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Major Taylor

Marshall Walter "Major" Taylor (November 26, 1878 – June 21, 1932) was an American professional cyclist. Even by modern cycling standards, Taylor could be considered the greatest American sprinter of all time.

Major Taylor
Taylor in July 1907
Personal information
Full nameMarshall Walter Taylor
NicknameWorcester Whirlwind
Born(1878-11-26)November 26, 1878
Indianapolis, Indiana, U.S.
DiedJune 21, 1932(1932-06-21) (aged 53)
Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Team information
DisciplineTrack
RoleRider
Rider typeSprinter
Amateur teams
1894–1895See-Saw Cycling Club
1895Albion Cycling Club
Professional teams
1896Worcester Cycle Manufacturing Company
1899E. C. Stearns Bicycle Agency
1900Iver Johnson's Arms & Cycle Works
Major wins
  • LAW Sprint Championship (1899)
  • National Sprint Championship (1900)
Medal record

He was born and raised in Indianapolis, where he worked in bicycle shops and began racing multiple distances in the track and road disciplines of cycling. As a teenager, he moved to Worcester, Massachusetts, with his employer/coach/mentor and continued his successful amateur career, which included breaking track records.

Taylor turned professional in 1896, at the age of 18, living in cities on the East Coast and participating in multiple track events including six-day races. He moved his focus to the sprint event in 1897, competing in a national racing circuit, winning many races and gaining popularity with the public. In 1898 and 1899, he set numerous world records in race distances ranging from the quarter-mile (0.4 km) to the two-mile (3.2 km).

Taylor won the 1-mile sprint event at the 1899 world track championships to become the first African American to achieve the level of cycling world champion and the second black athlete to win a world championship in any sport (following Canadian boxer George Dixon, 1890[1]). Taylor was also a national sprint champion in 1899 and 1900. He raced in the U.S., Europe and Australasia from 1901 to 1904, beating the world's best riders. After a 2+12-year hiatus, he made a comeback in 1907–1909, before retiring at age 32 to his home in Worcester in 1910.

Towards the end of his life Taylor faced severe financial difficulties. He spent the final two years of his life in Chicago, Illinois, where he died of a heart attack in 1932. Throughout his career he challenged the racial prejudice he encountered on and off the track and became a pioneering role model for other athletes facing racial discrimination. Several cycling clubs, trails, and events in the U.S. have been named in his honor, as well as the Major Taylor Velodrome in Indianapolis and Major Taylor Boulevard in Worcester. Other tributes include memorials and historic markers in Worcester, Indianapolis, and at his gravesite in Chicago. He has also been memorialized in film, music and fashion.

Early life edit

Marshall Walter Taylor was the son of Gilbert Taylor, a Civil War veteran, and Saphronia Kelter Taylor. His parents migrated from Louisville, Kentucky, and settled on a farm in Bucktown, a rural area on the western edge of Indianapolis, Indiana. Taylor, who was born on November 26, 1878, in Indianapolis was one of eight children in the family that included five girls and three boys. Around 1887, his father began working in Indianapolis as a coachman for a wealthy white family named Southard.[2][3][4][5]

When Taylor was a child he occasionally accompanied his father to work. Taylor soon became a close friend of the Southards' son, Daniel,[5] who was the same age. Approximately from the age of 8[6] until he was about 12,[7] Taylor lived with the family and along with Daniel was tutored at their home. Taylor's living arrangement with the Southards provided him with more advantages than his parents could provide; however, this period of his life abruptly ended when the Southards moved to Chicago, Illinois.[8][9][10][7] Taylor, who remained in Indianapolis, returned to live at his parents' home and "was soon thrust into the real world."[5]

The Southards provided Taylor with his first bicycle. By 1891 or early 1892, he had become such an expert trick rider that Tom Hay, an Indianapolis bicycle shop owner, hired him to perform bicycle stunts in front of the Hay and Willits bicycle shop. Taylor earned $6 a week for cleaning the shop and performing the stunts, plus a free bicycle worth $35.[8][3][11] It is likely that Taylor received his nickname of "Major" because he performed the cycling stunts wearing a military uniform.[8][a]

 
Harry T. Hearsey's bicycle shop in Downtown Indianapolis in 1896, where Taylor worked as a bicycle instructor

Taylor left the Hay and Willits shop in 1892 or early 1893 to take a job as head trainer for Harry T. Hearsey's bicycle shop in Indianapolis, teaching local residents how to ride. While working at Hearsey's shop, Taylor got to know Louis D. "Birdie" Munger,[13] a former high-wheel bicycle racer who owned the Munger Cycle Manufacturing Company, a racing bicycle factory in Indianapolis. (Munger later established the Worcester Cycle Manufacturing Company factory in Worcester, Massachusetts.) With a shared interest in bicycle racing, the two became friends and Munger hired the teenaged Taylor to work odd jobs that included sending Taylor to area high schools and colleges to train cyclists and promote Munger's line of racing bicycles.[14][15][16][17] Munger had also "made up his mind to make Taylor a champion" and coached him to become a racer.[18]

Early years and East Coast move edit

Although he competed in both road and track races during his amateur career, Taylor excelled in the track sprints, especially the one-mile (1.6 km) race.[19][20] The first cycling race Taylor won was a ten-mile (16 km) amateur event in Indianapolis in 1890.[21][22] He received a 15-minute handicap (head start) in the road race because of his young age. Taylor subsequently traveled to Peoria, Illinois, to compete in another meet, finishing in third place in the under-16 age category.[23][24]

Taylor encountered racial prejudice throughout his racing career from some of his competitors. In addition, some local track owners feared that other cyclists would refuse to compete if Taylor was present for a bicycle race and banned him from their tracks.[25] In 1893, for example, after 15-year-old Taylor beat a one-mile amateur track record, he was "hooted" and then barred from the track.[18] Taylor joined the See-Saw Cycling Club, which was formed by black cyclists of Indianapolis who were unable to join the local all-white Zig-Zag Cycling Club.[26][27]

Major Taylor won his first significant cycling competition on June 30, 1895, when he was the only rider to finish a grueling 75-mile (121 km) road race near his hometown of Indianapolis. During the race Taylor received threats from his white competitors, who did not know that he had entered the event until the start of the race. A few days later, on July 4, 1895, Taylor won a ten-mile road race in Indianapolis that made him eligible to compete at the national championships for black racers in Chicago. Later that summer, he won the ten-mile championship race in Chicago by ten lengths and set a new record for black cyclists of 27:32.[28][25][29][30]

 
The earliest press image of Taylor, aged 18, from the July 6, 1895, edition of Indianapolis News[31]

In 1895, Taylor and Munger relocated from Indianapolis to Worcester. At that time it was a center of the U.S. bicycle industry that included half a dozen factories and thirty bicycle shops. Munger, who was Taylor's employer, lifelong friend, and mentor, had decided to move his bicycle manufacturing business to the state of Massachusetts,[18][32] which was also a more tolerant area of the country.[33]

Munger and Charles Boyd, a business partner, established the Worcester Cycle Manufacturing Company with factories in Worcester, and Middletown, Connecticut. For Taylor, who continued to work for Munger as a bicycle mechanic and messenger between the company's two factory locations,[18][34][35] the move to the East Coast offered "higher visibility, larger crowds, increased sponsorship dollars, and greater access to world-class cycling venues."[36] After Taylor's relocation to Massachusetts, he joined the all-black Albion Cycling Club in 1895 and trained at YMCA in Worcester.[37][38] Taylor is first mentioned in The New York Times on September 26, 1895, as a competitor in the Citizen Handicap event, a ten-mile race on Ocean Parkway in Brooklyn, New York. Taylor raced with a 1:30 handicap in a field of 200 competitors that included nine scratch riders.[39]

In 1896, Taylor entered numerous races in the Northeastern states of Massachusetts, New Jersey, and Connecticut. After winning a ten-mile road race in Worcester, Taylor competed in the 25-mile (40 km) Irvington–Millburn race in New Jersey, also known as the Derby of the East. Within half a mile (0.8 km) of the finish line, someone startled Taylor by tossing ice water into his face and he finished in 23rd place. Taylor's first major East Coast race was in a League of American Wheelmen (LAW) one-mile contest in New Haven, Connecticut, where he started in last place but won the event.[40][41] In August 1896, Taylor made a trip to Indianapolis, where he set an unofficial new track record of 2:11 15 for a distance of one mile at the Capital City velodrome, beating Walter Sanger's official track record of 2:19 25. (Taylor could not compete with Sanger, a professional racer, in a head-to-head contest because he was still an amateur.)[42][43][44][45] Taylor's final amateur race took place on November 26, 1896, in the 25-mile Tatum Handicap at Jamaica, New York. Taylor finished the race in 14th place.[46][47]

Professional career edit

1896: First races edit

 
Madison Square Garden II (pictured in 1908) in New York City, the venue of Taylor's first professional race in 1896

Taylor turned professional in 1896, at the age of eighteen, and soon emerged as the "most formidable racer in America."[18] Taylor's first professional race took place in front of 5,000 spectators on December 5, 1896. He competed in a half-mile handicap event on an indoor track at New York City's Madison Square Garden II on the opening day of a multi-day event.[48][49] Although the main event was a six-day race fm December 6–12, other contests in shorter distances were held on December 5 to entertain the crowd. These races included the half-mile handicap for professionals in which Taylor competed, a half-mile race between Jay Eaton and Teddy Goodman, and a half-mile scratch race. In addition, there were half-mile scratch and handicap races for amateurs.[50]

Taylor began the half-mile handicap race on December 5, with a 35-yard (32 m) advantage over the scratch racers. He beat a field of competitors that included Tom Cooper, Philadelphia's A.C. Meixwell, and scratch rider Eddie C. Bald, who represented New York's Syracuse, and rode a Barnes bicycle. Taylor won the race riding Munger's "Birdie Special" bicycle and beat Bald by 20 yards (18 m) in a sprint to the finish.[51][52][53]

From December 6–12, 1896, Taylor participated as one of 28 competitors in a six-day event at Madison Square Garden. Although Taylor had just become a professional, he had achieved enough notoriety, possibly because of his stunning win on December 5, to be listed among the "American contestants" that also included A.A. Hansen (the Minneapolis "rainmaker") and Teddy Goodman. In addition, many "experts from abroad" participated in the meet such as Switzerland's Albert Schock, Germany's Frank J. Waller, Frank Forster, and Ed von Hoeg, and Canada's Burns W. Pierce. Several countries were represented in the event, including Scotland, Wales, France, England, and Denmark.[50][53]

As the fascination with six-day races spread across the Atlantic from its origins in the United Kingdom, their appeal to base instincts attracted large crowds. The more spectators who paid at the gate, the bigger the prizes, which provided riders with the incentive to stay awake–or be kept awake–in order to ride the greatest distance. To prepare for the event, Taylor went to Brooklyn, where he became a member of the South Brooklyn Wheelmen. An estimated crowd of 6,000 spectators attended the final day of the Madison Square Garden races in December 1896.[54][55] During these long, grueling races, riders suffered delusions and hallucinations, which may have been caused by exhaustion, lack of sleep, or perhaps use of drugs.[56][49][57][b]

Madison Square Garden's six-day event in 1896 was the longest race Taylor had ever entered. After Taylor refused to continue racing on the final day of the long-distance competition, exhausted from physical exertion and lack of sleep, a Bearnings reporter overheard him comment: "I cannot go on with safety, for there is a man chasing me around the ring with a knife in his hand."[59] Taylor completed a total of 1,732 miles (2,787 km) in 142 hours of racing to finish in eighth place.[60] Teddy Hale, the race winner, completed 1,910 miles (3,070 km) and took home $5,000 in prize money. Taylor never competed in another race that long.[61]

After Taylor's move to the East Coast in 1896, he initially lived in Worcester, where he worked for Munger, and in Middletown, the site of another of Munger's cycle factories.[39] Taylor also lived in other eastern cities, such as South Brooklyn, where he once trained,[50] but it is not known how long he still resided in New York after he became a professional racer.[62]

1897–1898: Fame and records edit

 
Taylor with the Boston pursuit team of 1897; one of the first known photographs of an integrated American professional sports team[63]

Taylor initially raced for Munger's Worcester Cycle Manufacturing Company. After the company went into receivership in 1897 he joined other racing teams.[64] Taylor competed in his first full year on the professional racing circuit in 1897.[65] Early in the season, at the Bostonian Cycle Club's "Blue Ribbon Meet" on May 19, 1897, Taylor rode a Comet bicycle to win first place in the one-mile open professional race.[66] On June 26, he won a quarter-mile (0.4 km) race at the track at Manhattan Beach, Brooklyn. Taylor also beat Eddie Bald in a one-mile race in Reading, Pennsylvania, but finished fourth in the prestigious LAW convention in Philadelphia.[67][68][69]

As a professional racer Taylor continued to experience racial prejudice as a black cyclist in a white-dominated sport.[60] In November and December 1897, when the circuit extended to the racially-segregated South, local race promoters refused to let Taylor compete because he was black. Taylor returned to Massachusetts for the remainder of the season and Eddie Bald became the American sprint champion in 1897. Despite the obstacles, Taylor was determined to race.[70]

