleasanton, given by the A. C. W. and Livermore Bicycle Club.
...
The new club, A. C. W., will admit of lady and associate members.
THE WHEELMEN. - Oakland Tribune, 11 Oct 1886
[Were there two versions of this club, in two different time periods? - MF]
A new cycling club has just been organized in Oakland, the Alameda County Wheelmen, and already has some thirty members enrolled. The leading spirits in this club are hustlers, and a large membership is sure to be the result at an early date.
There's a movement on foot for a "reunion dinner" New Year's day by the remaining members of the Old Alameda County Wheelmen's club, which 80 years ago was the banner sporting fraternity on this side of the bay. Those were the days before the "safety" came into vogue and when it was necessary for the novice to employ a stepladder in getting started on his "wheel." The Alameda County Wheelmen boasted some daring riders among their membership. They were the ones who surrounded Stevens when he left Oakland on his historic bicycle trip around the world, and they welcomed him when he arrived here on the completion of the Journey. Among the members were Jimmy Arkinson, Geo. H. Strong, Bob Magill, Charles Havens, Louis Sears, Al Reichling, "Bill" Bowman, Willie Sharp, Bill Haroldson, Ed Hinckley, Alec Ireland and Alec Roseborough.
New Year's eve these men will probably meet in a down town cafe for a quiet little dinner to talk over the days that are gone and the heroes of yester-year. Any members of the organization who may read this are urged to send in their names and addresses to Robert Magill, Oakland Chamber of Commerce.
[The above claim is problematic, because the Alameda County Wheelmen were founded in 1891. But some of these guys were riding bikes in 1884, as part of the Oakland Bicycle Club or Oakland Wheelmen. - MF]
Pages which link here:
- Oakland Bicycle Club (← links)
- California Associated Cycling Clubs (← links)
- ACME WHEELMEN. - Oakland Tribune, 22 Jul 1891 (← links)
- A GREAT RIDE. - Oakland Tribune, 27 Jan 1892 (← links)
- Theodore A. Schlueter (← links)
- San Francisco Call, Volume 72, Number 35, 5 July 1892 - Bicycle Races in Various Parts of the State (← links)
- Oakland Wheelmen (← links)
- Oakland Ramblers (← links)
- J. D. Arkison (← links)
- Thomas Stevens (← links)
- A. C. W. (redirect page) (← links)
- THE WHEELMEN - The San Francisco Call, 01 Jun 1895 (← links)
- THE WHEELMEN. - The San Francisco Call, 27 Apr 1895 (← links)
- THE WHEELMEN. - Oakland Tribune, 08 Nov 1886 (← links)
- THE WHEELMEN. - Oakland Tribune, 11 Oct 1886 (← links)
- Casey Castleman (← links)
- Alameda County Wheelmen (← links)
- CHAT ABOUT THE CYCLE. - Growth of the Alameda Bicycle and Athletic Club. - Century Run of the Orientals - A New Club. - End of the Thousand-Mile Relay Race. - The San Francisco Call, May 23, 1892 (← links)
- WHEEL WHIRLS. - Another Bicycle Club Has Been Organized in This City. - Oakland Tribune, June 24, 1891 (← links)
- CHAT ABOUT THE CYCLE. - The San Jose Road Club and Its Members. - General Interest in the Race Meets to Be Held To-Day - High Jinks in the Redwoods. - The San Francisco Call, Jul 4, 1892 (← links)
- W. J. Bowman (← links)
- Formation of the California Associated Cycling Clubs - The San Francisco Call - 31 Jul 1892 (← links)
- Olympic Club Bicycle Annex (← links)
- CHAT ABOUT THE CYCLE. - San Francisco Call - May 9, 1892 (← links)
- Henry Hutchinson (← links)
- WHEEL WHIRLS. - Oakland Tribune, September 30, 1891 (← links)