Cautionary Tales with Tim Harford - Tim Talks Bicycles with Patented
Episode Date: September 2, 2022Invented in the mid-1800s, bicycles have had enduring popularity. Across cultures, they have been embraced, promising freedom and mobility at a lower price point. Tim joins Dallas Campbell on Patent...ed: History of Inventions, to discuss the history of the bicycle, from the invention story through to bicycle booms, the C5 Sinclair and the rise of dockless bike sharing schemes. If you're interested in the stories behind the world's greatest inventions - from the mighty steam train to the humble condom - subscribe to Patented: History of Inventions today.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Pushkin.
Hello, Tim Halford here, and there'll be a brand new episode of cautionary tales next week
as per our usual schedule. But this week I want to talk about something a bit different,
well, about all kinds of different things, because the conversation you're about to hear is full of the most delectable digressions. We talk
about the invention of the bicycle. Why some inventions fail? Which Cassidy and the Sundance
Kid, the Amman's Patient of Women, the great stock market bicycle bubble, and the four
possessions that define any successful household.
Who's we? Well, me, Tim Halfd, host of cautionary tales in my alter ego
is the author of a book, 50 inventions that shaped the modern economy, and Dallas Campbell,
the host of Payton Tid, History of Inventions. Payton Tid is a wonderful podcast from the history
hit network. Every few days there's a delightful lighthearted yet knowledgeable conversation about an invention. Anything from the satellite to the pyramid.
I recommend you check it out while you wait for the next week's episode of Caustrey Tales
and until then, here's me and Dallas Campbell talking about the bicycle and so much more.
Hello, I'm Dallas Campbell. Welcome to Patented, podcast all about the history of inventions from History Hit. Today, on the show, we are talking about the humble bicycle.
Invented in the mid 1800s, bikes have had enduring popularity, promising freedom and mobility at a low price point.
200 years later, the basic design and function of the bike remains pretty much the same.
They're still powered by sweat, e-bikes excluded obviously.
They're still made up of wheels, frames, pedals, chains, gears.
Cyclists are still exposed to the traffic and the elements, in contrast to say the comfort
of the car, and they still come with a potential for freedom and mobility and excitement.
And we saw this clearly in the pandemic when supply was unable to keep up with demand
for bicycles.
People wanted to move around safely and quickly, and the humble bike was the easy answer.
And for those of us like me living in cities and towns, it's impossible to ignore the boom
in bike sharing apps, which only seems to be growing.
Research from Statista suggests that in 2020 the bike sharing app market was estimated to
be worth 3.3 billion, crikey, and by 2026 it'll reach over 13.7 billion.
These apps make bikes an even more visible feature in our day-to-day lives.
If you live in the city, you'll know what it's like. You see banks of them parked
absolutely everywhere. They also lower the barrier to entry to people cycling even further,
so they're a really interesting phenomenon. These days, you don't even need to own a cycle to be a
cyclist. Today on the show, I'm joined by the wonderful Tim Halford, host of the podcast, Corsion Retails and the BBC's 50 Objects that defined the modern economy.
Today we are going back to the origins of the Bicycle and to explore how they
remained steadfast in their utility in an ever-changing world.
Tim Halford, welcome to the show. It's lovely to have you.
That's a pleasure to be here.
I absolutely love your podcast, Corsair Retails,
which I've been listening to a lot recently.
And of course, every time I listen to an episode of Corsair,
I'm going to ask him about that. Well, yeah, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, around, and I've got a minute here, and I haven't actually landed any of these ideas in a way that any of them are gonna make sense.
We're gonna talk about bicycles,
and we'll get onto invention stories in a minute.
But by just listening to your episode,
about Clive Sinclair and the C5,
there's a thing that you mentioned in that particular episode,
which I think is so interesting,
and it's this idea of adjacent possibilities,
this idea of, in the world of innovation and invention,
a little bit like evolutionary biology,
there are all kinds of possibilities, and in these rooms of possibilities, there, a little bit like evolutionary biology, there are all kinds of possibilities,
and in these rooms of possibilities,
there are doors that we can go through.
And the secret is, you can't do big jumps
in rooms far away in sort of shadow futures.
Yeah, it's very hard to do.
It's really hard to do.
You don't get you well, you know,
evolutionary biology, of course,
well, you know that, but it kind of works in the innovation.
And Clive Sinclair, I know I'm digressing, we haven't even started yet, but I'm already on onto a digression.