In the early years of his professional racing career, Taylor's reputation continued to increase as he competed in and won more races. Newspapers began referring to him as the "Worcester Whirlwind," the "Black Cyclone," the "Ebony Flyer," the "Colored Cyclone," and the "Black Zimmerman," among other nicknames. He also gained popularity among the spectators.[71][72][73] One of his fans was President Theodore Roosevelt who kept track of Taylor throughout his seventeen-year racing career.[18]

 
Taylor on the front of the November 1, 1898, edition of the French sports magazine La Vie au grand air [fr]

Early in the 1898 racing season Taylor beat Bald at Manhattan Beach, but lost to Eddie McDuffie at Cambridge, Massachusetts, in a 30-mile (48 km) paced race. On July 17 at Philadelphia, Taylor won his biggest victories of the season: first place in the one-mile championship and second place in the one-mile handicap races. On August 27, in a head-to-head race with Jimmy Michael of Wales, Taylor set a new world record of 1:41 25 for a one-mile paced match and beat the Welsh racer to the finish by 20 yards (18 m).[74][75]

Taylor was among several top cyclists who could claim the national championship in 1898; however, scoring variations and the formation of a new cycling league that year "clouded" his claim to the title.[18] Early in the year a group of professional racers that included Taylor had left the LAW to join a rival group, the American Racing Cyclists' Union (ARCU), and its professional racing group, the National Cycling Association (NCA). During the ARCU sprint championship in St. Louis and Cape Girardeau, Missouri, Taylor, who was a devout Baptist, refused to compete for religious reasons in the finals of the championship races because they were held on a Sunday. As a result of Taylor's decision not to race in the finals at Cape Girardeau, the ARCU suspended him from membership. Taylor petitioned the LAW for reinstatement in 1898 and was accepted, but Tom Butler, who had remained a LAW member after the break-up, was declared the League's champion that year.[76][77][78][c]

During 1898–99, at the peak of his cycling career, Taylor established seven world records;[33][18] the quarter-mile, the one-third-mile (0.5 km), the half-mile, the two-thirds-mile (1.1 km), the three-quarters-mile (1.2 km), the one-mile, and the two-mile (3.2 km) distances. His one-mile world record of 1:41 from a standing start stood for 28 years.[60]

1899: World sprint champion edit

 
Taylor became the first Black American to win a world championship in any sport at the 1899 track world championships at the Vélodrome de Queen's Park in Montreal, Canada.

At the 1899 world championships in Montreal, Canada, Taylor won the one-mile sprint, to become the first African American to win a world championship in cycling. Taylor was the second black athlete, after Canadian bantamweight boxer George Dixon of Boston, to win a world championship in any sport.[33][45] For decades he was the only black athlete to be a world champion in cycling.[80][81] Taylor won the one-mile world championship sprint in a close finish a few feet ahead of Frenchman Courbe d'Outrelon and American Tom Butler.[82][83] In addition, Taylor placed second in the two-mile championship sprint at Montreal behind Charles McCarthy and won the half-mile championship race.[18][84][85][86] Because the finals were held on Sundays, when Taylor refused to compete for religious reasons, he did not compete in another world championship contest until 1909 in Copenhagen, Denmark. Taylor lost in a preliminary heat at Copenhagen and did not compete in the finals.[87]

After Taylor's world championship win in 1899, many claimed that the event "had been a farce, because Taylor had not competed against the strongest riders."[88] World cycling's governing body, the International Cycling Association (replaced with the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) in 1900), did not allow NCA racers to compete at the world championships in Montreal. As a result, Taylor's accomplishments were somewhat diminished. Because the rival organizations (LAW and the NCA) would not recognize each other, two American champions were crowned in 1899. Tom Cooper was the NCA champion and Taylor was the LAW champion.[89][90]

In addition to the world championship wins in the one-mile and two-mile distances at Montreal and the LAW Championship, which he won on points, Taylor's victories in 1899 included twenty-two first-place finishes in major championship races around the U.S. Taylor's record-setting times were impossible to dismiss. No other rider had matched the "range and variety" of his winning performances, which made him an international celebrity.[18][91][88][92] In 1899, Taylor made several unsuccessful attempts to recapture his world record for a one-mile paced distance in two "strenuous record-breaking campaigns," before he finally achieved the new world record of 1:19 in November to regain the title of "the fastest man in the world."[93][94]

For the 1899 racing season, Taylor went to Syracuse and with Munger's assistance he signed a contract to race for the E. C. Stearns Company. Taylor, Munger, and Harry Sager, who was Taylor's bicycle parts sponsor, initially planned to negotiate a deal with the Olive Wheel Company; however, the men were able to work out a more lucrative contract with Stearns, who agreed to build Taylor's bicycles using a chainless gear mechanism that Sanger had designed. The bicycles only weighed about 20 pounds (9.1 kg) and had an 88-inch (2,200 mm) gear for sprinting and a 120-inch (3,000 mm) gear for longer, paced runs.[95][96] Stearns "also agreed to build Taylor a revolutionary steam-powered pacing tandem, behind which he could attack world records and challenge the leading exponents of paced racing."[97] Although the tandem was temperamental, it helped Taylor break Eddie McDuffie's one-mile world record on November 15, 1899, with a time of 1:19 at a speed of 45.56 mph (73.32 km/h).[98] In late 1899, Taylor signed a contract to race with the Iver Johnson's Arms & Cycle Works team of Fitchburg, Massachusetts, during the 1900 racing season.[99]

1900: American sprint champion edit

In 1900, when the LAW no longer governed professional bicycle races in the U.S., Taylor's future as a professional racer was in jeopardy. Fortunately, the ARCU and the NCA, who had banned Taylor from competing in their leagues, readmitted him after payment of a $500 fine.[93][100] Taylor won the American sprint championship on points in 1900. He also beat Tom Cooper, the 1899 NCA champion, in a head-to-head match in a one-mile race at Madison Square Garden in front of 50,000 to 60,000 spectators. In addition, Taylor set world records in the half-mile and two-thirds-mile sprints and raced indoors using a "home trainer" in head-to-head competitions with other riders as a vaudeville act.[101][102][103] Taylor eventually settled in Worcester, where he purchased a home on Hobson Street in 1900.[62]

1901–1904: Europe and Australasia edit

 
Taylor racing against Edmond Jacquelin at Paris' Parc des Princes in 1901

Following his record-setting successes in the U.S. and Canada, Taylor agreed to a European tour. In 1901, Taylor made his first trip to Europe, but returned to compete in the U.S. after the conclusion of the European spring racing season. During his European tour Taylor still refused to race on Sundays, when most of the finals were held, because of his religious convictions.[104][105][106][107] It was reported that Taylor took a Bible with him when he travelled and began each race with a silent prayer because of his religious beliefs.[18]

 
Trophy presented to Major Taylor at Parc des Princes, Paris on May 27, 1901, in the Indiana State Museum and Historic Sites Collection

Taylor was popular among the European race fans and news reporters: "Everywhere he went he was mobbed, talked about, or written up."[108] In 1901, Taylor won 18 of the 24 European races he entered, notching up 42 victories when the individual heats are counted.[109] A highlight of Taylor's European tour in 1901 was the two match races with French champion Edmond Jacquelin at the Parc des Princes in Paris, the winner in each decided over the best of three heats. Jacquelin won the first match, on May 16, two heats to nil, a wheel length sealing the win in the first heat, two lengths the gap in the second. Taylor triumphed in the second match, on May 27, two heats to nil, four lengths his margin of victory in the first heat, three the gap in the second.[109]

Taylor also participated in a European tour in 1902, when he entered 57 races and won 40 of them to defeat the champions of Germany, England, and France.[18] In addition to racing in Europe, Taylor also competed in Australia and New Zealand in 1903 and 1904. In February 1903, for example, Taylor, lured by a £1,200 appearance fee and a world record 1st prize of £750, competed in the inaugural Sydney Thousand handicap. His fee the next year hit £2,000.[110][111] During his world tour in 1903, Taylor earned prize money estimated at $35,000 ($923,352 in 2015 chained dollars).[112]

1907–1910: Later years edit

 
Taylor and Léon Hourlier at a standstill during a race at Paris' Vélodrome Buffalo in 1909

Following a collapse from the mental and physical strain of professional competition, Taylor took a 2+12-year hiatus from cycling between 1904 and 1906, before returning to race in France. He set two world records in Paris in 1907 for the half-mile standing start at 0:42 15 and the quarter-mile standing start at 0:25 25. Taylor also returned to Europe for the racing season in 1908 and in 1909. He finally broke his long-standing decision to avoid Sunday races in 1909 when he was nearing the end of his racing career. Taylor's last professional race took place on October 10, 1909, in Roanne, France, in a match race against French world champion Charles Dupré. Taylor won the race, but he did not return to Europe for the 1910 season and retired from competitive cycling.[113][114][115]

Taylor was still breaking records in 1908, but his age was starting to "creep up on him."[18] He retired from racing in 1910 at the age of 32. When Taylor returned to his home in Worcester at the end of his racing career, his estimated net worth was $75,000 ($1,978,611 in 2015 chained dollars) to $100,000 ($2,638,148 in 2015 chained dollars). Taylor won his final competition, an "old-timers race" among former professional racers, in New Jersey in September 1917.[116][117][118]

Racism in cycling edit

 
A caricature published in the edition of February 23, 1894, of The Bearings cycling magazine, illustrating the ban of blacks from membership to the League of American Wheelmen

As Taylor gained notoriety as an amateur and a professional, he did not escape racial segregation. In 1894, the LAW changed its bylaws to exclude blacks from membership; however, it did permit them to compete in its races. Although Taylor's cycling was greatly celebrated abroad, particularly in France, his career was still restricted by racism, particularly in the Southern U.S., where some local promoters would not permit Taylor to compete against white cyclists.[119][120][121][122] Some restaurants and hotels also refused to serve him or provide him lodging.[8]

Taylor asserted in his autobiography that prominent bicycle racers of his era often cooperated to defeat him, such as the Butler brothers (Nat and Tom) were accused of doing in the one-mile world championship race at Montreal in 1899. At the LAW races in Boston, shortly after Taylor had won the world championship, he accused the entire field that included Tom Cooper and Eddie Bald, among others for fouling him.[123][124] Taylor complained after the event that he had been "bumped, jostled, and elbowed until I was sorely tried."[125][126][127] Racing promoter William A. Brady, who was also Taylor's manager, chastised the other riders for their "rough treatment" of Taylor during the race.[124]

While some of Taylor's fellow racers refused to compete with him, others resorted to intimidation, verbal insults, and threats to physically harm him.[8] While racing in Savannah, Georgia, in the Winter of 1898, he received a written threat saying "Clear out if you value your life"; the previous day Taylor had challenged three riders together to a race after one of them had said they "didn't pace niggers."[128] Taylor recalled that ice water had been thrown at him during races and nails were scattered in front of his wheels. Taylor further stated in his autobiography that he had been elbowed and "pocketed" (boxed in) by other riders to prevent him from sprinting to the front of the pack, a tactic at which he was so successful.[129][130][126][127]

Taylor's competitors also tried to injure him. One incident occurred after the one-mile Massachusetts Open race at Taunton on September 23, 1897; at the conclusion of the race, William Becker, who placed third behind Taylor in second place, tackled Taylor on the race track and choked him into unconsciousness. Becker, who claimed that Taylor had crowded him during the race, was temporarily suspended while the incident was investigated. Becker received a $50 fine as punishment for his actions, but was reinstated and allowed to continue racing. In another incident, which occurred in February 1904, when Taylor was competing in Australia, he was seriously injured on the final turn of a race when fellow competitor Iver Lawson veered his bicycle toward Taylor and collided with his front wheel. Taylor crashed and lay unconscious on the track before he was taken to a local hospital and later made a full recovery. Lawson was suspended from racing anywhere in the world for a year as a result of his actions.[8][131][132]

Life is too short for any man to hold bitterness in his heart and that is why I have no feeling against anybody.

Marshall Taylor[133]

Taylor explained that he included details of these incidents in his autobiography, along with his comments about his experiences, to serve as an inspiration for other African American athletes trying to overcome racial prejudice and discriminatory treatment in sports. Taylor cited exhaustion as well as the physical and mental strain caused by the racial prejudice he experienced on and off the track as his reasons for retiring from competitive cycling in 1910.[134][135] His advice to African American youths wishing to emulate him straightforward was that although bicycle racing had been the appropriate route to success for him, he would not recommend it in general. He suggested that individuals "practice clean living, fair play and good sportsmanship" and develop their best talent with a strong character, significant willpower, and "physical courage."[136] Despite many obstacles, Taylor rose to the top of his sport and became "one of the dominant athletes of his era."[22]

Retirement and death edit

 
Taylor in 1926, aged 47–48
 
1914 newspaper ad offering shares of the Major Taylor Manufacturing Company
 
Taylor's grave at Mount Glenwood Memory Gardens South

After retiring from competition, Taylor applied to Worcester Polytechnic Institute to study engineering, despite the fact that he did not have a high school diploma, but he was denied admission[137] and took up various business ventures.

