In the 1890s, cycle racing was the world’s No 1 sport. In the boom years of the 1890s, the cycle industry could not make bicycles fast enough to supply the demand from chaps who wished to emulate their racing heroes …and maybe even set their own records on the country’s roads.
As well as the established manufacturers catering to this market, hundreds of smaller companies purchased parts through the trade and built their own bicycles. After Humber introduced a safety bicycle with an upward sloping top tube in 1892 – similar in appearance to their racing model – many of the trade suppliers copied the design. It was often described as a ‘Humber Pattern Frame’.
As you can see in the advertisement below, it was offered without a transfer (decal) so that the “maker or agents may put their own transfer…”
c1895 ‘Humber Pattern’ Safety Bicycle with upward sloping top tube
20″ Frame
26″ Front wheel
24″ Rear wheel
Solid tyres
Standover height: 28.5″ with an upward slope to 37″
This lovely old safety bicycle has solid tyres and a 26 inch wheel at the front and 24 inch at the rear, a configuration that meant the back end was lower to provide for a rider with shorter legs. Pneumatic tyres were still a novelty at this time, and could add an extra 20% to the cost of a machine compared with solid rubber tyres, so many riders stuck with solid tyres as a result.
With 100+ makers and fittings suppliers all selling the same style of bicycle, unless a company name is stamped onto a machine or its original transfer (decal) has survived, it’s impossible to know who made such bicycles. They were all built to a high standard and so expensive that only the gentry could afford them.
Bicycle design changed in 1885/1896 to a diamond frame with a horizontal top tube, at which point this style of machine with an upward sloping top tube became noticeably out of date. But these days we don’t want the latest 1890s designs – instead it’s these earlier ‘dinosaurs’ we like, the beasts that ruled the roads before the internal combustion engine created an altogether noisier form of personal transportation.
If state-of-the-art technology from 130 years ago is what you prefer in your daily rider, this ‘dinosaur’ safety is waiting for you! It’s a lightweight safety in good all-round condition and is ready to ride home.