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1904 Tour de France

The 1904 Tour de France was the second Tour de France, held from 2 to 24 July. With a route similar to its previous edition, 1903 Tour de France winner Maurice Garin seemed to have repeated his win by a small margin over Lucien Pothier, while Hippolyte Aucouturier won four of the six stages. But the race became a victim of its own success, plagued by scandals; cyclists were accused of having taken trains during the race.[1] Twelve cyclists, including the first four of the final classification and all stage winners, were disqualified by the Union Vélocipédique Française (UVF). Henri Cornet, originally the fifth-place finisher, was awarded the victory four months after the race.[2] The problems caused the Tour de France to be provisionally cancelled, and subsequently the 1905 Tour de France was run with different rules from the 1903 and 1904 editions.

1904 Tour de France
Route of the 1904 Tour de France followed clockwise, starting in Montgeron and ending in Paris
Race details
Dates2–24 July 1904
Stages6
Distance2,428 km (1,509 mi)
Winning time96h 05' 55"
Results
  Winner  Henri Cornet (FRA)
  Second  Jean-Baptiste Dortignacq (FRA)
  Third  Aloïs Catteau (BEL)
← 1903
1905 →

Innovations and changes

The initial Tour de France of 1903 had been a large success, and it was quickly decided to organise it again in 1904. The route was identical, with the same six stages. The rules were the same as in 1903, with one exception: cyclists could not enter in just one stage, but had to join for the entire race. The favourites for the victory were Garin, Pothier and Aucouturier, who had performed well in the 1903 Tour de France.[3][4] Among the competitors was Henri Paret who, at 50 years old, still holds the record of oldest Tour de France cyclist.[5]

In the 1903 Tour de France, the organisation guaranteed that the first 50 cyclists in the final general classification would earn at least 5 francs per day. In 1904, if not more than 50 cyclists would finish, also cyclists who dropped out during the race would still get 5 francs for the days they had been in the race. This rule was added to attract cyclists who otherwise would not enter, because the Tour needed enough competitors to remain credible.[6]

Participants

Race incidents

 
Maurice Garin, initially declared winner of the 1904 Tour de France.

In the first stage, the riders fell after only a few kilometres. Lipman broke a finger, and became the first rider to abandon this Tour. Around 100 km in the race, Lucien Pothier lost ten minutes to the main group, led by Maurice Garin, because of a broken bicycle.[7] In Cosne, at 174 km, Pothier had reached the leading group. Aucouturier had lost more than one hour at that point. Just before the next control post in Nevers, Aucouturier fell on his face, and continued the race covered in blood. In the last part of the race, Maurice Garin and Lucien Pothier rode away from the others. They were attacked by four masked men in a car,[1] but still finished as the first two, with Garin beating Pothier by 50 m.[8] The many flat tires and crashes of Aucouturier, seemingly the results of sabotage, gave him a time loss of several hours.[4]

After the stage, three cyclists were punished: Aucouturier and Samson received fines of 500 and 250 francs, Aucouturier for having a cyclist not in the race following him, Samson for riding in the slipstream of a car.[9] Chevallier, who had finished third, was disqualified for resting in a car for 45 minutes.[10]

During the stage, Ferdinand Payan had been disqualified.[3] Some sources indicate he was helped by a motor,[11] other that he was helped by riders not in the race.[4] In that first stage, Garin had asked the race official Lefèvre for food, which was illegal. Lefèvre, who knew that Garin was the star of the race, broke the rules and gave him the food, because he did not want to be responsible for Garin leaving the race because of hunger.[4] The news that Garin had received illegal help quickly spread, and caused the fanatical crowd to take action.[4]

For the second stage, the organisers had made the option to postpone the start by two hours, in case the mistral wind was making cycling difficult. This was not necessary, so the riders started at midnight as planned.[12]

During this stage, Antoine Fauré led close to his hometown, and 200 fans tried to stop the rest of the cyclists from following him. Garin hurt his hand during the incident, and Giovanni Gerbi was knocked unconscious, and had to give up with broken fingers.[4] The situation was only solved after race officials fired shots in the air.[1] Further on, nails and broken glass had been spread along the road, which caused many flat tires.[13] Because of this help, Fauré was the first on top of the Col de la République, but was taken over by the favourites later. Aucouturier won the sprint.[14] When the riders reached Marseille, they complained that there had been too many incidents in this stage, and the stage results should be cancelled. In the last part, they had been stopped by a large group of cyclists. Maurice Garin had been attacked, and his arm had been injured: he finished the stage steering with only one hand. There was so much confusion at the last controle post, that the exact arrival times of the cyclists were not recorded.[13]