Nearly twenty years after his retirement, Taylor wrote and self-published his autobiography, The Fastest Bicycle Rider in the World: The Story of a Colored Boy's Indomitable Courage and Success Against Great Odds: An Autobiography (1928).[d] According to his book, Taylor was upbeat about his retirement: "I felt I had my day, and a wonderful day it was too." Taylor also claimed he had no regrets and "no animosity toward any man," but his autobiography included hints of bitterness in regard to his treatment as a competitor: "I always played the game fairly and tried my hardest, although I was not always given a square deal or anything like it."[139]

By 1930 Taylor had experienced severe financial difficulties from bad investments (including self-publishing his autobiography), the stock market crash, and businesses that proved unsuccessful. Taylor's home in Worcester and some of the family's personal property were sold to pay off debts. He also suffered from persistent ill health in his later years.[140][141][142]

Little is known of Taylor's life after the failure of his marriage and his move to Chicago around 1930. Taylor spent the final two years of his life in poverty, selling copies of his autobiography to earn a meagre income and residing at YMCA Hotel in Chicago's Bronzeville neighborhood.[143]

In March 1932, Taylor suffered a heart attack and was hospitalized in the Provident Hospital. After an unsuccessful heart operation, he was moved to Cook County Hospital's charity ward in April, where he died on June 21, at age 53. The official cause on his death certificate is "nephrosclerosis and hypertension," contributed by "Chronic myocarditis".[144] His wife and daughter, who survived him, did not immediately learn of his death and no one claimed his remains. He was initially buried at Mount Glenwood Cemetery in Thornton Township, Cook County, near Chicago, in an unmarked pauper's grave.[145] In 1948, a group of former professional bicycle racers used funds donated by Frank W. Schwinn, owner of the Schwinn Bicycle Co. at that time, to organize the exhumation and reburial of Taylor's remains in a more prominent location at the cemetery.[146][147] The plaque at the grave reads: "World's champion bicycle racer who came up the hard way without hatred in his heart, an honest, courageous and God-fearing, clean-living gentlemanly athlete. A credit to his race who always gave out his best. Gone but not forgotten."[148]

Legacy edit

Taylor's legacy lies in his willingness to challenge racial prejudice as an African American athlete in the white-dominated sport of cycling. He was also hailed as a sports hero in France and Australia. Taylor, who became a role model for other athletes facing racial prejudice and discrimination,[8] was "the first great black celebrity athlete" and a pioneer in his efforts to challenge segregation in sports. He also paved the way for others facing similar circumstances.[60] Taylor explained in his autobiography that he had no other African Americans to offer him advice and "therefore had to blaze my own trail."[136]

Honors and tributes edit

Honors and tributes
 
A plaque commemorating the 1982 dedication of the Major Taylor Velodrome in Indianapolis, Indiana
 
Memorial to Taylor outside the Worcester Public Library
 
Major Taylor Boulevard in Worcester
 
Major Taylor Museum in Worcester

Taylor's legacy remained largely unknown until 1982, when the Major Taylor Velodrome in Indianapolis opened for the city's hosting of the U.S. Olympic Festival.[149] Annual events taking place in the velodrome or the wider Indy Cycloplex named in honor of Taylor include the Major Taylor Racing League track series, and from 2015, the Major Taylor Cross Cup second division UCI cyclo-cross event.[150] Taylor was posthumously inducted into the U.S. Bicycling Hall of Fame in 1989.[151] In 1996 and 1997, Taylor was posthumously awarded with the USA Cycling Korbel Lifetime Achievement Award and the Massachusetts Hall of Black Achievement, respectively.[152][153] In 2002, he was one of the nine track cyclists inducted into the UCI Hall of Fame, created to commemorate 100 years of the Paris–Roubaix one-day road race and the inauguration of the World Cycling Centre.[154] In 2003, he was named a Sports Ethics Fellow by the Institute for International Sport.[155] During the 2005 UCI Track Cycling World Championships in Los Angeles, a Peugeot bicycle that Taylor had owned, and then was donated to the U.S. Bicycling Hall of Fame, was put on display inside the ADT Event Center.[156] In 2009, a state historical marker was installed as a tribute to Taylor near the Indiana State Fairgrounds in Indianapolis, where the Capital City track once stood, and where he had set an unofficial track record in 1896.[45] In 2018, he was honored with a special tribute award at the International Athletic Association's Jesse Owens Awards held at the National Museum of African American History and Culture.[157]

In 1998, in Taylor's adopted hometown of Worcester, where he lived for 35 years, the Major Taylor Association was formed by locals with the goal of erecting a permanent memorial to Taylor outside the Worcester Public Library and telling his story.[158][159][160][161] On July 24, 2006, the city renamed the Worcester Center Boulevard, a high-traffic downtown street, to Major Taylor Boulevard.[162][163] At the same time, funding for the memorial was secured with the Massachusetts Legislature approving $205,000, signed by governor Mitt Romney.[162] The opening ceremony took place on May 21, 2008, attended by Tour de France winner Greg LeMond.[159] The memorial features a bronze sculpture of Taylor surrounded by granite was created by Antonio Tobias Mendez, who was chosen from over more than 60 others.[164] At the grand opening of Worcester's Applebee's restaurant in 2000, Taylor was selected as their "hometown hero", and has a display of his memorabilia.[165] In 2002, the Educational Association of Worcester and the Worcester Public Schools, together with the Major Taylor Association, developed a curriculum guide on Taylor,[166] which has since been expanded and used in schools nationwide.[165] Since 2003, Worcester has hosted the annual "George Street Bike Challenge for Major Taylor" amateur hillclimb event.[167]

The first of the many cycling clubs named in Taylor's honor was organized in Columbus, Ohio, in 1979.[168][169] In 2008, a number of these clubs joined with other African-American clubs to form the National Brotherhood of Cyclists (NBC), a nonprofit organization that aims to further diversity in cycling.[170] The Major Taylor Trail, a six-mile-long (9.7 km) rail trail that navigates through South Side, Chicago, opened in 2007. Eleven years later, Chicagoan artist Bernard Williams oversaw the creation of a 400-foot-long (120 m) community mural honoring Taylor along the metal siding of the Little Calumet River bridge, which the trail crosses.[171] Taylor is also celebrated along the Alum Creek Greenway Trail in Columbus, Ohio.[172] In 2009, the Cascade Bicycle Club community organization of Washington state launched The Major Taylor Project, a youth cycling program.[173]

A small museum devoted to Taylor opened in 2021 in the former Worcester County Courthouse.[174] Taylor's great-granddaughter attended the dedication.[174]

In popular culture edit

Actor Philip Morris portrayed Taylor in the 1992 television mini-series Tracks of Glory.[175] Blues musician Otis Taylor (no relation) recorded "He Never Raced on Sunday," a song about Taylor for his 2004 album Double V.[176] In 2007, Nike produced the Major Taylor "premium" collection of their most iconic sneakers in a light brown/neon yellow/white colorway.[177] In the same year, SOMA Fabrications began making a set of bicycle handlebars called the Major Taylor Bar, which is a replica of 1930s drop handlebar that was named for Taylor.[178][179] Dewshane Williams portrayed Taylor in the 2013 episode of television drama series Murdoch Mysteries, "Tour de Murdoch".[180]

On April 12, 2018, at a private exhibition in the TheTimesCenter in New York City,[181] cognac brand Hennessy announced that Taylor would become the subject the company's fifth instalment of their "Wild Rabbit" advertising campaign, created with agency Droga5, which through a series of partnerships tells inspirational the stories of culturally influential people, with the slogan "Never stop. Never settle."[182] The event included the unveiling some of the partnerships including Kadir Nelson's bronze sculpture of Taylor, The Major.[181] The campaign launched to the public with a television commercial during the 2018 NBA Finals in April.[181] The Major directed by Derek Cianfrance, which has cuts in various lengths, features a voiceover from rapper Nas and recreates Taylor racing in an indoor velodrome.[183][184] The 30-second cut was shown during third and fourth quarters of the Super Bowl LIII in February 2019, Hennessy's first appearance in a Super Bowl commercial.[185][186] On April 22, 2018, ESPN premiered the Hennessy-sponsored television documentary short The Six Day Race: The Story of Marshall "Major" Taylor; directed by Colin Barnicle, it features interviews with contemporary African-American athletes, road cyclist Ayesha McGowan and BMX rider Nigel Sylvester.[183]

In 2019, two Taylor-inspired brand collaborations were released, with part of the proceeds going to the NBC. Kerby Jean-Raymond, under his haute couture fashion label Pyer Moss, designed a five-piece collection "MMT 140", and Affinity Cycles made limited-run of a modern replica Taylor-era track bicycle.[187] In partnership with the NBC, a series of tribute bicycle rides took place across the U.S. in November and December marking Taylor's birth date, and the creation of the $25,000 "MMT Higher Education Scholarship", awarded to one winner with the best "Never stop. Never settle." story.[170][183] Also in 2019, Taylor's name and likeness was licensed to Major Taylor Cycling Wear of Columbus Ohio to manufacture and distribute official sports- and cycling-wear bearing the image of Major Taylor.

Graphic novel publisher Drawn and Quarterly plans to publish a biography of Taylor by comic artist Frederick Noland in 2023.[188]

Marriage and family edit

 
Taylor with his wife, Daisy, and daughter, Sydney, c. 1906–1907

Taylor's wife, Daisy Victoria Morris, was born on January 28, 1876, in Hudson, New York. Taylor married Morris in Ansonia, Connecticut, on March 21, 1902. Taylor met her around 1900 when she was living in Worcester, with her aunt and uncle.[189][190][191][192][193][145]

While in Australia in 1904, Taylor and his wife had their only child, a daughter that they named Rita Sydney in honor of Sydney, where she was born on May 11.[194][195] When Taylor, his wife, and daughter were not traveling, they lived in a large home on Hobson Avenue in Worcester that Taylor had purchased in 1900.[62]

After his retirement from racing in 1910 and the failure of subsequent business ventures in the 1920s, Taylor and his wife became estranged. She left him in 1930 and moved to New York City. Around the same time Taylor left Worcester and moved to Chicago; he never saw his wife or daughter again.[196]

Taylor's daughter, who graduated from the Sargent School of Culture in Boston in 1925 and the University of Chicago in 1936, taught physical education at West Virginia State University. She died in 2005 at age 101; her survivors include a son, Dallas C. Brown Jr., and his five children.[112][197] In 1984, Taylor's daughter donated an extensive scrapbook collection on her father to the University of Pittsburgh Archives.[198]

World records edit

List of world records set by Major Taylor
Date Distance Pacing/start Time Location Refs
September 2, 1896 15 mile (0.32 km) Unpaced, flying start 0:23 35 Capital City Track, Indianapolis [199][200]
August 27, 1898 1 mile (1.6 km) Paced, standing start 1:43 25 Manhattan Beach, New York City [201][202]
1 mile (1.6 km) Paced, standing start 1:41 25
September 5, 1898 12 mile (0.80 km) Single-paced competition 0:58 45 Hampden Park, Springfield, MA [203][204]
November 4, 1898 1 kilometer (0.62 mi) Paced 0:57 35 Woodside Park, Philadelphia [205][206]
November 5, 1898 14 mile (0.40 km) Paced 0:22 25 [206][207]
2 miles (3.2 km) Paced 3:13 35
November 12, 1898 1 mile (1.6 km) Paced 1:32 [208][209]
12 mile (0.80 km) Paced 0:45 45
12 mile (0.80 km) Paced 0:45 35
November 14, 1898 13 mile (0.54 km) Paced 0:29 45 [210]
November 15, 1898 12 mile (0.80 km) Paced 0:45 25 [211][212]
1 mile (1.6 km) Paced 1:32
14 mile (0.40 km) Paced 0:22 15
13 mile (0.54 km) Paced 0:29 35
12 mile (0.80 km) Paced 0:45 25
34 mile (1.2 km) Paced 1:08 35
1 mile (1.6 km) Paced 1:32
November 16, 1898 14 mile (0.40 km) Paced 0:22 15 [213][214]
13 mile (0.54 km) Paced 0:29 35
12 mile (0.80 km) Paced 0:45 25
23 mile (1.1 km) Paced 1:00 45
1 mile (1.6 km) Paced 1:31 45
12 mile (0.80 km) Paced 0:45 15
34 mile (1.2 km) Paced 1:08 25
August 3, 1899 1 mile (1.6 km) Motor-paced 1:22 25 Garfield Park, Chicago [215][216]
November 9, 1899 14 mile (0.40 km) Motor-paced 0:20 [217][218]
November 10, 1899 12 mile (0.80 km) Motor-paced 0:41 [219][220]
November 15, 1899 1 mile (1.6 km) Motor-paced 1:19 [221]
December 14, 1900 14 mile (0.40 km) Unpaced 0:25 45 Madison Square Garden, New York City [222]
August 1908 12 mile (0.80 km) Standing start 0:42 15 Vélodrome Buffalo, Paris [223][224]
14 mile (0.40 km) Standing start 0:25 25
August 26, 1908 1 mile (1.6 km) Motor-paced 1:33 25 [225]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Andrew Ritchie, one of Taylor's biographers, offers other potential explanations for Taylor's nickname, but his military uniform appears to be the most likely reason, although Taylor never confirmed it.[12]
  2. ^ The extent of drug use during the era in which Taylor raced is "uncertain," but it was "not uncommon." At that time, many narcotics and pharmaceutical drugs, including opium, laudanum, morphine, heroin, and cocaine, among others, could be obtained legally.[58] Their exhaustion was countered by soigneurs (French: carers), helpers akin to seconds in boxing. Nitroglycerine, a drug used to stimulate the heart after cardiac attacks and was credited with improving riders' breathing, was also among the treatments supplied to riders.[56]
  3. ^ Earl Kiser, nicknamed the "Little Dayton Demon," raced for the Stearns "Yellow Fellow" team during the same era as Taylor. Kiser became a two-time world cycling champion and competed all across Europe in the late 1890s. After Taylor was barred from racing, Kiser petitioned the ARCU to have him included.[79]
  4. ^ The original version of Taylor's autobiography, printed by The Commonwealth Press in Worcester, Massachusetts, has a copyright date of 1928; however, other sources indicate that it was not published until 1929.[138][45]
  5. ^ Thomas Gascoyne was a dual world-recordholder from England who defeated Taylor twice in one day at Boston on July 20, 1901.[226]