Was a kind of victim of looking too far ahead for doors and future possibilities that were not
quite ready yet? He was indeed, and I don't regard Sir Clive Sinclair as a digression from the
bicycle at all, because I think one of the problems he faced was he was distracted by
bicycle regulations. So we should talk about that at some stage. But before we do,
the adjacent possible, you already discussed it on the show before Met Ridley talks about it.
It's an influential idea in certain circles, but I think it's really
informative, comes from evolutionary biology, as you say.
There are just certain things that you can't do even if you have the idea because all of the supporting
infrastructure just isn't there and
So Clive Sinclair for those who don't know
made his money in pocket calculators and then
dramatically increased his money being one of the most successful computer entrepreneurs the world had ever seen in the
1980s and then lost almost all of it.
Making this ridiculous vehicle called the C5, which is impossible to describe. It's like
riding around in a giant white stiletto with roller skates or something just absurd vehicle.
Do you must have wanted one? We must be roughly the same age because I remember when they came out
and I'm like, oh my God, this is the future.
And it was like, I must have,
and of course I didn't get one.
Yeah, towards a 12 year old boy,
it seemed incredible.
My goodness.
I didn't realize they didn't work at the time.
It's only now I realized they were not very good.
They, yes, and I mean, the main problem I think
was the batteries.
There were lots of different problems,
but the fundamental problem with the batteries,
batteries were very heavy, were expensive,
didn't take you very far, and didn't work in the cold.
So that was a problem, particularly since Sir Clive chose to unveil this invention in
January.
I think.
I know.
So we wrote them, the London Roads are covered in slush and the batteries are conking out
and they just didn't realise that was gonna be an issue. But what makes me feel for Sir Clive is,
when you hear his vision for electric vehicles,
and also when you hear his vision for computers,
you realize the guy was absolutely right.
In both respects, he saw Google coming,
he saw Siri coming, he saw Tesla coming,
he saw it all coming, he tried to make it happen,
and with his computers, such
as the ZX81 and the ZX Spectrum, he was able to make this important, incremental step
and make a great product. But with the C5, this proto-electric car just wasn't good enough.
And yeah, left him a laughing stock, which is a great shame.
It really is, it really is. What are the people who tweeted their happy memories of playing with Sir Clive's computers?
Was Elon Musk? Elon Musk loved Sir Clive's computers.
Of course, Elon Musk is a man who, like Sir Clive, made his money in tech
and then, you know, as in, you know, computing and software and it was a PayPal.
And then took that money and like Sir Clive had this vision of an electric future,
but unlike Sir Clive instead of embarrassing himself and losing almost everything, he became
the richest man in the world. And that is the difference, I don't think it's at any difference in
their talents, it's a difference in whether they have the adjacent possible on their side or not.
I mean, Crikey though, I mean Elon Musk nearly went bust a few times, I think in the beginnings
of SpaceX, it was a kind of coin flip whether it was going to go bust on art. And you're absolutely right. I just think
in his house, with all these doors, these adjacent doors, he was just lucky that the doors were
a little bit closer to him. But yeah, I think we're going to have a revisionist view of Clive
Synclair soon. I hope. I hope we kind of remember him fondly, because I know he had a kind of quite a
chaotic life towards the end, which you kind of go into detail a little bit in your podcast
about, you know, he became a poker player, which I always thought was quite, I remember
watching late night poker in the 90s, actually, and all these amazing people were on, like
people like Clive Sinclair. I'm like, who knew that Clive Sinclair became like a poker champion?
Yeah. There's your problem. He wasn't a poker before before it was cool as well. He was just like massively ahead of everything.
Actually, and it's weird now, I live in Central London, I walk out the door now,
and the pavement is littered with electric bikes.
And again, one of the things you talk about this idea of the shared economy,
thanks to the internet, of course, which didn't exist when Clifes and Clare was doing the C5.
The internet, the fact that we can have apps that let us take bikes
and ride them around and then dump them, and that was a pretty fundamental door to go through.
Yes, so I was quite struck. I was rereading a piece I did for the BBC maybe three years
ago and it became part of my book, The Next 50 Things that Made the Modern Economy.
And I speculate on the future of bikes and I point out that they seem to have a very
bright future. But interestingly, to me, I think I missed the big picture. So I was pointing out, oh yeah, with apps and with sort of sharing
economy technologies, you could just have these bikes lying around and you can rent one
and cycle it for a couple of miles and then just leave it. And by the way, the roads will
be cleaner and safer because they'll be electric cars and they'll probably be self-driving.