In the third stage, the Tour reached Nîmes, near the home town of Payan, whose fans were angry because of his disqualification. They threw rocks at the riders,[1] and barricaded the road.[4] The cyclists had troubles passing through Nîmes, and several were injured. The most important event for the general classification was when César Garin's bicycle was broken by attackers; he had to find a new bicycle, which took him 15 minutes. Further on, nails and broken glass were spread along the road. Many riders punctured, but there were no serious falls. The cyclists passed this part walking. After Nîmes, a leading group of five cyclists was formed: Maurice Garin, Pothier, Aucouturier, Cornet and Beaugendre. Aucouturier and Cornet escaped, and Aucouturier won, beating Cornet in the sprint.[3][15][16]

The fourth stage was run without the incidents that plagued the first three stages.[17] Pothier, Maurice and César Garin and Beaugendre reached Bordeaux together, and the stage was decided by the final kilometre in the velodrome, where Pothier recorded the fastest time.

In the fifth stage, nails on the road again causing punctures. As mechanical assistance was not allowed, Cornet had to ride the last 40 km on two flat tires.[1] Aucouturier won this stage, his third one, but was way behind in the general classification, which Garin led, with only 28 seconds margin to Pothier.[18]

In the sixth stage, Aucouturier, Garin and Dortignac escaped in the last kilometres. Aucouturier signed first at the control post in Ville-d'Avray. From that point, the race was neutralised until the velodrome Parc-des-Princes, where the riders would ride the final kilometre. At the moment that the riders arrived in Paris, it started to rain. The organisers decided together with the cyclists to exclude the final kilometre from the race, and make the control post in Ville-d'Avray the end of the race. This made Aucouturier the winner of the stage.[19] Maurice Garin finished second, which made him the overall winner.[3]

Initial results before disqualifications

Initially, Maurice Garin was declared the winner, having led the race from start to end.[4] Hippolyte Aucouturier won four stages. In total, 27 cyclists finished.[20] For each cyclist, the times they had needed in each stage was added up for the general classification. The cyclist with the least accumulated time after the last stage was the winner.

Stage characteristics and winners before disqualifications[20][21]
Stage Date Course Distance Type[a] Winner Race leader
1 2 July Montgeron to Lyon 467 km (290 mi)   Plain stage   Maurice Garin (FRA)   Maurice Garin (FRA)
2 9 July Lyon to Marseille 374 km (232 mi)   Stage with mountain(s)   Hippolyte Aucouturier (FRA)   Maurice Garin (FRA)
3 13 July Marseille to Toulouse 424 km (263 mi)   Plain stage   Hippolyte Aucouturier (FRA)   Maurice Garin (FRA)
4 17 July Toulouse to Bordeaux 268 km (167 mi)   Plain stage   Lucien Pothier (FRA)   Maurice Garin (FRA)
5 20 July Bordeaux to Nantes 425 km (264 mi)   Plain stage   Hippolyte Aucouturier (FRA)   Maurice Garin (FRA)
6 23 July Nantes to Paris 471 km (293 mi)   Plain stage   Hippolyte Aucouturier (FRA)   Maurice Garin (FRA)
Total 2,428 km (1,509 mi)[22]
Final general classification before disqualifications[20][21]
Rank Rider Time
1   Maurice Garin (FRA) 93h 06' 24"
2   Lucien Pothier (FRA) +6' 28"
3   César Garin (ITA) + 1h 51' 03"
4   Hippolyte Aucouturier (FRA) +2h 52' 26"
5   Henri Cornet (FRA) +2h 59' 27"
6   Jean-Baptiste Dortignacq (FRA) +5h 15' 36"
7   Philippe Jousselin (FRA) +8h 33' 42"
8   Aloïs Catteau (BEL) +12h 00' 56"
9   Camille Fily (FRA) +15h 36' 42"
10   Jean Dargassies (FRA) +16h 04' 01"

Disqualification

 
Henri Cornet, the winner of the 1904 Tour de France after the original top four finishers had been disqualified.

