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How the Bicycle Emancipated Women

by jayr_patron | May 16, 2008 at 04:03 am | 114 views | add comment

I didn't know the bicycle did more to the man, and especially woman, than just exercise and transportation.  I would have to share this to my sister so she need not ask me to "move the trash in the garage" so she could park the car properly.


Susan B. Anthony once said, “I think [bicycling] has done more to emancipate women than anything else in the world.” A woman on a bicycle, the equal rights champion observed, presents “the picture of free and untrammeled womanhood.”

Susan and her fellow 19th-century women had been severely trammeled their entire lives. Forget the glass ceiling; women in those days were trapped under the glass floor. Battles like “equal pay for equal work” were decades away. The Victorian woman’s cause was more along the lines of, “We’d like to leave the house, sometimes … please … if it isn’t too much trouble.”

The fashion for women at that time tended toward helplessness and frailty. Consider the image of a Victorian lady: She’s sickly and pale, relies on men for everything, and occasionally peeks out from behind an ornamental fan (usually before touching her wrist to her forehead and fainting). The frailty of a “lady” was such that preventing females from studying, working, voting and doing much of anything at all seemed a rational measure.

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May 16, 2008 at 04:03 am by jayr_patron, 114 views, add comment

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