Showing posts with label etiquette. Show all posts
Showing posts with label etiquette. Show all posts

02 April 2010

Cycling etiquette, 1895-style


Debretts, the authority on etiquette and manners, published a book with Vauxhall this week about how to drive politely.

We don't know what it says about shouting at cyclists. However, it inspired us to look back through the Real Cycling archives to 1895, when this blog would have been published as a leather-tooled hardback book, price 21 guineas.

This is probably what we would have said about cycling etiquette then. It shows just how far society has declined in the last century and a bit.



• Should a Hackney-carriage or omnibus driver use the road inconsiderately, hold your temper. You may think he is 'a d— fool', but to say so, even sotto voce, is most uncouth.

• If out sketching watercolours, you may be approached a policeman enquiring after your activities. Be co-operative; he is only doing his job. By ensuring that you are not an anarchist, foreigner or other criminal, he is protecting the safety of the Empire.

• Correct clothing should be worn in case of an accident. A green Devonshire jacket, cap with stiff peak, boots of good quality, and soft necktie are recommended. A magistrate will take a dim view of a cyclist who is 'scruffily dressed'.

• Do not over-indulge in alcohol when riding. Six or seven pints of stout or porter, and no more than one bottle of good brandy or port wine, is a perfectly adequate amount.

• Do not smoke cigarettes while riding. It is most improper. Tobacco should be enjoyed at a rest stop, when cigars are recommended.

• Married women should not cycle. Single ladies may do so, but must ride side saddle. Skirts, not 'Bloomers' or 'rational dress', must be worn.

• Do not shout at, or behave impatiently with, other road users, unless you are reliably informed that they are of a lower class.

• When cycling abroad, treat its inhabitants with politeness and civility, however disagreeable their customs and manners may appear. Remember, it is through no fault of their own that they are inferior.


Fans of polite cycling can look forward to the Tweed Ride (pic) on 10 April. Happy Easter.