During the race, nine riders were excluded because of, among other actions, illegal use of cars or trains. The Tour organisers were happy with the result, but the Union Vélocipédique Française (UVF) started an investigation after complaints from other cyclists. Their investigative committee heard testimony from dozens of competitors and witnesses, and, in December 1904, disqualified all the stage winners and the first four finishers (Maurice Garin, Pothier, César Garin, and Aucouturier). Ten of those disqualified were banned for one year, Maurice Garin for two years and the remaining two for life.[1] In total, 29 riders were punished.[4] The reasons for the disqualification were never made public.[23]

Fifth-placed Henri Cornet, aged 19, then became the youngest ever winner of the Tour.[24] Cornet had also been warned after he had received a lift by a car.[4] Only 15 cyclists from the original 27 that finished were not disqualified.[25]

Following the disqualifications, the Tour de France came nearest in history to being permanently cancelled.[26] The race organiser Henri Desgrange, said he would never run the race again because it had been overtaken by the "blind emotions" of those who attacked or helped riders as they passed. Desgrange was also upset that the UVF had imposed judgement on his race when he had already disciplined riders as he saw fit.

An angry exchange ensued between Desgrange and the UVF but the letters and the detailed complaints that led to the UVF's actions were lost when the Tour de France archives were transported south in 1940 to avoid the German invasion and were never seen again.[25]

Until the end of his life, Garin always said that he was the rightful winner of the 1904 Tour de France, but according to Les Woodland, Garin confessed to a friend that he had cheated.[4]

Final results

After the disqualifications, the first four cyclists of the initial classification were disqualified. In the new classification, only 15 cyclists had finished:[20]

Stage characteristics and winners after disqualifications[3][21][27]
Stage Date Course Distance [a] Winner Race leader
1 2 July Montgeron to Lyon 467 km (290 mi)   Plain stage   Michel Frédérick (SUI)   Michel Frédérick (SUI)
2 9 July Lyon to Marseille 374 km (232 mi)   Stage with mountain(s)   Alfred Faure (FRA)   Emile Lombard (BEL)
3 13 July Marseille to Toulouse 424 km (263 mi)   Plain stage   Henri Cornet (FRA)   Henri Cornet (FRA)
4 17 July Toulouse to Bordeaux 268 km (167 mi)   Plain stage   François Beaugendre (FRA)   François Beaugendre (FRA)
5 20 July Bordeaux to Nantes 425 km (264 mi)   Plain stage   Jean-Baptiste Dortignacq (FRA)   Henri Cornet (FRA)
6 23 July Nantes to Paris 471 km (293 mi)   Plain stage   Jean-Baptiste Dortignacq (FRA)   Henri Cornet (FRA)
Total 2,428 km (1,509 mi)[22]
Final general classification after disqualifications (1–10)[28]
Rank Rider Time
1   Henri Cornet (FRA) 96h 05' 55"
2   Jean-Baptiste Dortignacq (FRA) + 2h 16' 14"
3   Aloïs Catteau (BEL) + 9h 01' 25"
4   Jean Dargassies (FRA) + 13h 04' 30"
5   Julien Maitron (FRA) + 19h 06' 15"
6   Auguste Daumain (FRA) + 22h 44' 36"
7   Louis Coolsaet (BEL) + 23h 44' 20"
8   Achille Colas (FRA) + 25h 09' 50"
9   René Saget (FRA) + 25h 55' 16"
10   Gustave Drioul (BEL) + 30h 54' 49"

Aftermath

Because of the scandals associated with this Tour, Desgrange wanted to stop the race. He however changed his mind, and the rules were changed to prevent cyclists from cheating: the 1905 Tour de France would be decided with a points system. Tour de France 1904 winner Cornet would enter the Tour de France for seven more times, but would never again play an important role.[29]