But what I missed was now obvious and just a few years later, obvious fact, that they'll probably be self-driving. But what I missed was now obvious, and just a few years later,
obvious fact, that they'll take the battery technology from electric cars,
and they'll stick the batteries in bikes and indeed in scooters.
And even, I think maybe 2018, maybe even 2019, I was writing this,
that wasn't obvious, and suddenly it's like, of course, that's what's going to happen.
So these things can be hard to predict.
Yeah.
Wow, the bicycle, it's so interesting.
It is such a symbol really, the bicycle in lots of ways.
It's the simplicity, I think we like about it,
that makes it so interesting.
It's a symbol of the future.
It's a symbol about change.
It's a symbol about emancipation.
It's a symbol about freedom and equality.
All these different things, I think, make it really,
really interesting.
One of my favorite films is Butch Cassidy in the Sundance Kids,
which you will have seen, I'm hoping.
Yeah. Please say yes.
Yeah. Although, okay.
A long time ago.
A long time ago. Okay, so you think of it as a Western.
It's a Western, you know, it's full-numan and Robert Redford
and it's a kind of comedy, body move.
But it's very much a film about transition, about change.
And it's about the end of one era and the beginning of another era.
You know, here are two bank robbers on the make and their whole lives collapse
because the world is changing around them and they don't have the ability to change
and eventually it ends and there's the famous ending where they get shot and
that's how it ends. But there's a scene in it about the bicycle and they're
standing in a square in a sort of western town and there's a bicycle salesman
who says, welcome to the future and he holds up this brand new thing and it's
1890 something and he's extolling the virtues of the bicycle, how wonderful it is and the horse is dead
and this is going to be the new thing.
And then there's the weird scene with Catherine Ross and Paul Newman on the bicycle with the
raindrops keep falling on my head and they do all the bicycle stunts.
And at the end they crash the bicycle and Paul Newman throws it in the bin.
So the future is all yours, you lousy bicycle.
And it's just a weird and congerous scene that shouldn't really be there in the middle
of the western, but it's about the bicycle and it's about future and it's the invention
of the bicycle and how Paul Newman can't adapt to it and then his whole life unravels from
that.
So it is this, I don't know, it's an interesting symbol I think of lots of different things.
It is.
And it's sorry, that was a complete don't we?
No, no, it's lovely.
And yes, the bicycles moment
was there in the late 19th century. It's intriguing how long it existed in a proto-form that was
pretty useless. And then how rapidly it became modern. Well, let's start at the beginning of the
bicycle. How do we define a bicycle? Is it like the two-wheelness of it? Yeah, well, I suppose it's two wheels, right? It's a two-wheeled non-powered device, I suppose,
so you describe it. So you can make a case that bicycle number one was demonstrated around
1817, 1818. I forget the exact date. There was a gentleman called Karl von Dresse,
I forget the exact date. There was a gentleman called Karl von Dres in what we would now call Germany. And he had been working on a wooden horse, effectively. He'd been working
on a cheaper alternative to the horse. And the reason he'd been doing that is because
there'd been several bad harvest. The price of oats had risen. And it was expensive to
keep a horse. Well, it had always been expensive to keep a horse, but it was getting even more expensive to keep a horse.
And so he was quietly working away on a device
that wouldn't need to be fed with oats.
In 1815, there was a catastrophic explosion
in what we would now call Indonesia of Mount Tambora,
changed the world's weather dramatically for several years. 1816 in Europe
became known as the year without summer. Nobody knew it was anything to do with the volcano,
but it was. Crops failed. There was widespread starvation. It was absolutely catastrophic.
One of the things that was invented was Frankenstein, Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstein that summer.
But another thing that was invented, and there were several inventions,
but another thing that was invented
in the shadow of this year without summer
was Karl Draise's Velocipied,
or it's sometimes called a Dracyn.
There was no pedals or anything,
or this is it, it's just a kind of,
describe a Velocipied,
just so we've got an image of it.
There were no pedals.
No, you're complaining here about their details,
no pedals, yes, you're okay.
Who needs pedals? But no, you're okay. Who needs pedals?
But, no, you're right.
So this is one of the reasons,
one of the reasons it was limited
was you didn't have very good roads.
And one of the reasons it was limited
was you didn't have pedals.
So you effectively, it looked a bit like a modern bike.
And then you realized that, you know,
it had handlebars with some steering
and it had a crossbar and two wheels and a saddle.
And you sat on the saddle, but your legs would
drape on either side of the bike and your feet would touch the ground and you would just
propel yourself with these long, loping strides.
So it's dramatically inferior to what we now regard as a bicycle.
There was a bit of a fad for them.
They were sometimes called dandy horses.