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  194. ^ "Wheel Notes". The Mansfield News. Mansfield, Ohio. August 6, 1904 – via NewspaperARCHIVE.com.
  195. ^ Ritchie 1988, pp. 201–202.
  196. ^ Kerber & Kerber 2014, p. 328.
  197. ^ Brill 2008, p. 92.
  198. ^ Marshall W. "Major" Taylor Scrapbooks, 1897-1904, AIS.1984.07. Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh. from the original on December 10, 2013. Retrieved November 12, 2013.
  199. ^ "Major Breaks Records". Indianapolis News. September 3, 1896. p. 3 – via NewspaperARCHIVE.com.
  200. ^ "Cycling Briefs". Indianapolis Sun. September 3, 1896. p. 8 – via NewspaperARCHIVE.com.
  201. ^ "Major Taylor's Victory". New York Times. August 28, 1898. p. 5 – via NewspaperARCHIVE.com.
  202. ^ "Taylor's Great Victory over Jimmy Michael". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. August 28, 1898. p. 11 – via NewspaperARCHIVE.com.
  203. ^ "Taylor's Points". Boston Daily Globe. September 6, 1898. p. 4 – via NewspaperARCHIVE.com.
  204. ^ "Records Go at Springfield". Chicago Tribune. September 6, 1898. p. 5 – via Newspapers.com.
  205. ^ "Major Taylor Lowers the World's Kilometer, but Fails at the Mile". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. November 5, 1898. p. 3 – via NewspaperARCHIVE.com.
  206. ^ a b "Taylor Gets Records". Philadelphia Inquirer. November 6, 1898. p. 14 – via NewspaperARCHIVE.com.
  207. ^ "Sporting Miscellany". Baltimore Sun. November 7, 1898. p. 8 – via NewspaperARCHIVE.com.
  208. ^ "Taylor's Record". Philadelphia Inquirer. November 13, 1898. p. 11 – via NewspaperARCHIVE.com.
  209. ^ "Two New Records—Major Taylor Rides the Mile in 1.32 Flat". Boston Sunday Globe. November 13, 1898. p. 2 – via NewspaperARCHIVE.com.
  210. ^ "Major Taylor Lowered the Record for the One-Third of a Mile". Philadelphia Times. November 15, 1898. p. 8 – via NewspaperARCHIVE.com.
  211. ^ "Great Riding by Major Taylor". Philadelphia Times. November 16, 1898. p. 8 – via NewspaperARCHIVE.com.
  212. ^ ""Major" Taylor Ties Record". Boston Daily Globe. November 16, 1898. p. 7 – via NewspaperARCHIVE.com.
  213. ^ "More Records—"Major" Taylor Keeps On at Philadelphia". Boston Daily Globe. November 17, 1898. p. 3 – via NewspaperARCHIVE.com.
  214. ^ "More Records by Taylor". Philadelphia Inquirer. November 17, 1898. p. 4 – via NewspaperARCHIVE.com.
  215. ^ "Taylor Breaks All Records". Boston Post. August 4, 1898. p. 2 – via NewspaperARCHIVE.com.
  216. ^ "Lowers Mile Record". Boston Daily Globe. August 4, 1898. p. 7 – via NewspaperARCHIVE.com.
  217. ^ "Taylor's Quarter-Mile Record". Chicago Tribune. November 10, 1899. p. 8 – via Newspapers.com.
  218. ^ "Major Taylor and Eddie McDuffee Make New Records". Boston Post. November 10, 1899. p. 3 – via NewspaperARCHIVE.com.
  219. ^ "He Makes a Record Just for Fun". Chicago Tribune. November 11, 1899. p. 6 – via Newspapers.com.
  220. ^ "Taylor's New Record". Boston Post. November 11, 1899. p. 2 – via NewspaperARCHIVE.com.
  221. ^ "Mile Bicycle Record Broken". Philadelphia Times. November 16, 1898. p. 10 – via NewspaperARCHIVE.com.
  222. ^ ""Major" Taylor Breaks Record". New York Tribune. December 15, 1900. p. 3 – via Newspapers.com.
  223. ^ Kranish 2019, p. 296.
  224. ^ Taylor 1928, pp. 411–413.
  225. ^ "Major Taylor in Form". Sydney Daily Telegraph. August 28, 1908. p. 8 – via NewspaperARCHIVE.com.
  226. ^ "Leading Professionals Sidetrack Vailsburg—Gasgoyne's First Defeat in Pursuit Race". New-York Tribune. July 22, 1901. p. 8. Retrieved February 22, 2017 – via Newspapers.com.

Bibliography edit

  • Balf, Todd (2008). Major: A Black Athlete, a White Era, and the Fight to Be the World's Fastest Human Being. New York City: Three Rivers Press. ISBN 978-0-307-23658-6.
  • Brill, Marlene T. (2008). Marshall "Major" Taylor: World Champion Bicyclist, 1899–1901. Minneapolis, Minnesota: Twenty-First Century Books. ISBN 978-0-8225-6610-6.
  • Campbell, Ballard C. (2008). Disasters, Accidents, and Crises in American History: A Reference Guide to the Nation's Most Catastrophic Events. New York City: Infobase Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4381-3012-5.
  • Dalloni, Michel (2013). Le Vélo. 100 Questions sur (in French). Brussels: La Boétie. ISBN 978-2-368-65006-6.
  • Della Valle, Paul (2009). Massachusetts Troublemakers: Rebels, Reformers, and Radicals from the Bay State. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-7627-5795-4.
  • Gant, Jesse J.; Hoffman, Nicholas J. (Autumn 2013). "Wheel Fever". Wisconsin Magazine of History. Madison, Wisconsin: Wisconsin Historical Society.
  • Gray, Ralph D. (2003). IUPUI—the Making of an Urban University. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-34242-3.
  • Kerber, Conrad; Kerber, Terry (2014). Major Taylor: The Inspiring Story of a Black Cyclist and the Men Who Helped Him Achieve Worldwide Fame. New York City: Skyhorse Publishing. ISBN 978-1-62873-661-8.
  • Kranish, Michael (2019). The World's Fastest Man: The Extraordinary Life of Cyclist Major Taylor, America's First Black Sports Hero. New York City: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-1-5011-9261-6.
  • Novich, Max M. (1964). Abbotempo. United Kingdom: Abbott Universal.
  • Ritchie, Andrew (1988). Major Taylor: The Extraordinary Career of a Champion Bicycle Racer. Mill Valley, California: Bicycle Books. ISBN 978-0-8018-5303-6.
  • Taylor, Marshall (1928). The Fastest Bicycle Rider in the World: The Story of a Colored Boy's Indomitable Courage and Success Against Great Odds: An Autobiography. Worcester, Massachusetts: Wormley Publishing Company. OCLC 1989465. (reprinted Ayer, 2004: ISBN 9780836989106)

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Official website  
  • The Major Taylor Association
  • The Major Taylor Society

