William H. Lowden
https://fastestslowguy.blogspot.com/search?q=Lowden
Clubs
Accident to a Bicyclist.
Last Saturday, between Alvarado and Washington Corners, the front cycle of the bicycle upon which W. H. Lowden of this city was bicycling with ten other bicyclists, the others being of Oakland, collided with a piece of rock on the smooth road over which Mr. Lowden was going at the rate of fifteen miles an hour. The bicycle stopped. Mr. Lowdon didn't, till his head came against the road at which time a jagged piece of rock cut in the left side of his neck a long fissure half an inch deep and out of which so much of his blood ran that he was reduced for at an hour to unconsciousness.
Accident to a Bicyclist. - The San Francisco Examiner, 25 Apr 1881
At Jackson and Fifth streets the procession halted while Messrs. Louden and Gibbs, two well-known amateur photographers, trained their camera on the party. An hour was then spent in parading through the streets of Oakland, and everywhere along the line of ride the inhabitants paid homage to the wheelmen and their distinguished guest. The road to Haywards was then taken, and after a smart run San Leandro was reached. At this place the resident ladies were watching for the coming of the bicyclists, and Stevens was the recipient of a pretty tribute in the shape of a bouquet of violets adorned with knots of blue and white ribbon.
STEVENS IN THE SADDLE. - San Francisco Chronicle, Jan 17, 1887
Photographs are attributed to William Letts Oliver, his son Roland Letts Oliver, and occasionally other members of the Oliver family. Other notable photographers represented in the collection include W. H. Lowden and Gabriel Moulin.
Finding Aid to the Oliver Family Photograph Collections circa 1880-circa 1920s