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Tommy Godwin (cyclist, born 1912)

Thomas Edward Godwin (1912–1975) was an English cyclist who held the world cycling record for most miles covered in a year (75,065 miles or 120,805 kilometres) and the fastest completion of 100,000 mi (160,000 km).

Tommy Godwin
Godwin in 1939
Personal information
Full nameThomas Edward Godwin
Born1912
 United Kingdom
Died1975
Team information
DisciplineRoad – Endurance rider
RoleRider
Rider typeAll-rounder
Amateur teams
1926–1938Potteries CC
0^Birchfield CC
0^Rickmansworth CC
Professional teams
1939–1940Rickmansworth CC
0^Raleigh-Sturmy Archer
Major wins
More than 200 Amateur and Professional
Road and Time Trial Events

World Endurance record for a single year
- 75,065 miles (120,805 km) in 1939

World Endurance record for 100,000 miles (160,000 km)
in 500 days (May 1940)

In 1939, Godwin entered the Golden Book of Cycling as the greatest long-distance rider in the world.[1] He rode 75,065 mi (120,805 km) in a year, averaging over 200 miles (320 km) per day.[2] This record stood until 2016.

Early life edit

Godwin was born in 1912 in Stoke on Trent. To help support his family he worked as a delivery boy for a greengrocer (or newsagent[2]) and with the job came a heavy bike with metal basket. The basket was hacked off and the 14-year-old Godwin won his first 25-mile (40 km) time trial in 65 minutes.[1][2]

Cycling edit

Amateur career edit

After his initial time trial success he subsequently clocked inside 1 hour 2 minutes for 25 miles on four occasions, and covered 236 miles in 12 hours.[2]

In 1933 he finished 7th in the Best All-rounder road riding competition, open to all amateur cyclists in the United Kingdom. His average speed was 21.255 mph.[2] His individual performances were:

  • 50 miles, 2 hours 10 mins 12 secs, (23.077 mph)
  • 100 miles, 4hrs, 40 mins, 6 secs, (21.428 mph)
  • 12 hours – 231 5/8 miles. (19.25 mph)[2]

Professional career edit

Godwin left his amateur status at Potteries CC to join Rickmansworth Cycling Club as a professional. After more than 200 road and time trial wins, the mileage record beckoned.[1]

World endurance records edit

In 1911 the weekly magazine Cycling began a competition for the highest number of 100-mile rides or "centuries" in a single year.[3] The winner was Marcel Planes with 332 centuries in which he covered 34,366 miles (55,307 km).[3] The inspiration for the competition was said to be the efforts of Harry Long, a commercial traveller who rode a bicycle on his rounds covering every part of England and Scotland and who covered 25,376 miles (40,839 km) in 1910.[3] The world record for distance cycled in a year began in an era when bicycle companies competed to show their machines were the most reliable. The record was officially established nine times up to 1939.[4] A tenth claim in 1972, by the English rider Ken Webb, was later disallowed.[n 1][citation needed]

In January 2016 Godwin's very long-standing record was broken. The American Kurt Searvogel completed 76,076 miles (122,432 km) in one year, confirmed by the Ultramarathon Cycling Association, and this was later also recognised by the Guinness Book of Records.[5][6]

World Endurance record for a single year
Year Record holder Gender Country Distance Ref
1911 Marcel Planes Male   France 34,366 miles (55,307 km) [7]
1932 Arthur Humbles Male   Great Britain 36,007 miles (57,948 km) [7]
1933 Ossie Nicholson Male   Australia 43,966 miles (70,756 km) [8]
1936 Walter Greaves Male   Great Britain 45,383 miles (73,037 km) [9]
1937 Bernard Bennett Male   Great Britain 45,801 miles (73,710 km)
1937 René Menzies Male   France 61,561 miles (99,073 km) [10]
1937 Ossie Nicholson Male   Australia 62,657 miles (100,837 km) [11]
1938 Billie Dovey Female   Great Britain 29,604 miles (47,643 km) [12]
1939 Bernard Bennett Male   Great Britain 65,127 miles (104,812 km)
1939 Tommy Godwin Male   Great Britain 75,065 miles (120,805 km) [2]
2015 Kurt Searvogel Male   United States 76,076 miles (122,432 km) [6]
2016 Kajsa Tylen Female   Great Britain 32,526 miles (52,346 km) [13]
2017 Amanda Coker Female   United States 86,573.2 miles (138,517.2 km) [14]