major, taylor, marshall, walter, major, taylor, november, 1878, june, 1932, american, professional, cyclist, even, modern, cycling, standards, taylor, could, considered, greatest, american, sprinter, time, taylor, july, 1907personal, informationfull, namemarsh. Marshall Walter Major Taylor November 26 1878 June 21 1932 was an American professional cyclist Even by modern cycling standards Taylor could be considered the greatest American sprinter of all time Major TaylorTaylor in July 1907Personal informationFull nameMarshall Walter TaylorNicknameWorcester WhirlwindBorn 1878 11 26 November 26 1878Indianapolis Indiana U S DiedJune 21 1932 1932 06 21 aged 53 Chicago Illinois U S Team informationDisciplineTrackRoleRiderRider typeSprinterAmateur teams1894 1895See Saw Cycling Club1895Albion Cycling ClubProfessional teams1896Worcester Cycle Manufacturing Company1899E C Stearns Bicycle Agency1900Iver Johnson s Arms amp Cycle WorksMajor winsLAW Sprint Championship 1899 National Sprint Championship 1900 Medal record Men s track cyclingRepresenting United StatesWorld Championships1899 Montreal SprintHe was born and raised in Indianapolis where he worked in bicycle shops and began racing multiple distances in the track and road disciplines of cycling As a teenager he moved to Worcester Massachusetts with his employer coach mentor and continued his successful amateur career which included breaking track records Taylor turned professional in 1896 at the age of 18 living in cities on the East Coast and participating in multiple track events including six day races He moved his focus to the sprint event in 1897 competing in a national racing circuit winning many races and gaining popularity with the public In 1898 and 1899 he set numerous world records in race distances ranging from the quarter mile 0 4 km to the two mile 3 2 km Taylor won the 1 mile sprint event at the 1899 world track championships to become the first African American to achieve the level of cycling world champion and the second black athlete to win a world championship in any sport following Canadian boxer George Dixon 1890 1 Taylor was also a national sprint champion in 1899 and 1900 He raced in the U S Europe and Australasia from 1901 to 1904 beating the world s best riders After a 2 1 2 year hiatus he made a comeback in 1907 1909 before retiring at age 32 to his home in Worcester in 1910 Towards the end of his life Taylor faced severe financial difficulties He spent the final two years of his life in Chicago Illinois where he died of a heart attack in 1932 Throughout his career he challenged the racial prejudice he encountered on and off the track and became a pioneering role model for other athletes facing racial discrimination Several cycling clubs trails and events in the U S have been named in his honor as well as the Major Taylor Velodrome in Indianapolis and Major Taylor Boulevard in Worcester Other tributes include memorials and historic markers in Worcester Indianapolis and at his gravesite in Chicago He has also been memorialized in film music and fashion Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Early years and East Coast move 2 Professional career 2 1 1896 First races 2 2 1897 1898 Fame and records 2 3 1899 World sprint champion 2 4 1900 American sprint champion 2 5 1901 1904 Europe and Australasia 2 6 1907 1910 Later years 3 Racism in cycling 4 Retirement and death 5 Legacy 5 1 Honors and tributes 5 2 In popular culture 6 Marriage and family 7 World records 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 Further reading 13 External linksEarly life editMarshall Walter Taylor was the son of Gilbert Taylor a Civil War veteran and Saphronia Kelter Taylor His parents migrated from Louisville Kentucky and settled on a farm in Bucktown a rural area on the western edge of Indianapolis Indiana Taylor who was born on November 26 1878 in Indianapolis was one of eight children in the family that included five girls and three boys Around 1887 his father began working in Indianapolis as a coachman for a wealthy white family named Southard 2 3 4 5 When Taylor was a child he occasionally accompanied his father to work Taylor soon became a close friend of the Southards son Daniel 5 who was the same age Approximately from the age of 8 6 until he was about 12 7 Taylor lived with the family and along with Daniel was tutored at their home Taylor s living arrangement with the Southards provided him with more advantages than his parents could provide however this period of his life abruptly ended when the Southards moved to Chicago Illinois 8 9 10 7 Taylor who remained in Indianapolis returned to live at his parents home and was soon thrust into the real world 5 The Southards provided Taylor with his first bicycle By 1891 or early 1892 he had become such an expert trick rider that Tom Hay an Indianapolis bicycle shop owner hired him to perform bicycle stunts in front of the Hay and Willits bicycle shop Taylor earned 6 a week for cleaning the shop and performing the stunts plus a free bicycle worth 35 8 3 11 It is likely that Taylor received his nickname of Major because he performed the cycling stunts wearing a military uniform 8 a nbsp Harry T Hearsey s bicycle shop in Downtown Indianapolis in 1896 where Taylor worked as a bicycle instructorTaylor left the Hay and Willits shop in 1892 or early 1893 to take a job as head trainer for Harry T Hearsey s bicycle shop in Indianapolis teaching local residents how to ride While working at Hearsey s shop Taylor got to know Louis D Birdie Munger 13 a former high wheel bicycle racer who owned the Munger Cycle Manufacturing Company a racing bicycle factory in Indianapolis Munger later established the Worcester Cycle Manufacturing Company factory in Worcester Massachusetts With a shared interest in bicycle racing the two became friends and Munger hired the teenaged Taylor to work odd jobs that included sending Taylor to area high schools and colleges to train cyclists and promote Munger s line of racing bicycles 14 15 16 17 Munger had also made up his mind to make Taylor a champion and coached him to become a racer 18 Early years and East Coast move edit Although he competed in both road and track races during his amateur career Taylor excelled in the track sprints especially the one mile 1 6 km race 19 20 The first cycling race Taylor won was a ten mile 16 km amateur event in Indianapolis in 1890 21 22 He received a 15 minute handicap head start in the road race because of his young age Taylor subsequently traveled to Peoria Illinois to compete in another meet finishing in third place in the under 16 age category 23 24 Taylor encountered racial prejudice throughout his racing career from some of his competitors In addition some local track owners feared that other cyclists would refuse to compete if Taylor was present for a bicycle race and banned him from their tracks 25 In 1893 for example after 15 year old Taylor beat a one mile amateur track record he was hooted and then barred from the track 18 Taylor joined the See Saw Cycling Club which was formed by black cyclists of Indianapolis who were unable to join the local all white Zig Zag Cycling Club 26 27 Major Taylor won his first significant cycling competition on June 30 1895 when he was the only rider to finish a grueling 75 mile 121 km road race near his hometown of Indianapolis During the race Taylor received threats from his white competitors who did not know that he had entered the event until the start of the race A few days later on July 4 1895 Taylor won a ten mile road race in Indianapolis that made him eligible to compete at the national championships for black racers in Chicago Later that summer he won the ten mile championship race in Chicago by ten lengths and set a new record for black cyclists of 27 32 28 25 29 30 nbsp The earliest press image of Taylor aged 18 from the July 6 1895 edition of Indianapolis News 31 In 1895 Taylor and Munger relocated from Indianapolis to Worcester At that time it was a center of the U S bicycle industry that included half a dozen factories and thirty bicycle shops Munger who was Taylor s employer lifelong friend and mentor had decided to move his bicycle manufacturing business to the state of Massachusetts 18 32 which was also a more tolerant area of the country 33 Munger and Charles Boyd a business partner established the Worcester Cycle Manufacturing Company with factories in Worcester and Middletown Connecticut For Taylor who continued to work for Munger as a bicycle mechanic and messenger between the company s two factory locations 18 34 35 the move to the East Coast offered higher visibility larger crowds increased sponsorship dollars and greater access to world class cycling venues 36 After Taylor s relocation to Massachusetts he joined the all black Albion Cycling Club in 1895 and trained at YMCA in Worcester 37 38 Taylor is first mentioned in The New York Times on September 26 1895 as a competitor in the Citizen Handicap event a ten mile race on Ocean Parkway in Brooklyn New York Taylor raced with a 1 30 handicap in a field of 200 competitors that included nine scratch riders 39 In 1896 Taylor entered numerous races in the Northeastern states of Massachusetts New Jersey and Connecticut After winning a ten mile road race in Worcester Taylor competed in the 25 mile 40 km Irvington Millburn race in New Jersey also known as the Derby of the East Within half a mile 0 8 km of the finish line someone startled Taylor by tossing ice water into his face and he finished in 23rd place Taylor s first major East Coast race was in a League of American Wheelmen LAW one mile contest in New Haven Connecticut where he started in last place but won the event 40 41 In August 1896 Taylor made a trip to Indianapolis where he set an unofficial new track record of 2 11 1 5 for a distance of one mile at the Capital City velodrome beating Walter Sanger s official track record of 2 19 2 5 Taylor could not compete with Sanger a professional racer in a head to head contest because he was still an amateur 42 43 44 45 Taylor s final amateur race took place on November 26 1896 in the 25 mile Tatum Handicap at Jamaica New York Taylor finished the race in 14th place 46 47 Professional career edit1896 First races edit nbsp Madison Square Garden II pictured in 1908 in New York City the venue of Taylor s first professional race in 1896Taylor turned professional in 1896 at the age of eighteen and soon emerged as the most formidable racer in America 18 Taylor s first professional race took place in front of 5 000 spectators on December 5 1896 He competed in a half mile handicap event on an indoor track at New York City s Madison Square Garden II on the opening day of a multi day event 48 49 Although the main event was a six day race fm December 6 12 other contests in shorter distances were held on December 5 to entertain the crowd These races included the half mile handicap for professionals in which Taylor competed a half mile race between Jay Eaton and Teddy Goodman and a half mile scratch race In addition there were half mile scratch and handicap races for amateurs 50 Taylor began the half mile handicap race on December 5 with a 35 yard 32 m advantage over the scratch racers He beat a field of competitors that included Tom Cooper Philadelphia s A C Meixwell and scratch rider Eddie C Bald who represented New York s Syracuse and rode a Barnes bicycle Taylor won the race riding Munger s Birdie Special bicycle and beat Bald by 20 yards 18 m in a sprint to the finish 51 52 53 From December 6 12 1896 Taylor participated as one of 28 competitors in a six day event at Madison Square Garden Although Taylor had just become a professional he had achieved enough notoriety possibly because of his stunning win on December 5 to be listed among the American contestants that also included A A Hansen the Minneapolis rainmaker and Teddy Goodman In addition many experts from abroad participated in the meet such as Switzerland s Albert Schock Germany s Frank J Waller Frank Forster and Ed von Hoeg and Canada s Burns W Pierce Several countries were represented in the event including Scotland Wales France England and Denmark 50 53 As the fascination with six day races spread across the Atlantic from its origins in the United Kingdom their appeal to base instincts attracted large crowds The more spectators who paid at the gate the bigger the prizes which provided riders with the incentive to stay awake or be kept awake in order to ride the greatest distance To prepare for the event Taylor went to Brooklyn where he became a member of the South Brooklyn Wheelmen An estimated crowd of 6 000 spectators attended the final day of the Madison Square Garden races in December 1896 54 55 During these long grueling races riders suffered delusions and hallucinations which may have been caused by exhaustion lack of sleep or perhaps use of drugs 56 49 57 b Madison Square Garden s six day event in 1896 was the longest race Taylor had ever entered After Taylor refused to continue racing on the final day of the long distance competition exhausted from physical exertion and lack of sleep a Bearnings reporter overheard him comment I cannot go on with safety for there is a man chasing me around the ring with a knife in his hand 59 Taylor completed a total of 1 732 miles 2 787 km in 142 hours of racing to finish in eighth place 60 Teddy Hale the race winner completed 1 910 miles 3 070 km and took home 5 000 in prize money Taylor never competed in another race that long 61 After Taylor s move to the East Coast in 1896 he initially lived in Worcester where he worked for Munger and in Middletown the site of another of Munger s cycle factories 39 Taylor also lived in other eastern cities such as South Brooklyn where he once trained 50 but it is not known how long he still resided in New York after he became a professional racer 62 1897 1898 Fame and records edit nbsp Taylor with the Boston pursuit team of 1897 one of the first known photographs of an integrated American professional sports team 63 Taylor initially raced for Munger s Worcester Cycle Manufacturing Company After the company went into receivership in 1897 he joined other racing teams 64 Taylor competed in his first full year on the professional racing circuit in 1897 65 Early in the season at the Bostonian Cycle Club s Blue Ribbon Meet on May 19 1897 Taylor rode a Comet bicycle to win first place in the one mile open professional race 66 On June 26 he won a quarter mile 0 4 km race at the track at Manhattan Beach Brooklyn Taylor also beat Eddie Bald in a one mile race in Reading Pennsylvania but finished fourth in the prestigious LAW convention in Philadelphia 67 68 69 As a professional racer Taylor continued to experience racial prejudice as a black cyclist in a white dominated sport 60 In November and December 1897 when the circuit extended to the racially segregated South local race promoters refused to let Taylor compete because he was black Taylor returned to Massachusetts for the remainder of the season and Eddie Bald became the American sprint champion in 1897 Despite the obstacles Taylor was determined to race 70 In the early years of his professional racing career Taylor s reputation continued to increase as he competed in and won more races Newspapers began referring to him as the Worcester Whirlwind the Black Cyclone the Ebony Flyer the Colored Cyclone and the Black Zimmerman among other nicknames He also gained popularity among the spectators 71 72 73 One of his fans was President Theodore Roosevelt who kept track of Taylor throughout his seventeen year racing career 18 nbsp Taylor on the front of the November 1 1898 edition of the French sports magazine La Vie au grand air fr Early in the 1898 racing season Taylor beat Bald at Manhattan Beach but lost to Eddie McDuffie at Cambridge Massachusetts in a 30 mile 48 km paced race On July 17 at Philadelphia Taylor won his biggest victories of the season first place in the one mile championship and second place in the one mile handicap races On August 27 in a head to head race with Jimmy Michael of Wales Taylor set a new world record of 1 41 2 5 for a one mile paced match and beat the Welsh racer to the finish by 20 yards 18 m 74 75 Taylor was among several