Notes

  1. ^ a b In 1904, there was no distinction in the rules between plain stages and mountain stages; the icons shown here indicate which stages included mountains.[3]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f "No centenary party for 1904 Tour of shame". Reuters. 8 July 2004. from the original on 21 October 2012. Retrieved 18 March 2009.
  2. ^ . Amaury Sport Organisation. Archived from the original on 15 July 2009. Retrieved 29 December 2009.
  3. ^ a b c d e f (in French). Mémoire du cyclisme. Archived from the original on 9 July 2009. Retrieved 20 May 2009.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k McGann & McGann 2006, pp. 10–13.
  5. ^ "Tour de France Trivia". Retrieved 22 July 2012.
  6. ^ Thompson 2006, p. 152.
  7. ^ "Vélocipédie". Le Petit journal (in French). Gallica Bibliothèque Numérique. 3 July 1904. p. 4. Retrieved 16 March 2010.
  8. ^ "Vélocipédie". Le Petit journal (in French). Gallica Bibliothèque Numérique. 4 July 1904. p. 4. Retrieved 16 March 2010.
  9. ^ "Vélocipédie – coureurs punis". Le Petit journal (in French). Gallica Bibliothèque Numérique. 6 July 1904. p. 4. Retrieved 16 March 2010.
  10. ^ "Vélocipédie – Le Tour de France". Le Petit journal (in French). Gallica Bibliothèque Numérique. 10 July 1904. p. 4. Retrieved 16 March 2010.
  11. ^ "1904: Henri Cornet wint na diskwalificatie van winnaars" (in Dutch). tourdefrance.nl. 19 March 2003. Archived from the original on 4 May 2009. Retrieved 18 March 2009.
  12. ^ "Le Tour de France". Le Petit Parisien (in French). Gallica Bibliothèque Numérique. 10 July 1904. p. 5. Retrieved 16 March 2010.
  13. ^ a b "Vélocipédie – Le Tour de France". Le Petit journal (in French). Gallica Bibliothèque Numérique. 11 July 1904. p. 5. Retrieved 16 March 2010.
  14. ^ (in French). Mémoire du cyclisme. Archived from the original on 20 March 2012. Retrieved 28 October 2016.
  15. ^ "Le Tour de France". Le Petit journal (in French). Gallica Bibliothèque Numérique. 15 July 1904. p. 4. Retrieved 16 March 2010.
  16. ^ "Le Tour de France". Le Petit Parisien (in French). Gallica Bibliothèque Numérique. 15 July 1904. p. 5. Retrieved 16 March 2010.
  17. ^ "Vélocipédie – Le Tour de France". Le Petit Parisien (in French). Gallica Bibliothèque Numérique. 17 July 1904. p. 5. Retrieved 16 March 2010.
  18. ^ "Le Tour de France – La fin de la cinquième étape". Le Petit journal (in French). Gallica Bibliothèque Numérique. 22 July 1904. p. 3. Retrieved 16 March 2010.
  19. ^ "Vélocipédie – Le Tour de France". Le Figaro (in French). Gallica Bibliothèque Numérique. 25 July 1904. p. 6. Retrieved 16 March 2010.
  20. ^ a b c d James, Tom (4 April 2001). VeloArchive. Archived from the original on 22 September 2008. Retrieved 18 March 2009.
  21. ^ a b c Augendre 2016, p. 6.
  22. ^ a b Augendre 2016, p. 108.
  23. ^ Abt, Samuel (5 March 2008). "Tour's early scandal still a mystery". International Herald Tribune. Retrieved 18 March 2009.
  24. ^ "Tour records and winners". BBC. 30 June 2000. Retrieved 29 December 2009.
  25. ^ a b Pelkey, Charles (3 December 2008). . VeloNews. Archived from the original on 5 August 2009. Retrieved 21 September 2009.
  26. ^ Thomazeau, François (29 July 2007). "Plus ça change... they started cheating in 1904". Guardian. Retrieved 18 March 2009.
  27. ^ . Tour de France. Amaury Sport Organisation. Archived from the original on 2 April 2020. Retrieved 2 April 2020.
  28. ^ a b . Tour de France. Amaury Sport Organisation. Archived from the original on 2 April 2020. Retrieved 2 April 2020.
  29. ^ . ASO. Archived from the original on 23 June 2008. Retrieved 20 May 2009.

Bibliography

Further reading

  • Seray, Jacques (1999). 1904: The Tour de France Which Was to Be the Last. Ann Arbor Press. ISBN 0-9649835-2-4.

