Soon after she arrived in Chicago, in 1889, Swedish immigrant Tillie Anderson decided she needed a bicycle. While scraping together a living as a seamstress in a tailor鈥檚 shop, she spotted women sailing by on the new contraptions, looking very free, and she wanted to try it, too. Among her siblings, Anderson was known for her steely will; after two years of saving, she bought her first ride. Cruising through the streets of Chicago, however, Anderson quickly realized that she wasn鈥檛 satisfied with pedaling slow graceful loops like other Victorian ladies. She wanted to go fast.
In October 1895, Anderson entered her first race: a 100-mile test of endurance on Illinois roads between Elgin and Aurora. While bicycle riding was fashionable for women at the time, competitive racing was still a novelty鈥攖hough a fast-growing one. In driving rain, Anderson outpaced the previous women鈥檚 course record by 18 minutes. Several months later, in January 1896, she entered her first six-day race, in Chicago. Athletes competed for several hours each night on steep-banked wooden velodromes to see who could ride the farthest. By the last day, Anderson had left nearly everyone behind and was trailing only top pro . In the last four laps, the crowd thundered and shook the walls as Anderson pushed past Farnsworth and sprinted to victory.
鈥淲hen the last gong sounded and the race was won the crowd went into a delirium of excitement,鈥 a reporter from the Chicago Tribune wrote the next day. 鈥淢en bellowed hoarsely and women screamed. Garments were waved frantically and hats were juggled on canes and thrown into the air.鈥 Because Anderson beat the country鈥檚 leading racers, the reporter dubbed her the speediest woman rider in America. Anderson clinched a new record for a six-hour distance, 114 miles, but perhaps more important, she found a new career and her life鈥檚 calling.
In the 1890s and very early 20th century, women鈥檚 cycling became one of the country鈥檚 great sporting spectacles, drawing crowds of as many as 10,000 in cities across the country鈥攐ften more than college football games or even professional baseball at the time. Women raced the ungainly high-wheel penny-farthings throughout the 1880s, but the advent of the safety bicycle, with its equal-sized wheels, chain drive, improved braking, and lower cost, made the sport more accessible. Women took to the road by the thousands, experiencing newfound mobility and freedom, to the extent that women鈥檚 rights activists hailed the invention as a great emancipator. 鈥淚 stand and rejoice every time I see a woman ride by on a wheel鈥he picture of free, untrammeled womanhood,鈥 Susan B. Anthony said in 1896.
At the time, male cyclists raced in their own harrowing versions of six-day races. Starting on Mondays, they鈥檇 race around the clock as spectators filtered in and out, cheering and heckling. They鈥檇 stop only to dust themselves off from a bloody pile-up, down drugs (widely accepted, if not encouraged), or nap on the infield. By the time the racers finished, they were a pathetic lot, staggering off their bicycles and devolving into hallucinations.
Anderson even submitted herself to an examination by physicians interested in studying the effects of exercise on a woman鈥檚 body. Newspapers across the country published the results and an illustration of her bare chiseled leg. Her mother was horrified.
According to Roger Gilles, author of the forthcoming , women鈥檚 participation in cycling races led to innovations in the sport that made it a lot more fun鈥攁nd less gruesome鈥攖o watch. Because women were thought to be the weaker sex, organizers set them up to race for only two or three hours a day for six days, turning the event into fast-paced, highly entertaining chaos.
The women competed on small, temporary wooden tracks built inside armories and theaters, with banks as steep as 35 degrees. They sped along at 22 or 23 miles per hour and sprinted around 30 mph鈥攆aster than many spectators had ever seen a human being move鈥攅lbowing each other, zigzagging around, and sometimes winning by only the length of a bike. Brass bands clanged loudly and paced their tempo with the riders鈥 speed. Race promoters shouted through megaphones, and rowdy crowds tossed their hats and screamed, tearing down pennants and hoisting up bicycles at the end of the race. In comparison to the men鈥檚 races, it was quite civilized.
鈥淭he men鈥檚 races were more working-class, cigar-chomping affairs, whereas women鈥檚 races would attract the mayor, society people, women, and families,鈥 Gilles says. (Although there was still plenty of betting.) 鈥淚 think it helped a lot to develop what arena sports could be in America鈥hese women need a place in history.鈥
Among the professional women racers of the 1890s, Anderson was undoubtedly the best. Over the course of her seven-year career, she entered 120 races and won all but 11. Newspapers and promoters played up rivalries between the racers, such as Farnsworth and Lizzie Glaw, but Anderson鈥檚 mix of professionalism and fitness helped her to dominate. Although she was sometimes ridiculed for it, Anderson was among the first to train systematically by taking regular training rides, lifting weights, and watching her diet to maximize performance. She was competitive and stoic, leaping up valiantly after crashes, and sported a Muhammad Ali鈥搇ike swagger about her strength and abilities鈥攃ouched, naturally, in prim Victorian parlance.