top cyclists who could claim the national championship in 1898 however scoring variations and the formation of a new cycling league that year clouded his claim to the title 18 Early in the year a group of professional racers that included Taylor had left the LAW to join a rival group the American Racing Cyclists Union ARCU and its professional racing group the National Cycling Association NCA During the ARCU sprint championship in St Louis and Cape Girardeau Missouri Taylor who was a devout Baptist refused to compete for religious reasons in the finals of the championship races because they were held on a Sunday As a result of Taylor s decision not to race in the finals at Cape Girardeau the ARCU suspended him from membership Taylor petitioned the LAW for reinstatement in 1898 and was accepted but Tom Butler who had remained a LAW member after the break up was declared the League s champion that year 76 77 78 c During 1898 99 at the peak of his cycling career Taylor established seven world records 33 18 the quarter mile the one third mile 0 5 km the half mile the two thirds mile 1 1 km the three quarters mile 1 2 km the one mile and the two mile 3 2 km distances His one mile world record of 1 41 from a standing start stood for 28 years 60 1899 World sprint champion edit nbsp Taylor became the first Black American to win a world championship in any sport at the 1899 track world championships at the Velodrome de Queen s Park in Montreal Canada At the 1899 world championships in Montreal Canada Taylor won the one mile sprint to become the first African American to win a world championship in cycling Taylor was the second black athlete after Canadian bantamweight boxer George Dixon of Boston to win a world championship in any sport 33 45 For decades he was the only black athlete to be a world champion in cycling 80 81 Taylor won the one mile world championship sprint in a close finish a few feet ahead of Frenchman Courbe d Outrelon and American Tom Butler 82 83 In addition Taylor placed second in the two mile championship sprint at Montreal behind Charles McCarthy and won the half mile championship race 18 84 85 86 Because the finals were held on Sundays when Taylor refused to compete for religious reasons he did not compete in another world championship contest until 1909 in Copenhagen Denmark Taylor lost in a preliminary heat at Copenhagen and did not compete in the finals 87 After Taylor s world championship win in 1899 many claimed that the event had been a farce because Taylor had not competed against the strongest riders 88 World cycling s governing body the International Cycling Association replaced with the Union Cycliste Internationale UCI in 1900 did not allow NCA racers to compete at the world championships in Montreal As a result Taylor s accomplishments were somewhat diminished Because the rival organizations LAW and the NCA would not recognize each other two American champions were crowned in 1899 Tom Cooper was the NCA champion and Taylor was the LAW champion 89 90 In addition to the world championship wins in the one mile and two mile distances at Montreal and the LAW Championship which he won on points Taylor s victories in 1899 included twenty two first place finishes in major championship races around the U S Taylor s record setting times were impossible to dismiss No other rider had matched the range and variety of his winning performances which made him an international celebrity 18 91 88 92 In 1899 Taylor made several unsuccessful attempts to recapture his world record for a one mile paced distance in two strenuous record breaking campaigns before he finally achieved the new world record of 1 19 in November to regain the title of the fastest man in the world 93 94 For the 1899 racing season Taylor went to Syracuse and with Munger s assistance he signed a contract to race for the E C Stearns Company Taylor Munger and Harry Sager who was Taylor s bicycle parts sponsor initially planned to negotiate a deal with the Olive Wheel Company however the men were able to work out a more lucrative contract with Stearns who agreed to build Taylor s bicycles using a chainless gear mechanism that Sanger had designed The bicycles only weighed about 20 pounds 9 1 kg and had an 88 inch 2 200 mm gear for sprinting and a 120 inch 3 000 mm gear for longer paced runs 95 96 Stearns also agreed to build Taylor a revolutionary steam powered pacing tandem behind which he could attack world records and challenge the leading exponents of paced racing 97 Although the tandem was temperamental it helped Taylor break Eddie McDuffie s one mile world record on November 15 1899 with a time of 1 19 at a speed of 45 56 mph 73 32 km h 98 In late 1899 Taylor signed a contract to race with the Iver Johnson s Arms amp Cycle Works team of Fitchburg Massachusetts during the 1900 racing season 99 1900 American sprint champion edit In 1900 when the LAW no longer governed professional bicycle races in the U S Taylor s future as a professional racer was in jeopardy Fortunately the ARCU and the NCA who had banned Taylor from competing in their leagues readmitted him after payment of a 500 fine 93 100 Taylor won the American sprint championship on points in 1900 He also beat Tom Cooper the 1899 NCA champion in a head to head match in a one mile race at Madison Square Garden in front of 50 000 to 60 000 spectators In addition Taylor set world records in the half mile and two thirds mile sprints and raced indoors using a home trainer in head to head competitions with other riders as a vaudeville act 101 102 103 Taylor eventually settled in Worcester where he purchased a home on Hobson Street in 1900 62 1901 1904 Europe and Australasia edit nbsp Taylor racing against Edmond Jacquelin at Paris Parc des Princes in 1901Following his record setting successes in the U S and Canada Taylor agreed to a European tour In 1901 Taylor made his first trip to Europe but returned to compete in the U S after the conclusion of the European spring racing season During his European tour Taylor still refused to race on Sundays when most of the finals were held because of his religious convictions 104 105 106 107 It was reported that Taylor took a Bible with him when he travelled and began each race with a silent prayer because of his religious beliefs 18 nbsp Trophy presented to Major Taylor at Parc des Princes Paris on May 27 1901 in the Indiana State Museum and Historic Sites CollectionTaylor was popular among the European race fans and news reporters Everywhere he went he was mobbed talked about or written up 108 In 1901 Taylor won 18 of the 24 European races he entered notching up 42 victories when the individual heats are counted 109 A highlight of Taylor s European tour in 1901 was the two match races with French champion Edmond Jacquelin at the Parc des Princes in Paris the winner in each decided over the best of three heats Jacquelin won the first match on May 16 two heats to nil a wheel length sealing the win in the first heat two lengths the gap in the second Taylor triumphed in the second match on May 27 two heats to nil four lengths his margin of victory in the first heat three the gap in the second 109 Taylor also participated in a European tour in 1902 when he entered 57 races and won 40 of them to defeat the champions of Germany England and France 18 In addition to racing in Europe Taylor also competed in Australia and New Zealand in 1903 and 1904 In February 1903 for example Taylor lured by a 1 200 appearance fee and a world record 1st prize of 750 competed in the inaugural Sydney Thousand handicap His fee the next year hit 2 000 110 111 During his world tour in 1903 Taylor earned prize money estimated at 35 000 923 352 in 2015 chained dollars 112 1907 1910 Later years edit nbsp Taylor and Leon Hourlier at a standstill during a race at Paris Velodrome Buffalo in 1909Following a collapse from the mental and physical strain of professional competition Taylor took a 2 1 2 year hiatus from cycling between 1904 and 1906 before returning to race in France He set two world records in Paris in 1907 for the half mile standing start at 0 42 1 5 and the quarter mile standing start at 0 25 2 5 Taylor also returned to Europe for the racing season in 1908 and in 1909 He finally broke his long standing decision to avoid Sunday races in 1909 when he was nearing the end of his racing career Taylor s last professional race took place on October 10 1909 in Roanne France in a match race against French world champion Charles Dupre Taylor won the race but he did not return to Europe for the 1910 season and retired from competitive cycling 113 114 115 Taylor was still breaking records in 1908 but his age was starting to creep up on him 18 He retired from racing in 1910 at the age of 32 When Taylor returned to his home in Worcester at the end of his racing career his estimated net worth was 75 000 1 978 611 in 2015 chained dollars to 100 000 2 638 148 in 2015 chained dollars Taylor won his final competition an old timers race among former professional racers in New Jersey in September 1917 116 117 118 Racism in cycling edit nbsp A caricature published in the edition of February 23 1894 of The Bearings cycling magazine illustrating the ban of blacks from membership to the League of American WheelmenAs Taylor gained notoriety as an amateur and a professional he did not escape racial segregation In 1894 the LAW changed its bylaws to exclude blacks from membership however it did permit them to compete in its races Although Taylor s cycling was greatly celebrated abroad particularly in France his career was still restricted by racism particularly in the Southern U S where some local promoters would not permit Taylor to compete against white cyclists 119 120 121 122 Some restaurants and hotels also refused to serve him or provide him lodging 8 Taylor asserted in his autobiography that prominent bicycle racers of his era often cooperated to defeat him such as the Butler brothers Nat and Tom were accused of doing in the one mile world championship race at Montreal in 1899 At the LAW races in Boston shortly after Taylor had won the world championship he accused the entire field that included Tom Cooper and Eddie Bald among others for fouling him 123 124 Taylor complained after the event that he had been bumped jostled and elbowed until I was sorely tried 125 126 127 Racing promoter William A Brady who was also Taylor s manager chastised the other riders for their rough treatment of Taylor during the race 124 While some of Taylor s fellow racers refused to compete with him others resorted to intimidation verbal insults and threats to physically harm him 8 While racing in Savannah Georgia in the Winter of 1898 he received a written threat saying Clear out if you value your life the previous day Taylor had challenged three riders together to a race after one of them had said they didn t pace niggers 128 Taylor recalled that ice water had been thrown at him during races and nails were scattered in front of his wheels Taylor further stated in his autobiography that he had been elbowed and pocketed boxed in by other riders to prevent him from sprinting to the front of the pack a tactic at which he was so successful 129 130 126 127 Taylor s competitors also tried to injure him One incident occurred after the one mile Massachusetts Open race at Taunton on September 23 1897 at the conclusion of the race William Becker who placed third behind Taylor in second place tackled Taylor on the race track and choked him into unconsciousness Becker who claimed that Taylor had crowded him during the race was temporarily suspended while the incident was investigated Becker received a 50 fine as punishment for his actions but was reinstated and allowed to continue racing In another incident which occurred in February 1904 when Taylor was competing in Australia he was seriously injured on the final turn of a race when fellow competitor Iver Lawson veered his bicycle toward Taylor and collided with his front wheel Taylor crashed and lay unconscious on the track before he was taken to a local hospital and later made a full recovery Lawson was suspended from racing anywhere in the world for a year as a result of his actions 8 131 132 Life is too short for any man to hold bitterness in his heart and that is why I have no feeling against anybody Marshall Taylor 133 Taylor explained that he included details of these incidents in his autobiography along with his comments about his experiences to serve as an inspiration for other African American athletes trying to overcome racial prejudice and discriminatory treatment in sports Taylor cited exhaustion as well as the physical and mental strain caused by the racial prejudice he experienced on and off the track as his reasons for retiring from competitive cycling in 1910 134 135 His advice to African American youths wishing to emulate him straightforward was that although bicycle racing had been the appropriate route to success for him he would not recommend it in general He suggested that individuals practice clean living fair play and good sportsmanship and develop their best talent with a strong character significant willpower and physical courage 136 Despite many obstacles Taylor rose to the top of his sport and became one of the dominant athletes of his era 22 Retirement and death edit nbsp Taylor in 1926 aged 47 48 nbsp 1914 newspaper ad offering shares of the Major Taylor Manufacturing Company nbsp Taylor s grave at Mount Glenwood Memory Gardens South After retiring from competition Taylor applied to Worcester Polytechnic Institute to study engineering despite the fact that he did not have a high school diploma but he was denied admission 137 and took up various business ventures Nearly twenty years after his retirement Taylor wrote and self published his autobiography The Fastest Bicycle Rider in the World The Story of a Colored Boy s Indomitable Courage and Success Against Great Odds An Autobiography 1928 d According to his book Taylor was upbeat about his retirement I felt I had my day and a wonderful day it was too Taylor also claimed he had no regrets and no animosity toward any man but his autobiography included hints of bitterness in regard to his treatment as a competitor I always played the game fairly and tried my hardest although I was not always given a square deal or anything like it 139 By 1930 Taylor had experienced severe financial difficulties from bad investments including self publishing his autobiography the stock market crash and businesses that proved unsuccessful Taylor s home in Worcester and some of the family s personal property were sold to pay off debts He also suffered from persistent ill health in his later years 140 141 142 Little is known of Taylor s life after the failure of his marriage and his move to Chicago around 1930 Taylor spent the final two years of his life in poverty selling copies of his autobiography to earn a meagre income and residing at YMCA Hotel in Chicago s Bronzeville neighborhood 143 In March 1932 Taylor suffered a heart attack and was hospitalized in the Provident Hospital After an unsuccessful heart operation he was moved to Cook County Hospital s charity ward in April where he died on June 21 at age 53 The official cause on his death certificate is nephrosclerosis and hypertension contributed by Chronic myocarditis 144 His wife and daughter who survived him did not immediately learn of his death and no one claimed his remains He was initially buried at Mount Glenwood Cemetery in Thornton Township Cook County near Chicago in an unmarked pauper s grave 145 In 1948 a group of former professional bicycle racers used funds donated by Frank W Schwinn owner of the Schwinn Bicycle Co at that time to organize the exhumation and reburial of Taylor s remains in a more prominent location at the cemetery 146 147 The plaque at the grave reads World s champion bicycle racer who came up the hard way without hatred in his heart an honest courageous and God fearing clean living gentlemanly athlete A credit to his race who always gave out his best Gone but not forgotten 148 Legacy editTaylor s legacy lies in his willingness to challenge racial prejudice as an African American athlete in the white dominated sport