External links

  Media related to Tour de France 1904 at Wikimedia Commons

1904, tour, france, second, tour, france, held, from, july, with, route, similar, previous, edition, 1903, tour, france, winner, maurice, garin, seemed, have, repeated, small, margin, over, lucien, pothier, while, hippolyte, aucouturier, four, stages, race, be. The 1904 Tour de France was the second Tour de France held from 2 to 24 July With a route similar to its previous edition 1903 Tour de France winner Maurice Garin seemed to have repeated his win by a small margin over Lucien Pothier while Hippolyte Aucouturier won four of the six stages But the race became a victim of its own success plagued by scandals cyclists were accused of having taken trains during the race 1 Twelve cyclists including the first four of the final classification and all stage winners were disqualified by the Union Velocipedique Francaise UVF Henri Cornet originally the fifth place finisher was awarded the victory four months after the race 2 The problems caused the Tour de France to be provisionally cancelled and subsequently the 1905 Tour de France was run with different rules from the 1903 and 1904 editions 1904 Tour de FranceRoute of the 1904 Tour de France followed clockwise starting in Montgeron and ending in ParisRace detailsDates2 24 July 1904Stages6Distance2 428 km 1 509 mi Winning time96h 05 55 Results Winner Henri Cornet FRA Second Jean Baptiste Dortignacq FRA Third Alois Catteau BEL 19031905 Contents 1 Innovations and changes 2 Participants 3 Race incidents 4 Initial results before disqualifications 5 Disqualification 6 Final results 7 Aftermath 8 Notes 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 Further reading 12 External linksInnovations and changes EditThe initial Tour de France of 1903 had been a large success and it was quickly decided to organise it again in 1904 The route was identical with the same six stages The rules were the same as in 1903 with one exception cyclists could not enter in just one stage but had to join for the entire race The favourites for the victory were Garin Pothier and Aucouturier who had performed well in the 1903 Tour de France 3 4 Among the competitors was Henri Paret who at 50 years old still holds the record of oldest Tour de France cyclist 5 In the 1903 Tour de France the organisation guaranteed that the first 50 cyclists in the final general classification would earn at least 5 francs per day In 1904 if not more than 50 cyclists would finish also cyclists who dropped out during the race would still get 5 francs for the days they had been in the race This rule was added to attract cyclists who otherwise would not enter because the Tour needed enough competitors to remain credible 6 Participants EditFor a more comprehensive list see List of cyclists in the 1904 Tour de France Race incidents EditMain articles 1904 Tour de France Stage 1 to Stage 3 and 1904 Tour de France Stage 4 to Stage 6 Maurice Garin initially declared winner of the 1904 Tour de France In the first stage the riders fell after only a few kilometres Lipman broke a finger and became the first rider to abandon this Tour Around 100 km in the race Lucien Pothier lost ten minutes to the main group led by Maurice Garin because of a broken bicycle 7 In Cosne at 174 km Pothier had reached the leading group Aucouturier had lost more than one hour at that point Just before the next control post in Nevers Aucouturier fell on his face and continued the race covered in blood In the last part of the race Maurice Garin and Lucien Pothier rode away from the others They were attacked by four masked men in a car 1 but still finished as the first two with Garin beating Pothier by 50 m 8 The many flat tires and crashes of Aucouturier seemingly the results of sabotage gave him a time loss of several hours 4 After the stage three cyclists were punished Aucouturier and Samson received fines of 500 and 250 francs Aucouturier for having a cyclist not in the race following him Samson for riding in the slipstream of a car 9 Chevallier who had finished third was disqualified for resting in a car for 45 minutes 10 During the stage Ferdinand Payan had been disqualified 3 Some sources indicate he was helped by a motor 11 other that he was helped by riders not in the race 4 In that first stage Garin had asked the race official Lefevre for