We
had regular Saturday afternoon runs:
we all had to work on Saturday mornings - there was no five-day
working week in the early 1920s - one or more runs on a Sunday,
weekday evening runs, on Tuesday to the Half-way House, Horton
and on Thursdays to the Battleaxes, Elstree, and bearing in
mind the numbers now attending club runs it may amaze you
when I tell you that after our quarterly meetings there would
be ninety or more sitting down to Sunday tea.
At
the beginning of 1923 competition record for 25 miles
events was 1.2.38 and the ambition of we tyros was to beat
evens (for the uninitiated evens is 20 miles an hour, i.e.
1hr.15m for a 25 miles event). In April 1923 I entered the
Fulham Wheelers Novices '25'. The winning time was 1hr.14m.4s.
I was fourth with 1hr.14m.20s. As a consequence of that
ride I was persuaded to join the Fulham Whs but although
I rode in their events and in their name in Open Events
I continued to ride regularly with the Section. During 1923
and 1924 other members of the Section joined other local
racing clubs, such as the Bath Road Club and the Uxbridge
Wheelers but unlike me they tended to drift away from the
Section. I was unhappy at losing such friends in this way
so towards the end of 1924 I suggested that the section
should promote its own racing club.
As
a consequence at a meeting at the Pear Tree Tea Rooms,
Chobham on the 21st December 1924 a racing club was formed
with the title of the Western Wheelers for regular riding
male members of the Western Section - ladies were subsequently
admitted in 1927. Early in 1926 we learnt that there was
another club with that title so the title of our club was
changed first to Western Elite but then to the Westerley
Road Club. So you all will now know why and how our Club
came to be formed. I was elected Secretary of the Western
Wheelers. I was the only official and consequently responsible
for the whole of the administration and the promotion of
all our events. In 1925, our first active year, I promoted
three 25 miles events, the second of which was for singles
and tandems, two fifty miles events, a hundred miles event
a twelve hours and a Hill Climb and that was the basic Club
Programme into the war years.
On
the 3rd September 1939 came the war and as the months
passed member after member joined the forces with the result
that our racing and administrative members were greatly
reduced and we owe an immense debt to the late Les Ames
for his great work in keeping the Club going during those
difficult years.
The
war brought for us in casualties. On the 25th November
1941 Doug Hamilton was killed in Libya while serving was
a wireless operator. On 13th March 1942 Tommy Lane was also
killed in action in Libya while serving as a gunner in Royal
Artillery and on 15th September 1943 Les Ward died of wounds
received in action. In the autumn of 1943 Bill Stratton
was among the missing from a Japanese transport carrying
prisoners of was between Thailand and Japan. In February
1945 George Strong and Bobby Biggs were both killed in fighting
accidents. George Strong had been our Club Champion in 1941
and Bobby Biggs had given every sign of being a great rider
for he won the West London Cycling Association twelve just
before the war started, beating that great rider Stan Butler
(the grandfather of the present Gethin) into second place.
In
1927 Bill Harrison joined the club and soon became our
dominant performer. He won the Club Championship in the
four years 1929-1931 and went on to achieve national fame.
Prior to the creation of the Road Time Trials Council in
1938 there were no national road time trial championships
and the most exciting event of the inter-war years was the
North Road Cycling Club Memorial fifty miles event. This
was an event restricted to the best fifty milers of the
year and we were delighted in 1929 when Bill was one of
the twelve: he finished in fifth place.
From
our early days there has always been an interest in
national records and of the 25 events I organised eight
were successful. The first of these successes was Bill Harrison's
breaking of the Road Records Association Bath and Back Bicycle
record. In 1931 Bill reached the height of his fame when
he was placed fourth in the second British Best All-rounder
Competition organised by the weekly newspaper "Cycling".
Throughout
our history we have usually had an outstanding tricyclist.
In 1931 Henry Payne, Club Champion for our first three years,
who already held the London to York Tricycle Record, added
to his score the London to Bath and back R.R.A. record.
In 1930 Arthur Abram joined the Club. He was only an average
bicyclist. In 1933 he borrowed a tricycle and within weeks
had attained national fame as a tricyclist. In that year
he won the major national tricycle award - The Tricycle
Trophy. He repeated his success the following year - a year
in which he also broke the national 12 hour tricycle record.
In October 1935 he broke the London to Liverpool Tricycle
record. Not satisfied in reducing it by 26 minutes he attacked
it again the following month reducing it by a further 36
minutes and in 1939 he broke the Liverpool to Edinburgh
Tricycle record.
Soon
after the war Alby Griffiths, who had joined the Club
in 1940, in addition to winning many Open Events, won the
Club Championship in the years 1947, 1948 and 1949. Having
been placed 5th in the BBAR Competition in 1947. In 1947
E Fry, another fine tricycle rider broke the Pembroke to
London Tricycle record.
By
the early fifties John Mortimer, another of the Clubs
outstanding riders, was performing well both on bicycle
and tricycle. He won many tricycle awards including the
Tricycle Trophy. In 1955 he broke the London to Brighton
and Back Tricycle Record and broke national tricycle competition
records at 50 and 100 miles. He won or was placed in a number
of Open Events but possibly his best rides were in events
he did not win. I refer to his second place in the Catford
24 hours event of 1953 when, after spending nearly an hour
off his bicycle due to mechanical trouble, he covered 454
miles and his third place in the National 12 hours Championship
in 1955 when he covered almost 260 miles, only a few miles
less than the then competition record.
At
our first Committee Meeting in 1929 we decided that
we ought to support the sport by promoting an Open Event
and I recall Bill Harrison saying "let us promote a
real event not a boys '25' ", with the result that
we promoted our Open '100': it soon became a classic and
has remained so until the present day.
Our
best year in Road Racing was in 1966 when Richard Sweeting
was placed in no less than 15 events.
In
1924 we set out to provide a racing programme for members
of a C.T.C Section and 75 years on we are doing just that.
With
the odd exception we have been fortunate in having excellent
officers and from our early days have been respected as
a well organised club, a reputation we still retain.
I
have written much about our past, for it is proper at
the time of our 75th anniversary, that our achievements
should be recorded. With our current group of active riders,
led for the second year in succession by our young current
Club Champion Dave Newman, I have confidence that our future
is bright.