of cycling He was also hailed as a sports hero in France and Australia Taylor who became a role model for other athletes facing racial prejudice and discrimination 8 was the first great black celebrity athlete and a pioneer in his efforts to challenge segregation in sports He also paved the way for others facing similar circumstances 60 Taylor explained in his autobiography that he had no other African Americans to offer him advice and therefore had to blaze my own trail 136 Honors and tributes edit Honors and tributes nbsp A plaque commemorating the 1982 dedication of the Major Taylor Velodrome in Indianapolis Indiana nbsp Memorial to Taylor outside the Worcester Public Library nbsp Major Taylor Boulevard in Worcester nbsp Major Taylor Museum in Worcester Taylor s legacy remained largely unknown until 1982 when the Major Taylor Velodrome in Indianapolis opened for the city s hosting of the U S Olympic Festival 149 Annual events taking place in the velodrome or the wider Indy Cycloplex named in honor of Taylor include the Major Taylor Racing League track series and from 2015 the Major Taylor Cross Cup second division UCI cyclo cross event 150 Taylor was posthumously inducted into the U S Bicycling Hall of Fame in 1989 151 In 1996 and 1997 Taylor was posthumously awarded with the USA Cycling Korbel Lifetime Achievement Award and the Massachusetts Hall of Black Achievement respectively 152 153 In 2002 he was one of the nine track cyclists inducted into the UCI Hall of Fame created to commemorate 100 years of the Paris Roubaix one day road race and the inauguration of the World Cycling Centre 154 In 2003 he was named a Sports Ethics Fellow by the Institute for International Sport 155 During the 2005 UCI Track Cycling World Championships in Los Angeles a Peugeot bicycle that Taylor had owned and then was donated to the U S Bicycling Hall of Fame was put on display inside the ADT Event Center 156 In 2009 a state historical marker was installed as a tribute to Taylor near the Indiana State Fairgrounds in Indianapolis where the Capital City track once stood and where he had set an unofficial track record in 1896 45 In 2018 he was honored with a special tribute award at the International Athletic Association s Jesse Owens Awards held at the National Museum of African American History and Culture 157 In 1998 in Taylor s adopted hometown of Worcester where he lived for 35 years the Major Taylor Association was formed by locals with the goal of erecting a permanent memorial to Taylor outside the Worcester Public Library and telling his story 158 159 160 161 On July 24 2006 the city renamed the Worcester Center Boulevard a high traffic downtown street to Major Taylor Boulevard 162 163 At the same time funding for the memorial was secured with the Massachusetts Legislature approving 205 000 signed by governor Mitt Romney 162 The opening ceremony took place on May 21 2008 attended by Tour de France winner Greg LeMond 159 The memorial features a bronze sculpture of Taylor surrounded by granite was created by Antonio Tobias Mendez who was chosen from over more than 60 others 164 At the grand opening of Worcester s Applebee s restaurant in 2000 Taylor was selected as their hometown hero and has a display of his memorabilia 165 In 2002 the Educational Association of Worcester and the Worcester Public Schools together with the Major Taylor Association developed a curriculum guide on Taylor 166 which has since been expanded and used in schools nationwide 165 Since 2003 Worcester has hosted the annual George Street Bike Challenge for Major Taylor amateur hillclimb event 167 The first of the many cycling clubs named in Taylor s honor was organized in Columbus Ohio in 1979 168 169 In 2008 a number of these clubs joined with other African American clubs to form the National Brotherhood of Cyclists NBC a nonprofit organization that aims to further diversity in cycling 170 The Major Taylor Trail a six mile long 9 7 km rail trail that navigates through South Side Chicago opened in 2007 Eleven years later Chicagoan artist Bernard Williams oversaw the creation of a 400 foot long 120 m community mural honoring Taylor along the metal siding of the Little Calumet River bridge which the trail crosses 171 Taylor is also celebrated along the Alum Creek Greenway Trail in Columbus Ohio 172 In 2009 the Cascade Bicycle Club community organization of Washington state launched The Major Taylor Project a youth cycling program 173 A small museum devoted to Taylor opened in 2021 in the former Worcester County Courthouse 174 Taylor s great granddaughter attended the dedication 174 In popular culture edit Actor Philip Morris portrayed Taylor in the 1992 television mini series Tracks of Glory 175 Blues musician Otis Taylor no relation recorded He Never Raced on Sunday a song about Taylor for his 2004 album Double V 176 In 2007 Nike produced the Major Taylor premium collection of their most iconic sneakers in a light brown neon yellow white colorway 177 In the same year SOMA Fabrications began making a set of bicycle handlebars called the Major Taylor Bar which is a replica of 1930s drop handlebar that was named for Taylor 178 179 Dewshane Williams portrayed Taylor in the 2013 episode of television drama series Murdoch Mysteries Tour de Murdoch 180 On April 12 2018 at a private exhibition in the TheTimesCenter in New York City 181 cognac brand Hennessy announced that Taylor would become the subject the company s fifth instalment of their Wild Rabbit advertising campaign created with agency Droga5 which through a series of partnerships tells inspirational the stories of culturally influential people with the slogan Never stop Never settle 182 The event included the unveiling some of the partnerships including Kadir Nelson s bronze sculpture of Taylor The Major 181 The campaign launched to the public with a television commercial during the 2018 NBA Finals in April 181 The Major directed by Derek Cianfrance which has cuts in various lengths features a voiceover from rapper Nas and recreates Taylor racing in an indoor velodrome 183 184 The 30 second cut was shown during third and fourth quarters of the Super Bowl LIII in February 2019 Hennessy s first appearance in a Super Bowl commercial 185 186 On April 22 2018 ESPN premiered the Hennessy sponsored television documentary short The Six Day Race The Story of Marshall Major Taylor directed by Colin Barnicle it features interviews with contemporary African American athletes road cyclist Ayesha McGowan and BMX rider Nigel Sylvester 183 In 2019 two Taylor inspired brand collaborations were released with part of the proceeds going to the NBC Kerby Jean Raymond under his haute couture fashion label Pyer Moss designed a five piece collection MMT 140 and Affinity Cycles made limited run of a modern replica Taylor era track bicycle 187 In partnership with the NBC a series of tribute bicycle rides took place across the U S in November and December marking Taylor s birth date and the creation of the 25 000 MMT Higher Education Scholarship awarded to one winner with the best Never stop Never settle story 170 183 Also in 2019 Taylor s name and likeness was licensed to Major Taylor Cycling Wear of Columbus Ohio to manufacture and distribute official sports and cycling wear bearing the image of Major Taylor Graphic novel publisher Drawn and Quarterly plans to publish a biography of Taylor by comic artist Frederick Noland in 2023 188 Marriage and family edit nbsp Taylor with his wife Daisy and daughter Sydney c 1906 1907Taylor s wife Daisy Victoria Morris was born on January 28 1876 in Hudson New York Taylor married Morris in Ansonia Connecticut on March 21 1902 Taylor met her around 1900 when she was living in Worcester with her aunt and uncle 189 190 191 192 193 145 While in Australia in 1904 Taylor and his wife had their only child a daughter that they named Rita Sydney in honor of Sydney where she was born on May 11 194 195 When Taylor his wife and daughter were not traveling they lived in a large home on Hobson Avenue in Worcester that Taylor had purchased in 1900 62 After his retirement from racing in 1910 and the failure of subsequent business ventures in the 1920s Taylor and his wife became estranged She left him in 1930 and moved to New York City Around the same time Taylor left Worcester and moved to Chicago he never saw his wife or daughter again 196 Taylor s daughter who graduated from the Sargent School of Culture in Boston in 1925 and the University of Chicago in 1936 taught physical education at West Virginia State University She died in 2005 at age 101 her survivors include a son Dallas C Brown Jr and his five children 112 197 In 1984 Taylor s daughter donated an extensive scrapbook collection on her father to the University of Pittsburgh Archives 198 World records editList of world records set by Major Taylor Date Distance Pacing start Time Location RefsSeptember 2 1896 1 5 mile 0 32 km Unpaced flying start 0 23 3 5 Capital City Track Indianapolis 199 200 August 27 1898 1 mile 1 6 km Paced standing start 1 43 2 5 Manhattan Beach New York City 201 202 1 mile 1 6 km Paced standing start 1 41 2 5September 5 1898 1 2 mile 0 80 km Single paced competition 0 58 4 5 Hampden Park Springfield MA 203 204 November 4 1898 1 kilometer 0 62 mi Paced 0 57 3 5 Woodside Park Philadelphia 205 206 November 5 1898 1 4 mile 0 40 km Paced 0 22 2 5 206 207 2 miles 3 2 km Paced 3 13 3 5November 12 1898 1 mile 1 6 km Paced 1 32 208 209 1 2 mile 0 80 km Paced 0 45 4 51 2 mile 0 80 km Paced 0 45 3 5November 14 1898 1 3 mile 0 54 km Paced 0 29 4 5 210 November 15 1898 1 2 mile 0 80 km Paced 0 45 2 5 211 212 1 mile 1 6 km Paced 1 321 4 mile 0 40 km Paced 0 22 1 51 3 mile 0 54 km Paced 0 29 3 51 2 mile 0 80 km Paced 0 45 2 53 4 mile 1 2 km Paced 1 08 3 51 mile 1 6 km Paced 1 32November 16 1898 1 4 mile 0 40 km Paced 0 22 1 5 213 214 1 3 mile 0 54 km Paced 0 29 3 51 2 mile 0 80 km Paced 0 45 2 52 3 mile 1 1 km Paced 1 00 4 51 mile 1 6 km Paced 1 31 4 51 2 mile 0 80 km Paced 0 45 1 53 4 mile 1 2 km Paced 1 08 2 5August 3 1899 1 mile 1 6 km Motor paced 1 22 2 5 Garfield Park Chicago 215 216 November 9 1899 1 4 mile 0 40 km Motor paced 0 20 217 218 November 10 1899 1 2 mile 0 80 km Motor paced 0 41 219 220 November 15 1899 1 mile 1 6 km Motor paced 1 19 221 December 14 1900 1 4 mile 0 40 km Unpaced 0 25 4 5 Madison Square Garden New York City 222 August 1908 1 2 mile 0 80 km Standing start 0 42 1 5 Velodrome Buffalo Paris 223 224 1 4 mile 0 40 km Standing start 0 25 2 5August 26 1908 1 mile 1 6 km Motor paced 1 33 2 5 225 See also edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp Sports portal nbsp Indiana portalList of African American firsts List of African American sports firsts List of cyclists List of former students of the Conservatoire de Paris List of Indiana state historical markers in Marion County List of people from Indianapolis List of people from Worcester Massachusetts Thomas Gascoyne e Major Taylor TrailNotes edit Andrew Ritchie one of Taylor s biographers offers other potential explanations for Taylor s nickname but his military uniform appears to be the most likely reason although Taylor never confirmed it 12 The extent of drug use during the era in which Taylor raced is uncertain but it was not uncommon At that time many narcotics and pharmaceutical drugs including opium laudanum morphine heroin and cocaine among others could be obtained legally 58 Their exhaustion was countered by soigneurs French carers helpers akin to seconds in boxing Nitroglycerine a drug used to stimulate the heart after cardiac attacks and was credited with improving riders breathing was also among the treatments supplied to riders 56 Earl Kiser nicknamed the Little Dayton Demon raced for the Stearns Yellow Fellow team during the same era as Taylor Kiser became a two time world cycling champion and competed all across Europe in the late 1890s After Taylor was barred from racing Kiser petitioned the ARCU to have him included 79 The original version of Taylor s autobiography printed by The Commonwealth Press in Worcester Massachusetts has a copyright date of 1928 however other sources indicate that it was not published until 1929 138 45 Thomas Gascoyne was a dual world recordholder from England who defeated Taylor twice in one day at Boston on July 20 1901 226 References edit George Dixon American boxer Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 4 a b Kerber amp Kerber 2014 pp 8 9 Ritchie 1988 p 13 a b c Who was Major Taylor Bridgewater State University November 17 2004 Archived from the original on March 6 2012 Taylor 1928 p 1 a b Ritchie 1988 p 15 a b c d e f g Heyman Brian 2010 Stories of African American Achievement PDF Bureau of International Information Programs pp 16 19 Archived PDF from the original on April 9 2017 Retrieved April 8 2017 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 pp 4 5 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 10 Ritchie 1988 p 18 Ritchie 1988 p 19 Ritchie 1988 p 25 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 pp 10 11 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 37 Ritchie 1988 pp 21 23 Ritchie 1988 p 46 a b c d e f g h i j k l m They had a Dream Chronicle Telegram Elyria Ohio March 8 1970 via NewspaperARCHIVE com Kerber amp Kerber 2014 pp 17 18 Ritchie 1988 p 31 Kranish 2019 p 25 26 a b Ogden Dale Winter 1999 Beginnings The Ebony Streak Traces of Indiana and Midwestern History Indianapolis Indiana Historical Society 11 1 28 Archived from the original on January 19 2019 Retrieved January 19 2019 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 pp 9 10 Kranish 2019 pp 26 a b Kerber amp Kerber 2014 pp 34 36 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 34 Ritchie 1988 p 43 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 pp 32 33 Ritchie 1988 pp 32 33 Ritchie 1988 pp 43 45 Taylor the colored rider Indianapolis News July 6 1895 p 9 via NewspaperARCHIVE com Moore Wilma L Fall 2012 Everyday People Sports Champions and History Makers Traces of Indiana and Midwestern History Indianapolis Indiana Historical Society 24 4 29 Archived from the original on January 19 2019 Retrieved January 19 2019 a b c Arvia Phil October 18 2009 Recalling a Champ Cyclist Major Taylor SouthtownStar Tinley Park Illinois via Newspapers com Kerber amp Kerber 2014 pp 58 59 Ritchie 1988 pp 50 51 Gant amp Hoffman 2013 p 51 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 pp 61 63 Ritchie 1988 p 52 a b Pedalers Ready to Race The New York Times September 26 1895 p 6 via Newspapers com Kerber amp Kerber 2014 pp 64 65 Ritchie 1988 pp 54 56 Gant amp Hoffman 2013 p 53 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 pp 65 66 Ritchie 1988 p 57 a b c d Marshall Major Taylor Indiana Historical Bureau Archived from the original on March 31 2017 Retrieved February 23 2017 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 80 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 86 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 pp 86 88 a b Ritchie 1988 p 61 a b c Six Day Cycle Race The Fort Wayne News Fort Wayne Indiana December 5 1896 via NewspaperARCHIVE com Kerber amp Kerber 2014 pp 85 88 Ritchie 1988 p 62 a b Severe Spills Defective Banking at Madison Square Garden Throws Many Riders Syracuse Daily Standard Syracuse New York December 6 1896 via NewspaperARCHIVE com Kerber amp Kerber 2014 pp 84 85 Ritchie 1988 p 60 a b Novich 1964 Ritchie 1988 p 65 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 45 Ritchie 1988 p 66 a b c d Southwick Albert B September 16 2001 Who was Major Taylor Telegram amp Gazette Worcester Massachusetts Archived from the original on June 14 2018 Retrieved February 7 2019 via Major Taylor Association Inc Ritchie 1988 pp 67 68 a b c Ritchie 1988 p 138 O Connor Brion February 25 2015 Honoring Major Taylor America s first black world champion in any sport Sports Illustrated Time Inc Archived from the original on April 6 2017 Retrieved April 5 2017 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 pp 116 117 Ritchie 1988 p 74 Again Winners Newton Tires Boston Daily Globe May 23 1897 via NewspaperARCHIVE com Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 100 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 pp 103 104 Ritchie 