So for about six months people would be charging around the streets of London on these things.
Everybody thought they were ridiculous.
And they very rapidly went out of fashion.
Heapsed as of the time would have been...
Yeah, yeah.
But these things didn't have breaks as well as not having pedals.
And so, yeah, they weren't really very good.
And they just sort of disappeared for decades.
And it takes a while for an improved
version to be delivered. The next stage in the Bicycles Evolution is the penny-farthing.
The penny-farthing is something we, I think, regard as this sort of very quaint Victorian
thing and we imagine somebody with a top hat or a bowler hat and a four-piece suit and
a pocket watch on a gold chain and all that,
you know, a monocle and all this sort of stuff. Actually, they were speed machines. And the reason
the front wheel was so big was not as some kind of fashionable affectation, it was because that was
the way to get speed. Because without gearing, as you push the pedals, you don't go very fast.
So you need to make the wheel bigger and bigger and bigger. At that point, well, it pretty much
have had chains, but not never an invented a bicycle chain yet,
which is the solution to the big wheel.
That, yes, gearing and chains, yes.
Now that's an interesting point.
I'm not sure exactly when the bicycle chain itself
was perfected, but there's a general story
in bicycle manufacture of trying to make interchangeable
parts that work cheaply.
And the interchangeability is important because it means that you know,
it's something fails, you can just buy a replacement part and fix it.
And interchangeable parts was not a new idea.
So the military had perfected this idea of interchangeable parts.
You want a musket where if something goes wrong with a musket,
you just grab another part of the musket and you know,
you grab a spare and fit the spare on the battlefield and it doesn't require days and days of handcrafted
smithing.
So that idea had been around since the time of the French Revolution, got slightly got
lost in the noise of the French Revolution, but there's this famous demonstration that
Thomas Jefferson witnesses in Paris of a French gunsmith taking apart 10 muskets in front of an audience,
and just throwing all the parts in the box and just randomly mixing all the parts,
and then taking random parts out of the box, reassembling them into a musket
and showing that the musket works.
And that blue Thomas Jefferson's mind, it was incredible.
But that was really high-end military technology,
so that what commercialised it and made it available to the everyday citizen
was bicycle manufacturers. So one of the problems that bicycle manufacturers have tried to solve
is can I make say links to a chain or can I make cogs or can I make the spokes of a wheel
in a standard way that they're all interchangeable in a way that's not super expensive. And they
achieve that and that then paves the way for certain
other small inventions such as the motor car. Paves the way for Henry Ford's assembly line.
That's really interesting. James Burke ourselves from connections from the
bicycle to the motor car. I think it was Rover as well. Was it Rover who obviously made
cars in the UK? They were making bicycles. Yeah, Rover were with a first British
manufacturers of what became known as a safety bicycle and then Rover as older listeners will know then became very big players in the British motorcar
industry. And of course you got the Wright brothers who were bicycle mechanics who built the plane,
so you can go all the way to the plane if you really want to make the connections.
Yeah, the Wright brothers is another great story of innovation and of course the Wright
brothers were not the first in flight but they were arguably the first in controlled flights because they realized actually the
mechanics of flying a pitch roll in your, which they evolved from their work with bicycles.
You know, that's how it sort of came to me. Can we just pause on penny-fathers from
America? Because I'm really interested in the penny-fathers. Yes. Because as a sort of design
solution, okay, before we have chains, before we have breaks, the way in order to get speed,
and you say they're racing machines,
is to have a giant front wheel.
They are such peculiar objects.
Who was making them, and why were they making them?
Was it like, okay, we've got the sort of dandy horse thing,
which has become a bit of a novelty.
We're now gonna race them.
Because that's what humans like to do.
We like to turn everything into sport or art.
We'll be back after this short break.
Tim Halford here, you're listening to a conversation between me and Dallas Campbell from the Patented Podcast. Corsary Tales will be back next week and Patented will be back
after this brief message.
And now back to Patented with me Tim Halford and Dallas Campbell. Yeah, yes, and it's fearless young gentlemen of the people who are riding them. And actually,
I need to let me just read you a nice quotation from the next 50 things that made the modern economy. If I may advertise my own book for a second, I just love this.
So you've got these five foot wheels. You're on top of this five foot wheel. You've got massive
potholes because these are mid 19th century roads. Bone shaking suspension. You'd hit this pothole
and you'd just be pitched forward. And one gentleman says, as you pitched forward, you'd encounter a nice, straight iron handlebar
close across your waist to imprison your legs
and make it quite certain that it should be your face
that first reached the surface of this unyielding planet.