鈥淭hree years ago I was very fat in the legs, almost as much so as Miss Peterson, one of my competitors in the St. Louis race, is today,鈥 Anderson told the St. Louis Republic in 1897. 鈥淢y muscles were not at all developed, though it was but a short time when the fat began to peel off and give way to sinewy strength.鈥
Anderson also had the advantage of a trainer, fellow bike racer and future husband Phillip Shoburg, who recognized her talent and quit his own career to support hers. Shoburg helped her schedule races, secure lucrative sponsorships, tune her bike, and pace her on training rides. Between her prize money and sponsorships, Anderson was making between $5,000 and $6,000 a year, the equivalent of $140,000 to $160,000 in today鈥檚 dollars. But not everyone thought this line of work was becoming of a woman.
鈥淭he popular reception was unambiguous鈥攖hey loved it,鈥 Gilles says. 鈥淭housands and thousands of people went to these races and they had no problems whatsoever. But just like today, the pundits鈥攐r the vocal minority鈥攚ere holding on to these mores and values of a Victorian era and trying to steer people against it.鈥 Some of Anderson鈥檚 own friends wouldn鈥檛 speak to her after seeing some of the scandalous outfits the women racers wore鈥攍ong tights, clingy shorts, and curve-skimming sweaters. 鈥淥h, they really thought I was wicked,鈥 she once said.
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Anderson herself was unselfconscious. She was proud of being a serious athlete and unapologetic about her muscular physique. Anderson even submitted herself to an examination by physicians interested in studying the effects of exercise on a woman鈥檚 body. Newspapers across the country published the results and an illustration of her bare chiseled leg. Her mother was horrified.
鈥淎lthough Miss Anderson鈥檚 limbs are not as regular from the artistic viewpoint鈥er general health is better,鈥 proclaimed one article in the St. Louis Republic in 1897. 鈥淔rom a comparative feebleness she has grown into robust strength. From head to foot she is a mass of muscles.鈥
Throughout the heyday of women鈥檚 six-day racing, the League of American Wheelmen discouraged women from racing and men from supporting them. Some publications in recent years have reported that the league actually banned women from racing in 1902, but there are no records to confirm that. The sport likely declined for a host of reasons. The advent of automobiles and motorcycles ended the great bicycle boom of the 1890s, shuttering bicycle manufacturers and drying up sponsorship dollars. In 1902, two of Anderson鈥檚 best competitors died鈥擫izzie Glaw of typhoid and Dottie Farnsworth of a cycling accident sustained in a circus performance. Societal discomfort with female athleticism may have also played a role. By 1902, there were no longer any women鈥檚 races.
Tillie Anderson pedaled her last race that year, soon after her husband died of tuberculosis. Although suitors courted her, she never married again. She became a Swedish masseuse for wealthy families in Chicago, helped establish bike paths in Chicago in the 1930s, and spent summers at a lakeside cabin in northern Minnesota. Anderson died in 1965 at age 90.
For decades, Anderson was largely forgotten by the general public, but in 2000, with the help of her grandniece聽Alice Roepke, she was inducted into the U.S. Bicycling Hall of Fame. In 2011, author Sue Stauffacher took interest in Anderson鈥檚 story and wrote a children鈥檚 book about her life, . This fall, in addition to Roger Gilles鈥 book, British author Isabel Best will release a yet-to-be-titled book about Anderson and other legendary women riders.
Anderson鈥檚 racing calendars, photos, and notes still reside in her Minnesota cabin, where her racing bike is still on display. Her descendants continue to use the cottage and fondly remember her. 鈥淪he was always really proud of what she did,鈥 Roepke says. 鈥淭hese races would be on the front page of the smallest little town newspapers. People would talk about it around the kitchen table. It surprises me that it was just lost to time.鈥
While women raced in sporadic events in the first half of the 20th century, women鈥檚 cycling didn鈥檛 take off again until the 1970s. According to Gilles, based on her times, Anderson would likely keep up with the professionals of the late 20th and 21st century. 鈥淚t does not fatigue me in the least to take part in these long-distance races,鈥 Anderson once told a St. Louis newspaper. 鈥淚 am just as fresh after a two-hour鈥檚聽run as when I commence.鈥