1988 p 71 Ritchie 1988 p 81 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 95 Gant amp Hoffman 2013 p 50 Ritchie 1988 p 73 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 139 Ritchie 1988 p 95 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 142 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 pp 147 148 Ritchie 1988 pp 102 103 Archdeacon Tom July 10 2012 Local shares story of overlooked athlete Dayton Daily News Cox Ohio Publishing Archived from the original on February 7 2019 Retrieved April 7 2017 Nine time track world champion Gregory Bauge announces retirement January 11 2021 Pego June 20 2020 Marshall Walter Taylor 1878 1932 GVA Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 165 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 168 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 pp 161 162 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 166 Ritchie 1988 pp 127 129 Ritchie 1988 p 128 a b Ritchie 1988 p 133 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 pp 158 159 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 167 Ritchie 1988 p 131 Ritchie 1988 p 135 a b Kerber amp Kerber 2014 pp 173 175 Ritchie 1988 p 134 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 pp 153 154 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 169 Ritchie 1988 p 114 Ritchie 1988 pp 130 131 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 181 Ritchie 1988 p 142 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 189 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 193 Ritchie 1988 pp 155 156 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 199 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 203 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 207 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 254 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 210 a b McKay Feargal January 9 2022 Mythologies Major Taylor Henri Desgrange and a Wheelbarrow Full of Centimes Podium Cafe Retrieved January 21 2022 Jarratt Phil May 24 2016 History of Cycling in Australia Australian Geographic Comment by Phill Bates Track Cycling Crisis Point December 12 2018 Retrieved January 16 2020 a b Ogden Dale Winter 1989 Thunderbolt The Ebony Streak The Blond Terror of Terre Haute Traces of Indiana and Midwestern History Indianapolis Indiana Historical Society 1 1 42 Archived from the original on January 19 2019 Retrieved January 19 2019 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 297 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 pp 303 308 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 pp 315 316 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 306 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 311 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 321 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 pp 31 32 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 115 Ritchie 1988 p 37 Ritchie 1988 p 41 Ritchie 1988 p 125 a b Ritchie 1988 p 129 Taylor 1928 p 37 a b Kerber amp Kerber 2014 pp 106 107 a b Kerber amp Kerber 2014 pp 109 110 Della Valle 2009 pp 214 215 Taylor 1928 pp 59 60 Taylor 1928 pp 62 63 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 pp 88 92 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 pp 112 113 Taylor 1928 p 422 Taylor 1928 p Forward Taylor 1928 p 420 a b Taylor 1928 p 427 Rhoden William C 2006 40 million slaves the rise fall and redemption of the black athlete New York New York Crown pp 89 90 ISBN 0307565742 Retrieved January 5 2023 Ritchie 1988 pp 239 243 Taylor 1928 pp 421 422 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 pp 320 322 Ritchie 1988 pp 221 225 Ritchie 1988 p 235 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 335 Ritchie 1988 pp 252 253 a b Ritchie 1988 p 255 Ritchie 1988 pp 256 257 Brill 2008 p 95 Della Valle 2009 pp 217 218 Gray 2003 p 188 Cyclocross Indy Cycloplex Retrieved February 7 2019 Marshall Major Taylor U S Bicycling Hall of Fame Archived from the original on April 6 2017 Retrieved April 5 2017 Tolman Lynne February 8 1998 Major Taylor s influence continues Major Taylor Association Archived from the original on December 28 2016 Retrieved April 11 2017 Marshall Walter Major Taylor Massachusetts Hall of Black Achievement Bridgewater State University January 1997 Archived from the original on May 22 2017 Retrieved April 11 2017 Paris Roubaix 100 Years Old and the UCI s WCC Inauguration in Aigle UCI April 14 2002 Archived from the original on August 17 2012 Retrieved April 8 2017 Major Taylor recognized for sportsmanship March 2003 Archived from the original on December 28 2016 Retrieved April 11 2017 Maloney Tim March 22 2005 Major Taylor s bike displayed at Track World s Cyclingnews com Immediate Media Company Archived from the original on February 7 2019 Retrieved February 6 2019 Olympic Gold Medalist Bob Beamon amp World Champion Cyclist Marshall Major Taylor Receive 2018 Jesse Owens Awards Press release Hennessy PR Newswire October 11 2018 Archived from the original on May 23 2019 Retrieved May 23 2019 Tolman Lynne July 23 1995 Worcester Whirlwind overcame bias Telegram amp Gazette Worcester MA Archived from the original on January 7 2017 Retrieved February 7 2019 via LTolman org a b A Major Monument Cyclingnews com Immediate Media Company May 26 2008 Archived from the original on February 7 2019 Retrieved February 6 2019 Tolman Lynne June 7 1998 Put a lid on bike injuries Telegram amp Gazette Worcester MA Archived from the original on January 7 2017 Retrieved February 6 2019 via LTolman org Nony Celine August 12 2018 Black sports stars Major Taylor so long forgotten PDF L Equipe Archived PDF from the original on February 7 2019 via LTolman org a b A proper tribute Major Taylor Boulevard honors cycling champ PDF Telegram amp Gazette Worcester MA July 25 2006 Archived PDF from the original on July 24 2008 via Major Taylor Association Inc Schworm Peter July 24 2006 A black athlete changed the gears of cycling s world The Boston Globe Archived from the original on April 7 2017 Retrieved April 5 2017 The Statue Major Taylor Association Inc Archived from the original on June 16 2018 Retrieved February 6 2019 a b Tolman Lynne May 2007 The Major PDF Bike Culture Magazine No 138 Lexington MA Deb Fries Archived PDF from the original on October 19 2013 via Major Taylor Association Inc Walsh Virginia Dufault Janet Pulda Arnold Major Taylor curriculum guide 2011 PDF Major Taylor Association Inc Archived PDF from the original on February 7 2019 Conti Mark July 8 2017 Cycling Major Taylor era bike to make George Street climb Telegram amp Gazette Worcester MA Archived from the original on July 14 2017 Retrieved February 7 2017 Major Taylor Cycling Club Long Street Tour Archived from the original on April 6 2017 Retrieved April 5 2017 Directory Major Taylor Cycling Clubs of America Archived from the original on February 7 2019 Retrieved February 6 2019 a b Hennessy Partners with National Brotherhood of Cyclists to Promote Diversity in Sports in the Name of Cyclist Marshall Major Taylor Press release Hennessy PR Newswire October 22 2018 Archived from the original on January 25 2019 Retrieved January 25 2019 Henderson Audrey F September 5 2018 New Mural Brings Spotlight to Chicago Bike Trail Next City Archived from the original on September 5 2018 Retrieved February 6 2019 Alum Creek Greenway Trail TrailLink Rails to Trails Conservancy Archived from the original on January 25 2019 Retrieved January 25 2019 Teens from the Major Taylor Project will bicycle 200 miles on July 9 and 10 from Seattle to Portland West Seattle Herald Robinson Communications Inc July 1 2011 Archived from the original on April 9 2017 Retrieved April 8 2017 a b Shih Nicole October 29 2021 City honors Worcester Whirlwind again with new Major Taylor Museum Worcester MA Telegram amp Gazette Archived from the original on May 23 2022 Retrieved January 8 2023 Tracks of Glory TV mini series IMDb July 5 1992 Archived from the original on September 6 2011 Retrieved August 14 2012 Otis Taylor Chicago Tribune Tronc Archived from the original on April 6 2017 Retrieved April 5 2017 Dalloni 2013 chpt 75 Why the Walker Racer Is Not Named the Lawson Racer SOMA Fabrications Blogger November 2 2007 Archived from the original on December 29 2017 Retrieved February 5 2019 Major Taylor Bar SOMA Fabrications Archived from the original on March 31 2017 Retrieved February 22 2017 Murdoch Mysteries Tour de Murdoch IMDb October 7 2013 Retrieved August 31 2017 a b c Palmieri Jean E April 12 2018 Hennessy Taps Jean Raymond for First Apparel Capsule Women s Wear Daily Archived from the original on June 15 2018 Retrieved February 5 2019 Hennessy Spotlights World Champion Cyclist Marshall Major Taylor in Newest Wild Rabbit Campaign Press release Hennessy PR Newswire April 16 2018 Archived from the original on April 16 2018 Retrieved February 5 2019 a b c Balf Todd April 19 2018 Why Haven t You Heard of Marshall Major Taylor Outside Archived from the original on February 7 2019 Retrieved February 5 2019 Hennessey Major by Droga5 The Drum Archived from the original on June 29 2018 Retrieved February 5 2019 Hennessy Celebrates Those Who Push the Limits of Potential in First Ever Game Day Ad Press release Hennessy PR Newswire April 1 2018 Archived from the original on February 7 2019 Retrieved February 7 2019 Price Satchel February 3 2019 Cycling great Major Taylor gets tribute during Super Bowl ad Chicago Sun Times Archived from the original on February 5 2019 Retrieved February 5 2019 Meschke Jacob February 4 2019 The Unsung Story of Major Taylor Gets a Voice With Hennessy Cognac Campaign Bicycling Archived from the original on February 7 2019 Retrieved February 5 2019 Blackburn Kaiya Smith December 8 2020 D Q Acquires Major Taylor by Fred Noland drawnandquarterly com Retrieved February 22 2022 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 178 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 180 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 253 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 338 Ritchie 1988 pp 191 192 Wheel Notes The Mansfield News Mansfield Ohio August 6 1904 via NewspaperARCHIVE com Ritchie 1988 pp 201 202 Kerber amp Kerber 2014 p 328 Brill 2008 p 92 Marshall W Major Taylor Scrapbooks 1897 1904 AIS 1984 07 Archives Service Center University of Pittsburgh Archived from the original on December 10 2013 Retrieved November 12 2013 Major Breaks Records Indianapolis News September 3 1896 p 3 via NewspaperARCHIVE com Cycling Briefs Indianapolis Sun September 3 1896 p 8 via NewspaperARCHIVE com Major Taylor s Victory New York Times August 28 1898 p 5 via NewspaperARCHIVE com Taylor s Great Victory over Jimmy Michael Brooklyn Daily Eagle August 28 1898 p 11 via NewspaperARCHIVE com Taylor s Points Boston Daily Globe September 6 1898 p 4 via NewspaperARCHIVE com Records Go at Springfield Chicago Tribune September 6 1898 p 5 via Newspapers com Major Taylor Lowers the World s Kilometer but Fails at the Mile Brooklyn Daily Eagle November 5 1898 p 3 via NewspaperARCHIVE com a b Taylor Gets Records Philadelphia Inquirer November 6 1898 p 14 via NewspaperARCHIVE com Sporting Miscellany Baltimore Sun November 7 1898 p 8 via NewspaperARCHIVE com Taylor s Record Philadelphia Inquirer November 13 1898 p 11 via NewspaperARCHIVE com Two New Records Major Taylor Rides the Mile in 1 32 Flat Boston Sunday Globe November 13 1898 p 2 via NewspaperARCHIVE com Major Taylor Lowered the Record for the One Third of a Mile Philadelphia Times November 15 1898 p 8 via NewspaperARCHIVE com Great Riding by Major Taylor Philadelphia Times November 16 1898 p 8 via NewspaperARCHIVE com Major Taylor Ties Record Boston Daily Globe November 16 1898 p 7 via NewspaperARCHIVE com More Records Major Taylor Keeps On at Philadelphia Boston Daily Globe November 17 1898 p 3 via NewspaperARCHIVE com More Records by Taylor Philadelphia Inquirer November 17 1898 p 4 via NewspaperARCHIVE com Taylor Breaks All Records Boston Post August 4 1898 p 2 via NewspaperARCHIVE com Lowers Mile Record Boston Daily Globe August 4 1898 p 7 via NewspaperARCHIVE com Taylor s Quarter Mile Record Chicago Tribune November 10 1899 p 8 via Newspapers com Major Taylor and Eddie McDuffee Make New Records Boston Post November 10 1899 p 3 via NewspaperARCHIVE com He Makes a Record Just for Fun Chicago Tribune November 11 1899 p 6 via Newspapers com Taylor s New Record Boston Post November 11 1899 p 2 via NewspaperARCHIVE com Mile Bicycle Record Broken Philadelphia Times November 16 1898 p 10 via NewspaperARCHIVE com Major Taylor Breaks Record New York Tribune December 15 1900 p 3 via Newspapers com Kranish 2019 p 296 Taylor 1928 pp 411 413 Major Taylor in Form Sydney Daily Telegraph August 28 1908 p 8 via NewspaperARCHIVE com Leading Professionals Sidetrack Vailsburg Gasgoyne s First Defeat in Pursuit Race New York Tribune July 22 1901 p 8 Retrieved February 22 2017 via Newspapers com Bibliography editBalf Todd 2008 Major A Black Athlete a White Era and the Fight to Be the World s Fastest Human Being New York City Three Rivers Press ISBN 978 0 307 23658 6 Brill Marlene T 2008 Marshall Major Taylor World Champion Bicyclist 1899 1901 Minneapolis Minnesota Twenty First Century Books ISBN 978 0 8225 6610 6 Campbell Ballard C 2008 Disasters Accidents and Crises in American History A Reference Guide to the Nation s Most Catastrophic Events New York City Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 1 4381 3012 5 Dalloni Michel 2013 Le Velo 100 Questions sur in French Brussels La Boetie ISBN 978 2 368 65006 6 Della Valle Paul 2009 Massachusetts Troublemakers Rebels Reformers and Radicals from the Bay State Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 7627 5795 4 Gant Jesse J Hoffman Nicholas J Autumn 2013 Wheel Fever Wisconsin Magazine of History Madison Wisconsin Wisconsin Historical Society Gray Ralph D 2003 IUPUI the Making of an Urban University Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 34242 3 Kerber Conrad Kerber Terry 2014 Major Taylor The Inspiring Story of a Black Cyclist and the Men Who Helped Him Achieve Worldwide Fame New York City Skyhorse Publishing ISBN 978 1 62873 661 8 Kranish Michael 2019 The World s Fastest Man The Extraordinary Life of Cyclist Major Taylor America s First Black Sports Hero New York City Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1 5011 9261 6 Novich Max M 1964 Abbotempo United Kingdom Abbott Universal Ritchie Andrew 1988 Major Taylor The Extraordinary Career of a Champion Bicycle Racer Mill Valley California Bicycle Books ISBN 978 0 8018 5303 6 Taylor Marshall 1928 The Fastest Bicycle Rider in the World The Story of a Colored Boy s Indomitable Courage and Success Against Great Odds An Autobiography Worcester Massachusetts Wormley Publishing Company OCLC 1989465 reprinted Ayer 2004 ISBN 9780836989106 Further reading editBurdan Jenny 2003 A Major Champion New Heights Series Wellington New Zealand Learning Media Limited ISBN 978 0 7903 0232 4 Cline Ransome Lesa Ransome James 2003 Major Taylor Champion Cyclist New York City Atheneum Books ISBN 978 0 689 83159 1 Fitzpatrick Jim 2011 Major Taylor in Australia Kilcoy Australia Star Hill Studio ISBN 978 0 9807480 2 4 Grivell H Curly n d Highlights from the life of Major Taylor Australia Sport Radio Press Kranish Michael May 7 2019 The World s Fastest Man The Extraordinary Life of Cyclist Major Taylor America s First Black Sports Hero New York Simon and Schuster Scribner ISBN 9781501192593 Scioscia Mary 1993 Bicycle Rider Trophy Picture Bks New York City Harper amp Row ISBN 978 0 06 443295 5 Wilds Mary 2002 A Forgotten Champion The Story of Major Taylor Fastest Bicycle Racer in the World Avisson Young Adult Series Greensboro NC Avisson Press ISBN 978 1 888105 52 0 Whimpress Bernard 2005 Major Taylor at Adelaide Oval Adelaide Australia Bernard Whimpress ISBN 978 0 9750491 2 9 External links editMajor Taylor at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Data from Wikidata Official website nbsp The Major Taylor Association The Major Taylor Society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Major Taylor amp oldid 1186916145, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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