food which was illegal Lefevre who knew that Garin was the star of the race broke the rules and gave him the food because he did not want to be responsible for Garin leaving the race because of hunger 4 The news that Garin had received illegal help quickly spread and caused the fanatical crowd to take action 4 For the second stage the organisers had made the option to postpone the start by two hours in case the mistral wind was making cycling difficult This was not necessary so the riders started at midnight as planned 12 During this stage Antoine Faure led close to his hometown and 200 fans tried to stop the rest of the cyclists from following him Garin hurt his hand during the incident and Giovanni Gerbi was knocked unconscious and had to give up with broken fingers 4 The situation was only solved after race officials fired shots in the air 1 Further on nails and broken glass had been spread along the road which caused many flat tires 13 Because of this help Faure was the first on top of the Col de la Republique but was taken over by the favourites later Aucouturier won the sprint 14 When the riders reached Marseille they complained that there had been too many incidents in this stage and the stage results should be cancelled In the last part they had been stopped by a large group of cyclists Maurice Garin had been attacked and his arm had been injured he finished the stage steering with only one hand There was so much confusion at the last controle post that the exact arrival times of the cyclists were not recorded 13 In the third stage the Tour reached Nimes near the home town of Payan whose fans were angry because of his disqualification They threw rocks at the riders 1 and barricaded the road 4 The cyclists had troubles passing through Nimes and several were injured The most important event for the general classification was when Cesar Garin s bicycle was broken by attackers he had to find a new bicycle which took him 15 minutes Further on nails and broken glass were spread along the road Many riders punctured but there were no serious falls The cyclists passed this part walking After Nimes a leading group of five cyclists was formed Maurice Garin Pothier Aucouturier Cornet and Beaugendre Aucouturier and Cornet escaped and Aucouturier won beating Cornet in the sprint 3 15 16 The fourth stage was run without the incidents that plagued the first three stages 17 Pothier Maurice and Cesar Garin and Beaugendre reached Bordeaux together and the stage was decided by the final kilometre in the velodrome where Pothier recorded the fastest time In the fifth stage nails on the road again causing punctures As mechanical assistance was not allowed Cornet had to ride the last 40 km on two flat tires 1 Aucouturier won this stage his third one but was way behind in the general classification which Garin led with only 28 seconds margin to Pothier 18 In the sixth stage Aucouturier Garin and Dortignac escaped in the last kilometres Aucouturier signed first at the control post in Ville d Avray From that point the race was neutralised until the velodrome Parc des Princes where the riders would ride the final kilometre At the moment that the riders arrived in Paris it started to rain The organisers decided together with the cyclists to exclude the final kilometre from the race and make the control post in Ville d Avray the end of the race This made Aucouturier the winner of the stage 19 Maurice Garin finished second which made him the overall winner 3 Initial results before disqualifications EditInitially Maurice Garin was declared the winner having led the race from start to end 4 Hippolyte Aucouturier won four stages In total 27 cyclists finished 20 For each cyclist the times they had needed in each stage was added up for the general classification The cyclist with the least accumulated time after the last stage was the winner Stage characteristics and winners before disqualifications 20 21 Stage Date Course Distance Type a Winner Race leader1 2 July Montgeron to Lyon 467 km 290 mi Plain stage Maurice Garin FRA Maurice Garin FRA 2 9 July Lyon to Marseille 374 km 232 mi Stage with mountain s Hippolyte Aucouturier FRA Maurice Garin FRA 3 13 July Marseille to Toulouse 424 km 263 mi Plain stage Hippolyte Aucouturier FRA Maurice Garin FRA 4 17 July Toulouse to Bordeaux 268 km 167 mi Plain stage Lucien Pothier