In 1937 the Australian Ossie Nicholson had regained his record from Briton Walter Greaves by covering 62,657.6 mi (100,837.6 km). At 5 am on 1 January 1939 Godwin set out to bring the record home. He wasn't alone; two other British riders started that day, Edward Swann and Bernard Bennett. Swann crashed after 939.6 mi (1,512.1 km), but Bennett fought it out with Godwin for the rest of the year. In sportsmanship their support teams, which included pace-makers, stopped at 50,000 mi (80,000 km) to let the riders complete the attempt on personal merit. Godwin was sponsored by the Raleigh Bicycle Company and Sturmey-Archer.[15]

Godwin's bike weighed more than 30 pounds (14 kg). As war came, he rode through blackouts, his lights taped to a glow. Silk knickers were substituted for chamois inserts and Godwin maintained his vegetarian diet. For the first two months, Godwin's mileage lagged 922 mi (1,484 km) behind Nicholson's schedule. Godwin increased his daily average beyond 200 mi (320 km) a day, and on 21 June 1939 completed 361 mi (581 km) in 18 hours, his longest ride of the record.

On 26 October 1939, Godwin rode into Trafalgar Square having completed 62,658 mi (100,838 km), gaining the record with two months to spare. He rode through the winter to complete 75,065 mi (120,805 km) in the year.

In May 1940 after 500 days' riding he secured the 100,000-mile (160,000 km) record as well. Godwin dismounted and spent weeks learning how to walk before going to war in the RAF.

Later career edit

Godwin returned to cycling in 1945, keen to race as an amateur. However, despite a petition by fellow cyclists, the governing bodies ruled that having ridden as a professional he was barred from amateur status. Godwin became trainer and mentor to the Stone Wheelers. Godwin died aged 63, returning from a ride to Tutbury Castle with friends.

Commemoration edit

Godwin is commemorated by a plaque at Fenton Manor Sports Centre in Stoke on Trent that was unveiled in March 2005 by Edie Hemmings, the culmination of a 30-year campaign by her late husband, George.[16]

Citation in the Golden Book edit

Godwin entered the Golden Book of Cycling on 31 December 1939. This recognised his record-breaking exploits for averaging over 200 miles a day for a year.[2]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Ken Webb's claim was for 80,647 miles (129,789 km) in 1972. Webb insisted he had completed the distance but others said he hadn't and he was removed from the Guinness Book of Records.[citation needed]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Tommy Godwin, biography, Dave Barter, June 2005 issue of "Cycle". Retrieved 24 September 2008
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h "Pedal Club archives – Citation for Thomas Edward Godwin". Archive maintained by 'The Pedal Club'.
  3. ^ a b c "Year's Road Riding". The Sydney Morning Herald. National Library of Australia. 7 January 1933. p. 18.
  4. ^ Cycling, 1972, undated cutting
  5. ^ MacMichael, Simon (22 January 2016). "Kurt Searvogel awarded Guinness World Record for distance cycled in a year". road.cc. Retrieved 7 August 2016.
  6. ^ a b Wynn, Nigel (5 January 2016). "American Kurt Searvogel breaks cycling highest annual mileage record". Cycling Weekly. Retrieved 7 August 2016.
  7. ^ a b "The Golden Book of Cycling – Citation for Arthur Humbles". Archive maintained by 'The Pedal Club'.
  8. ^ "Ossie for Aussie". The Referee. Sydney: National Library of Australia. 7 January 1937. p. 20.
  9. ^ "The Golden Book of Cycling – citation for Walter Greaves". Archive maintained by 'The Pedal Club'.
  10. ^ "Cycling". The Sydney Morning Herald. National Library of Australia. 18 January 1938. p. 16.
  11. ^ "Australia regains world's cycling record". The Referee. Sydney, NSW: National Library of Australia. 6 January 1938. p. 20.
  12. ^ Barter, Dave (6 May 2014). "Billie Fleming: Happy 100th birthday". Cycling Weekly. Retrieved 15 June 2014.
  13. ^ "Kajsa Tylen: Cyclist's 32,000-mile ride smashes world record". BBC News. 31 December 2016.
  14. ^ "Greatest distance cycled in a year (UMCA)". Guinness World Records. Retrieved 20 April 2017.
  15. ^ BBC Radio 4 – Making History. Site includes Information, Pictures and Audio
  16. ^ BBC Stoke – Sports News Archive – 2005

Further reading edit

  • Barter, Dave (2015). The Year: Reawakening the legend of cycling's hardest endurance record. Sheffield, UK: Vertebrate Publishing. ISBN 978-1-910240-43-4.
  • Barlow, Godfrey (2012). Unsurpassed: The Story of Tommy Godwin, the World's Greatest Distance Cyclist. Norwich, UK: Mousehold Press. ISBN 978-1-874739-14-2. Retrieved 9 February 2013.