So not for the faint hearted.
Unyielding planet, that's great.
Simple times, Tim.
You see, we didn't worry about safety and this kind of thing.
Have you ever been on a penny father?
They're absolutely lethal.
For exactly the reason you've just read out.
I have a friend who races penny farthings still
and she owns a couple of penny farthings.
My friend Kat, hello Kat, but she races them
and they're just terrifying.
They're just unbelievable.
Yes.
I can believe it.
Having not so very long ago, a couple of years ago,
fallen off a regular bicycle because the chain failed.
It's an importance of maintenance,
and hit the tarmac phase first.
Yeah.
It wasn't a joke, and I wouldn't have wanted
to be falling any further than I already did.
So, yeah, I can only imagine really what it is like
to fall from that heart and just to smack into the tarmac.
So, there was still really,
I mean, they were just for racing the penny.
Is that people weren't sort of riding around on them
particularly to get from A to B?
As I sort of, I mentioned at the beginning,
we talked about emancipation and about how, you know,
suddenly the bicycle can help low wage people
get around cheaply and we can talk about
the emancipation of women as well, I think.
But the penny farming was not that.
Yes, it was a huge, a huge factor in the emancipation of women and Cap, I think. But the penny-fiving was not that. Yes, it was a huge factor in the immense
patient of women and Cap will be able to tell you much more about that than I will.
But I think it was the safety bicycle rather than the penny-fiving
that really opened it up to the masses.
And that this wasn't this rather daring, full-hardy thing,
but it was a sort of simple practical.
What do we mean by the safety bicycle?
What defines the safety bicycle? Good? What defines the safety bicycle?
Good. What defines the safety bicycle is you're not,
you're not sort of, five foot, the seat is not five foot up.
Basically five foot up.
Yeah.
You're not going to kill yourself automatically.
So it's much more like the shape of the original
velocity where your feet can touch the ground.
So obviously it really helps if you can put your feet down
when you get into any trouble, the bicycle is safer.
But the reason that the bicycle went from the shape of the velocity, which looks modern,
up to this crazy penifarthing shape, and then back down, it brings the saddle back down
to a height of say three feet, a meter.
What makes that possible is gearing.
So you've got the gears, you've got the chains, and then you can travel at a reasonable
speed by pedaling. The velocity didn't have pedals, the penifarthing didn't have gears, you've got the chains, and then you can travel at a reasonable speed by pedaling.
The velocity didn't have pedals, the penny-farthing didn't have gears, the safety bicycle has pedals and gears, and can travel at a reasonable speed while also traveling at a reasonable height.
Now at the same time, you've got manufacturing improvements, which are making the bikes lighter and stronger. You have the diamond frame very quickly comes along, which is a very simple, strong way
to support the structure of the bicycle,
and you can make it lighter again.
You have pneumatic tires,
done lot comes along with pneumatic tires,
and suddenly the ride is much smoother.
And this is all happening within the space of a decade
at the end of the 19th century.
So it's very dramatic.
I'm, did all these innovations,
was it all the same people who came up with these innovations?
Whoever was making these bicycles,
they say, oh, this person is making pneumatic tires,
all this person understands gearing
and I'm just trying to find how
all these little pieces came together.
So my understanding, so I'm a dilatante of innovation.
So I can't tell you every detail about the,
me too, about how the bike was invented,
but my impression, distinct impression is that
these are at about the same time from different people. So you've got manufacturers trying to get
to the cold pressing of steel, you've got the invention of the chain, you've got the invention of
the gear, you've got the invention of the pneumatic tire, and it's not the same people, but they're all
very rapidly. Lots and lots of different bicycle companies appearing and taking advantage of these
innovations. And suddenly the bike is everywhere.
And you've got these social implications, so women wearing trousers, cycling around
without rage, chafferones. But you also have financial implications. So there's a bicycle
bubble in Birmingham, the sort of main, the main Midlands city in the UK, in the 1890s,
loads and loads of bicycle companies set up
in Birmingham. The most successful of them, and the one that really starts the bubble, has
the right to use Dunlop technology. So you've got the Dunlop tires. This is a company that's
got real potential because everyone wants a bike, and these guys have got the best technology.
But there's a bit of a sort of bubble in speculation, people see the shares of this company,
go up and up and up. There's a little bit of financial chicaneery, verging on
fraud, and then suddenly everybody else is setting up a bicycle company. So some of these
bicycle companies never made a bike, and I think almost certainly never intended to make
a bike. The whole purpose of the company was to be able to sell some shares to people
who want to own shares in a bicycle company. And the people who created the bicycle company get out of it.