FRA Maurice Garin FRA 5 20 July Bordeaux to Nantes 425 km 264 mi Plain stage Hippolyte Aucouturier FRA Maurice Garin FRA 6 23 July Nantes to Paris 471 km 293 mi Plain stage Hippolyte Aucouturier FRA Maurice Garin FRA Total 2 428 km 1 509 mi 22 Final general classification before disqualifications 20 21 Rank Rider Time1 Maurice Garin FRA 93h 06 24 2 Lucien Pothier FRA 6 28 3 Cesar Garin ITA 1h 51 03 4 Hippolyte Aucouturier FRA 2h 52 26 5 Henri Cornet FRA 2h 59 27 6 Jean Baptiste Dortignacq FRA 5h 15 36 7 Philippe Jousselin FRA 8h 33 42 8 Alois Catteau BEL 12h 00 56 9 Camille Fily FRA 15h 36 42 10 Jean Dargassies FRA 16h 04 01 Disqualification Edit Henri Cornet the winner of the 1904 Tour de France after the original top four finishers had been disqualified During the race nine riders were excluded because of among other actions illegal use of cars or trains The Tour organisers were happy with the result but the Union Velocipedique Francaise UVF started an investigation after complaints from other cyclists Their investigative committee heard testimony from dozens of competitors and witnesses and in December 1904 disqualified all the stage winners and the first four finishers Maurice Garin Pothier Cesar Garin and Aucouturier Ten of those disqualified were banned for one year Maurice Garin for two years and the remaining two for life 1 In total 29 riders were punished 4 The reasons for the disqualification were never made public 23 Fifth placed Henri Cornet aged 19 then became the youngest ever winner of the Tour 24 Cornet had also been warned after he had received a lift by a car 4 Only 15 cyclists from the original 27 that finished were not disqualified 25 Following the disqualifications the Tour de France came nearest in history to being permanently cancelled 26 The race organiser Henri Desgrange said he would never run the race again because it had been overtaken by the blind emotions of those who attacked or helped riders as they passed Desgrange was also upset that the UVF had imposed judgement on his race when he had already disciplined riders as he saw fit An angry exchange ensued between Desgrange and the UVF but the letters and the detailed complaints that led to the UVF s actions were lost when the Tour de France archives were transported south in 1940 to avoid the German invasion and were never seen again 25 Until the end of his life Garin always said that he was the rightful winner of the 1904 Tour de France but according to Les Woodland Garin confessed to a friend that he had cheated 4 Final results EditAfter the disqualifications the first four cyclists of the initial classification were disqualified In the new classification only 15 cyclists had finished 20 Stage characteristics and winners after disqualifications 3 21 27 Stage Date Course Distance a Winner Race leader1 2 July Montgeron to Lyon 467 km 290 mi Plain stage Michel Frederick SUI Michel Frederick SUI 2 9 July Lyon to Marseille 374 km 232 mi Stage with mountain s Alfred Faure FRA Emile Lombard BEL 3 13 July Marseille to Toulouse 424 km 263 mi Plain stage Henri Cornet FRA Henri Cornet FRA 4 17 July Toulouse to Bordeaux 268 km 167 mi Plain stage Francois Beaugendre FRA Francois Beaugendre FRA 5 20 July Bordeaux to Nantes 425 km 264 mi Plain stage Jean Baptiste Dortignacq FRA Henri Cornet FRA 6 23 July Nantes to Paris 471 km 293 mi Plain stage Jean Baptiste Dortignacq FRA Henri Cornet FRA Total 2 428 km 1 509 mi 22 Final general classification after disqualifications 1 10 28 Rank Rider Time1 Henri Cornet FRA 96h 05 55 2 Jean Baptiste Dortignacq FRA 2h 16 14 3 Alois Catteau BEL 9h 01 25 4 Jean Dargassies FRA 13h 04 30 5 Julien Maitron FRA 19h 06 15 6 Auguste Daumain FRA 22h 44 36 7 Louis Coolsaet BEL 23h 44 20 8 Achille Colas FRA 25h 09 50 9 Rene Saget FRA 25h 55 16 10 Gustave Drioul BEL 30h 54 49 Final general classification 11 15 28 Rank Rider Time11 Henri Paret FRA 32h 18 39 12 Auguste Gauthier FRA 33h 14 02 13 Auguste Rist FRA 35h 01 20 14 Damelincourt FRA 48h 39 03 15 Antoine Deflotriere FRA 101h 28 52 Aftermath EditBecause of the scandals associated with this Tour Desgrange wanted to stop the race He however changed his mind and the rules were changed to prevent cyclists from cheating the 1905 Tour de France would be decided with a points system Tour de France 1904 winner Cornet would enter the Tour de France