External links edit

  • Tommy Godwin section of Dave Barter's Cycling site.
  • BBC – Information, Pictures and Audio
  • TommyGodwin.com – The story of the greatest long-distance rider of all time

tommy, godwin, cyclist, born, 1912, track, cyclist, olympic, medalist, tommy, godwin, cyclist, born, 1920, thomas, edward, godwin, 1912, 1975, english, cyclist, held, world, cycling, record, most, miles, covered, year, miles, kilometres, fastest, completion, t. For the track cyclist and Olympic medalist see Tommy Godwin cyclist born 1920 Thomas Edward Godwin 1912 1975 was an English cyclist who held the world cycling record for most miles covered in a year 75 065 miles or 120 805 kilometres and the fastest completion of 100 000 mi 160 000 km Tommy GodwinGodwin in 1939Personal informationFull nameThomas Edward GodwinBorn1912 United KingdomDied1975Team informationDisciplineRoad Endurance riderRoleRiderRider typeAll rounderAmateur teams1926 1938Potteries CC0 Birchfield CC0 Rickmansworth CCProfessional teams1939 1940Rickmansworth CC0 Raleigh Sturmy ArcherMajor winsMore than 200 Amateur and Professional Road and Time Trial Events World Endurance record for a single year 75 065 miles 120 805 km in 1939 World Endurance record for 100 000 miles 160 000 km in 500 days May 1940 In 1939 Godwin entered the Golden Book of Cycling as the greatest long distance rider in the world 1 He rode 75 065 mi 120 805 km in a year averaging over 200 miles 320 km per day 2 This record stood until 2016 Contents 1 Early life 2 Cycling 2 1 Amateur career 2 2 Professional career 2 3 World endurance records 2 4 Later career 3 Commemoration 3 1 Citation in the Golden Book 4 Notes 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksEarly life editGodwin was born in 1912 in Stoke on Trent To help support his family he worked as a delivery boy for a greengrocer or newsagent 2 and with the job came a heavy bike with metal basket The basket was hacked off and the 14 year old Godwin won his first 25 mile 40 km time trial in 65 minutes 1 2 Cycling editAmateur career edit After his initial time trial success he subsequently clocked inside 1 hour 2 minutes for 25 miles on four occasions and covered 236 miles in 12 hours 2 In 1933 he finished 7th in the Best All rounder road riding competition open to all amateur cyclists in the United Kingdom His average speed was 21 255 mph 2 His individual performances were 50 miles 2 hours 10 mins 12 secs 23 077 mph 100 miles 4hrs 40 mins 6 secs 21 428 mph 12 hours 231 5 8 miles 19 25 mph 2 Professional career edit Godwin left his amateur status at Potteries CC to join Rickmansworth Cycling Club as a professional After more than 200 road and time trial wins the mileage record beckoned 1 World endurance records edit In 1911 the weekly magazine Cycling began a competition for the highest number of 100 mile rides or centuries in a single year 3 The winner was Marcel Planes with 332 centuries in which he covered 34 366 miles 55 307 km 3 The inspiration for the competition was said to be the efforts of Harry Long a commercial traveller who rode a bicycle on his rounds covering every part of England and Scotland and who covered 25 376 miles 40 839 km in 1910 3 The world record for distance cycled in a year began in an era when bicycle companies competed to show their machines were the most reliable The record was officially established nine times up to 1939 4 A tenth claim in 1972 by the English rider Ken Webb was later disallowed n 1 citation needed In January 2016 Godwin s very long standing record was broken The American Kurt Searvogel completed 76 076 miles 122 432 km in one year confirmed by the Ultramarathon Cycling Association and this was later also recognised by the Guinness Book of Records 5 6 World Endurance record for a single year Year Record holder Gender Country Distance Ref 1911 Marcel Planes Male nbsp France 34 366 miles 55 307 km 7 1932 Arthur Humbles Male nbsp Great Britain 36 007 miles 57 948 km 7 1933 Ossie Nicholson Male nbsp Australia 43 966 miles 70 756 km 8 1936 Walter Greaves Male nbsp Great Britain 45 383 miles 73 037 km 9 1937 Bernard Bennett Male nbsp Great Britain 45 801 miles 73 710 km 1937 Rene Menzies Male nbsp France 61 561 miles 99 073 km 10 1937 Ossie Nicholson Male nbsp Australia 62 657 miles 100 837 km 11 1938 Billie Dovey Female nbsp Great Britain 29 604 miles 47 643 km 12 1939 Bernard Bennett Male nbsp Great Britain 65 127 miles 104 812 km 1939 Tommy Godwin Male nbsp Great Britain 75 065 miles 120 805 km 2 2015 Kurt Searvogel Male nbsp United States 76 076 miles 122 432 km 6 2016 Kajsa Tylen Female nbsp Great Britain 32 526 miles 52 346 km 13 2017 Amanda