So, you get stuff like, is probably now illegal and certainly should have been illegal at the time,
but people seem to get away with it. So you'd set up two companies, one of which would order 20,000 bicycles from the other company.
And then launched this company that says, well, we've got this order of 20,000 bikes from this other company.
So demand is strong for our product.
People would buy the shares and then the founders of these companies would just quietly disappear.
And this was all happening in the eight, it was about 1896, 1897.
Okay. Very dramatic boom and bust.
And there was a railroad, mania earlier on in the Victorian era.
We have the dot com bubble.
I mean, as so often, there's a real technology, there's real progress,
there really is something to be excited about. But then the bubble mentality takes over,
and a lot of people lose a lot of money. Even though there is something really important
underneath the surface, the bubble just takes over for a while.
Okay, so we've got this interesting sort of financial dynamic going on with the sort of bicycle bubble,
beginning of the 20s. Okay, just talk history, how the bicycles sort of change things socially. I'm so interested in that.
You know, what it meant for people, every day people, what it meant for women,
and how bicycles kind of became objects of desire.
Steve Jones, the geneticist, once quipped, I think plausibly, although without proof,
that the bicycle was a dramatic shock to the genetic mix
of Western society, because it moved us from a situation where all the marriages were within
a particular village to a situation where young men could go according to the cycle and they
could go to the next valley, they could go to the next village, and suddenly there's much more genetic
mixing enabled by the bicycle. Now, as I said, I don't think he has any direct evidence for this,
but it seems very plausible. And so nice idea.
This was, it makes sense. It's a lovely idea, but this is what
Carl Drase, I'm not sure, Carl Drase was particularly thinking about that,
but he was thinking when he first invented his wooden horse,
he was thinking of this democratizing technology, only rich people can
afford a horse, but anybody can afford a bike and when you think about it
That's still true. The bike is still the democratic technology that I mean not everybody in the world can afford a bike
But a huge number of people can far far more than can afford a car and it provides that freedom
So the first obvious instance of this example of this was freedom for women in
Western societies in the UK and the US
in the late 19th century. I mean one feminist campaigner said towards the end of her life that it
was the bicycle had done more than anything else to emancipate women. Susan B. Anthony made
this comment because suddenly you could just get on your bike and you could be free and you didn't
have to have a shaperone, you didn't have to have someone with you.
There's this lovely vignette in Margaret Guroff's book
about the history of the bicycle,
where she talks about Angeline Allen riding around the streets
and I think it was Boston wearing trousers in the 1890s.
And the newspapers,
the newspaper story about this, like she wore trousers
was the headline.
And they added that she was young, pretty and divorced. But the interesting thing was that she nobody was fast about the fact that she
was by herself on a bicycle. That was by then completely accepted. It was what she was wearing while
she was doing it, not what she was doing. And then I think hints of this idea of the bike providing
freedom for young women. And the much more recent work shows, for
example, the benefits to schoolgirls in India of having access to a bike. LeBron James,
basketball star, he's funded a school and every people of the school get a free bike.
And LeBron has spoken about how when he was a boy and he and his friends were on their bikes,
they felt like they had wings, they were free. So it is this hugely emancipating technology
for the poor, for women, for the young, it always was,
and it still is today.
It's really interesting actually,
because as well as this of innovation of the bicycle itself,
I mentioned my friend Kat Young-Nichol,
who's done all this research,
looking at all these Victorian patents,
the Victorian cycleware, I'm holding up her book now,
it's called Bicycles and Blooms.
But actually, you know, women were inventing or innovating
with different materials and also skirts with pulleys
and things that you could pull.
So your skirt would come up so you could get over the crossbar.
And it's really interesting how these,
these sort of really peculiar,
but wonderful patterns have evolved alongside the bicycle
in order to make it rideable,
particularly for women.
It's really, I love this idea.
That's obviously the solution.
Not lower the crossbar, not wear some trousers.
It's skirt pulleys, but yeah.
I mean, this is the way humans think, it's terrific.
Actually, social mobility, that's really interesting.
I remember in the 1980s, I can't remember who was.
The bicycle became this great symbol of fatturism when...
Norman Tebbet. It was Norman Tebbet.
Yeah, Norman Tebbets get on your bike.
Yeah, what he actually said, he was talking about his father
and he was saying that when his father was struggling
to find work, he got on his bike and cycled around
until he found work.
So implicitly, he was telling everybody else,
be like my dad and get on your bike.