for seven more times but would never again play an important role 29 Notes Edit a b In 1904 there was no distinction in the rules between plain stages and mountain stages the icons shown here indicate which stages included mountains 3 References Edit a b c d e f No centenary party for 1904 Tour of shame Reuters 8 July 2004 Archived from the original on 21 October 2012 Retrieved 18 March 2009 The Tour Year 1904 Amaury Sport Organisation Archived from the original on 15 July 2009 Retrieved 29 December 2009 a b c d e f 2eme Tour de France 1904 in French Memoire du cyclisme Archived from the original on 9 July 2009 Retrieved 20 May 2009 a b c d e f g h i j k McGann amp McGann 2006 pp 10 13 Tour de France Trivia Retrieved 22 July 2012 Thompson 2006 p 152 Velocipedie Le Petit journal in French Gallica Bibliotheque Numerique 3 July 1904 p 4 Retrieved 16 March 2010 Velocipedie Le Petit journal in French Gallica Bibliotheque Numerique 4 July 1904 p 4 Retrieved 16 March 2010 Velocipedie coureurs punis Le Petit journal in French Gallica Bibliotheque Numerique 6 July 1904 p 4 Retrieved 16 March 2010 Velocipedie Le Tour de France Le Petit journal in French Gallica Bibliotheque Numerique 10 July 1904 p 4 Retrieved 16 March 2010 1904 Henri Cornet wint na diskwalificatie van winnaars in Dutch tourdefrance nl 19 March 2003 Archived from the original on 4 May 2009 Retrieved 18 March 2009 Le Tour de France Le Petit Parisien in French Gallica Bibliotheque Numerique 10 July 1904 p 5 Retrieved 16 March 2010 a b Velocipedie Le Tour de France Le Petit journal in French Gallica Bibliotheque Numerique 11 July 1904 p 5 Retrieved 16 March 2010 2eme Tour de France 1904 2eme etape in French Memoire du cyclisme Archived from the original on 20 March 2012 Retrieved 28 October 2016 Le Tour de France Le Petit journal in French Gallica Bibliotheque Numerique 15 July 1904 p 4 Retrieved 16 March 2010 Le Tour de France Le Petit Parisien in French Gallica Bibliotheque Numerique 15 July 1904 p 5 Retrieved 16 March 2010 Velocipedie Le Tour de France Le Petit Parisien in French Gallica Bibliotheque Numerique 17 July 1904 p 5 Retrieved 16 March 2010 Le Tour de France La fin de la cinquieme etape Le Petit journal in French Gallica Bibliotheque Numerique 22 July 1904 p 3 Retrieved 16 March 2010 Velocipedie Le Tour de France Le Figaro in French Gallica Bibliotheque Numerique 25 July 1904 p 6 Retrieved 16 March 2010 a b c d James Tom 4 April 2001 The Tour is finished VeloArchive Archived from the original on 22 September 2008 Retrieved 18 March 2009 a b c Augendre 2016 p 6 a b Augendre 2016 p 108 Abt Samuel 5 March 2008 Tour s early scandal still a mystery International Herald Tribune Retrieved 18 March 2009 Tour records and winners BBC 30 June 2000 Retrieved 29 December 2009 a b Pelkey Charles 3 December 2008 The Explainer Disqualified VeloNews Archived from the original on 5 August 2009 Retrieved 21 September 2009 Thomazeau Francois 29 July 2007 Plus ca change they started cheating in 1904 Guardian Retrieved 18 March 2009 The history of the Tour de France Year 1904 The stage winners Tour de France Amaury Sport Organisation Archived from the original on 2 April 2020 Retrieved 2 April 2020 a b The history of the Tour de France Year 1904 Stage 6 Ville d Avray gt Paris Tour de France Amaury Sport Organisation Archived from the original on 2 April 2020 Retrieved 2 April 2020 Past results for Henri Cornet FRA ASO Archived from the original on 23 June 2008 Retrieved 20 May 2009 Bibliography EditAugendre Jacques 2016 Guide historique Historical guide PDF Tour de France in French Paris Amaury Sport Organisation Archived PDF from the original on 17 August 2016 Retrieved 27 October 2016 McGann Bill McGann Carol 2006 The Story of the Tour de France 1903 1964 Vol 1 Indianapolis IN Dog Ear Publishing ISBN 978 1 59858 180 5 Thompson Christopher S 2006 The Tour de France A Cultural History Oakland CA University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 24760 4 Further reading EditSeray Jacques 1999 1904 The Tour de France Which Was to Be the Last Ann Arbor Press ISBN 0 9649835 2 4 External links Edit Media related to Tour de France 1904 at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1904 Tour de France amp oldid 1132424568, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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