Coker Female nbsp United States 86 573 2 miles 138 517 2 km 14 In 1937 the Australian Ossie Nicholson had regained his record from Briton Walter Greaves by covering 62 657 6 mi 100 837 6 km At 5 am on 1 January 1939 Godwin set out to bring the record home He wasn t alone two other British riders started that day Edward Swann and Bernard Bennett Swann crashed after 939 6 mi 1 512 1 km but Bennett fought it out with Godwin for the rest of the year In sportsmanship their support teams which included pace makers stopped at 50 000 mi 80 000 km to let the riders complete the attempt on personal merit Godwin was sponsored by the Raleigh Bicycle Company and Sturmey Archer 15 Godwin s bike weighed more than 30 pounds 14 kg As war came he rode through blackouts his lights taped to a glow Silk knickers were substituted for chamois inserts and Godwin maintained his vegetarian diet For the first two months Godwin s mileage lagged 922 mi 1 484 km behind Nicholson s schedule Godwin increased his daily average beyond 200 mi 320 km a day and on 21 June 1939 completed 361 mi 581 km in 18 hours his longest ride of the record On 26 October 1939 Godwin rode into Trafalgar Square having completed 62 658 mi 100 838 km gaining the record with two months to spare He rode through the winter to complete 75 065 mi 120 805 km in the year In May 1940 after 500 days riding he secured the 100 000 mile 160 000 km record as well Godwin dismounted and spent weeks learning how to walk before going to war in the RAF Later career edit Godwin returned to cycling in 1945 keen to race as an amateur However despite a petition by fellow cyclists the governing bodies ruled that having ridden as a professional he was barred from amateur status Godwin became trainer and mentor to the Stone Wheelers Godwin died aged 63 returning from a ride to Tutbury Castle with friends Commemoration editGodwin is commemorated by a plaque at Fenton Manor Sports Centre in Stoke on Trent that was unveiled in March 2005 by Edie Hemmings the culmination of a 30 year campaign by her late husband George 16 Citation in the Golden Book edit Godwin entered the Golden Book of Cycling on 31 December 1939 This recognised his record breaking exploits for averaging over 200 miles a day for a year 2 Notes edit Ken Webb s claim was for 80 647 miles 129 789 km in 1972 Webb insisted he had completed the distance but others said he hadn t and he was removed from the Guinness Book of Records citation needed References edit a b c Tommy Godwin biography Dave Barter June 2005 issue of Cycle Retrieved 24 September 2008 a b c d e f g h Pedal Club archives Citation for Thomas Edward Godwin Archive maintained by The Pedal Club a b c Year s Road Riding The Sydney Morning Herald National Library of Australia 7 January 1933 p 18 Cycling 1972 undated cutting MacMichael Simon 22 January 2016 Kurt Searvogel awarded Guinness World Record for distance cycled in a year road cc Retrieved 7 August 2016 a b Wynn Nigel 5 January 2016 American Kurt Searvogel breaks cycling highest annual mileage record Cycling Weekly Retrieved 7 August 2016 a b The Golden Book of Cycling Citation for Arthur Humbles Archive maintained by The Pedal Club Ossie for Aussie The Referee Sydney National Library of Australia 7 January 1937 p 20 The Golden Book of Cycling citation for Walter Greaves Archive maintained by The Pedal Club Cycling The Sydney Morning Herald National Library of Australia 18 January 1938 p 16 Australia regains world s cycling record The Referee Sydney NSW National Library of Australia 6 January 1938 p 20 Barter Dave 6 May 2014 Billie Fleming Happy 100th birthday Cycling Weekly Retrieved 15 June 2014 Kajsa Tylen Cyclist s 32 000 mile ride smashes world record BBC News 31 December 2016 Greatest distance cycled in a year UMCA Guinness World Records Retrieved 20 April 2017 BBC Radio 4 Making History Site includes Information Pictures and Audio BBC Stoke Sports News Archive 2005Further reading editBarter Dave 2015 The Year Reawakening the legend of cycling s hardest endurance record Sheffield UK Vertebrate Publishing ISBN 978 1 910240 43 4 Barlow Godfrey 2012 Unsurpassed The Story of Tommy Godwin the World s Greatest Distance Cyclist Norwich UK Mousehold Press ISBN 978 1 874739 14 2 Retrieved 9 February 2013 External links editTommy Godwin section of Dave Barter s Cycling site BBC Information Pictures and Audio TommyGodwin com The story of the greatest long distance rider of all time Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tommy Godwin cyclist born 1912 amp oldid 1223071105, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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