But yeah, that was the idea.
And obviously, people have their feelings about
how easy it was to find work when Norman Tebet was a cabinet minister. But I think the point,
the underlying point is that it does expand possibilities. You can search in a larger job market,
you can search as Steve Jones implied, you can search in a larger marriage market,
you can roam more widely, you're freer, and it's cheap.
You can do all this for the car, but the bike is incredibly cheap.
Yeah, just while we're on the subject of the 80s and Steve Jones and Jean Pools,
the rally bike in the 1970s and the 1980s became this great badge of, it was almost like the P
Cox feather, like what bike did you have when you were growing up in the 1980s in the UK?
Like if you had a rally chopper,
I always thought that was the sort of,
and I was never allowed a rally chopper,
but there was a kind of great currency
as a kid growing up in the UK about what bike you had.
I had a Tomahawk, which was like the junior chopper.
Tomahawk, great bike, but didn't have the gears.
Yeah, the chopper had had three gears,
I think the Tomahawk didn't.
Yeah, that's right, the Tomahawk was the smaller version,
the chopper of course had the gear stick in the middle,
which was the thing you wanted and the banana seat.
I had a Commando, which was the junior version of the grifter.
Actually, no, the boxer was the junior, anyway, sorry.
But yes, the conversation we're having here sounds very parochial,
but in fact, this is really universal.
So you've got this very famous Italian movie, I think,
from the 1950s, The Bicycle Thief.
Of course.
And then there is a Chinese remake called Beijing Bicycle.
I think maybe the late 80s, maybe the 90s.
But in both cases, this is about somebody's bicycle being stolen
and the bicycle is such an important possession.
And why the thief stole the bike and how the owner desperately tries to get the bike back.
And it's the bike as this symbol of mobility and
this this prized possession. And in fact, in China in the 1970s, 1980s, people would talk about
this is deeply communist China, incredibly poor. People talked about the four possessions,
the four possessions that you could have as a household that every householder spied to have.
And they were the sewing machine, the radio, a wristwatch, and a bicycle.
And if you had all four of those,
you had the four possessions,
then you had made it materially speaking.
What are the four possessions now, the iPhone?
Probably still the bicycle.
For me anyway, I suppose it depends where you live.
I wonder.
I think still the bicycle.
That I think is a really interesting point
because we think of the bicycle
as a transitional technology. So you had the horse, then it along comes the bike and it's cheaper
and better and it paves the way for the car. And then you have the car and then once you can afford
the car, you don't need the bike anymore. And that's true for individuals and it's true for societies.
That's the way we think and it's completely wrong. And you can see that in the data.
So David Edgerton's wonderful book, The Shock of the Old,
makes this point that in the 1950s and 60s,
global production of bicycles and global production of cars
was about the same.
You had about the same number of cars
made as bicycles around the world.
But then as you get into the 70s, the 80s, the 90s,
bicycles leave cars in the dust.
More and more production of bicycles, production of cars increases, production of bicycles increases
much more.
This incredibly practical thing, they're practical in very poor countries, they're practical
in very rich countries.
I have two bicycles, I've got the bike in the shed and I've got the folding brompton
that I can take on the train.
I use the bicycle much more than I use the car.
I've been leaving aside environmental concerns or the price of fuel, the bike is incredibly
practical technology and it's always been used no matter how much competition there was
for the car.
I think that tells us something fundamental about technologists that it's not just a
case of how you had this technology, then a better technology comes and then you get rid
of the old technology.
That's rarely how it works and it's certainly not how it's worked with transport.
And the bike is a great example of that.
We mentioned right at the beginning we sort of talked about Clive Sinclair and we talked about batteries
and shared economies and bicycles now.
What about the next decade, maybe two decades, where are we going to be with a bike?
So a couple of obvious things that have appeared.
One is battery power.
So the idea that you can recharge a battery on a bike when you break, get a little bit of
extra juice and use that to help you get up a hill.
First thing, I didn't see the point of it myself, but then I'm fit and I'm a keen cyclist.
I'd like to pedal up a hill, but lots and lots of people find that really useful.
And it really struck with the first time I was cycling up a steep hill in Oxford, and it's the only one we
have in the city.
I was going to say, which is the hill in Oxford? There's no steep hill in the city.
We've only got, there's one, head into the hill, there's one, it's quite steep, but we've
only got the one. As I was laboring up this hill, enjoying the workout, a lady who I think
was at least 15 years older than me, definitely passed her time and age.
Just in a sit-up and beg bike,
just absolutely effortlessly cycled past me,
seeming to exert no energy at all.
And the first thing I thought was goodness, me, she's so fit.
And then I realized, oh, it's an electric bike,
and it's the first time I'd seen one.
Now, of course, that absolutely everywhere. It was two, three years ago.
It's quite recent.
So the electric bikes have come from nowhere
and they're clearly game changers
because lots of people who wouldn't have cycled
because they didn't want to get sweaty
because they didn't feel they had the energy
because they were frightened of the hills.
They'll be out there with the electric bikes.
Or just because they're fun.
People like to do them.
And there's a critical mass element there. There is a movement in favor of cycling in cities
called critical mass and the whole idea is you want more cyclists because the more cyclists
there are, the safer each individual cyclist is. So that's coming. And then of course the other
thing is just a general movement in many societies towards making more space for bikes on city roads, squeezing the car,
expanding the space available for bikes. And those two things together potentially will
democratise the bike. I mean, I don't mind sharing a road with cars. I'm not, I'd rather
not, as a cyclist, but it's fine. But a lot of people worry about that. And the more space
there is available for those people, the more they'll get on the bike. And I think with an electric bike on roads that feel safe, the vast majority of
the population in a country like the UK is going to be able to get around by bike. Don't
actually need the car because all the journeys are five miles or less. It'd be very interesting
to see whether we get there. I don't know that we will. I've made many forecasts that have been proved wrong within months, let alone years, but
that seems to be an interesting possibility. It's interesting that Clive Sinclair's electric
bicycle, basically the C5, was sort of an electric, a recumbent electric bicycle, which
wasn't really a bicycle. We've kind of, we're sort of there. I wish Clive Sinclair was
was around to see this now because he'd go, ah, that's what I should have done. If only I had Christ. I mean, the irony is very early in his career before he had any money,
he was experimenting with battery-enhanced scooters. So he was, and now of course,
they're everywhere. You can't, you can't, can't cross the street without being hit by a battery.
I mean, don't get me started. I'm always going to run over.
But these things are not, not as obvious as it seems.
I think Sir Clive was somewhat distracted by,
his vision was an electric car.
And then he was distracted by there
were new regulations introduced in the UK
for electrically assisted bicycles in the early eighties.
And Sir Clive saw them and thought,
oh, my car could,
my little car could qualify as an electric bike if I just make some small modifications,
basically add some pedals. And then I wouldn't, people wouldn't have to get insurance,
they wouldn't need a driving license, they don't need a helmet, they, the age restrictions
are more forgiving. And so he saw this as an opportunity,
but I think in hindsight,
as much he obviously always easier in hindsight,
I think in hindsight, it was a distraction.
It distracted him from what is the best possible way
to get a short-range electric vehicle on the road
and make people feel safe in it.
And he produced this thing that, you know,
it wasn't really a bike, it wasn't really a car.
It wasn't really a very practical solution at all because it's just too close to the road. So you get splashed and you
can't be seen. And I think, how'd he not been distracted by the need to try to squeeze into
that regulation and sort of feel that he was somehow getting one over on, you know, the government
rulemakers? He might have made a better vehicle. Hard to be sure, but that's my speculation.
That's interesting, I'm lucky.
I've ridden a penny-farthing, I've ridden a Sinclair C5
and I flew the Wright Brothers 1902 Glider,
all of which we can thank the bicycle for.
But listen, thank you so much for joining me on the show.
And will you come back on and talk about other things
at some point, because I can talk to you all day.
I would gladly do that.
And if people want to hear more about the C5,
that cautionary tale's episode is already out
and there is one coming about the volcano
the year without summer and the invention
of the velocities.
So yeah, they'll be there.
It's a fantastic podcast.
It's really, really good.
Oh, I enjoyed the Tudon coming.
One is my eye, listen to the other day,
which is very good as well.
Anyway, I'm not going to talk about that,
but yes, listen to cautionary tales, Tim Halford,
thank you very much.
My pleasure, thank you.
Thank you very much for listening to today's episode.
That's all we've got time for you today.
Hope you enjoyed it, I certainly did.
We've got plenty more to come.
I'm back every Wednesday and Sunday
with brand new episodes.
Coming up next, we're gonna be talking about
one of the most iconic invention stories,
the Wright Brothers, one of my favorite stories ever.
Nothing defines what invention and innovation
means, I think, more than that particular story,
and how they did their very first controlled flight
back in 1903 at Kitty Hawk.
If you want to hear more from Tim,
check out his cautionary tales podcast. It's absolutely fantastic and you can find that of course wherever
you get your podcast from.