
It
all started with a
Raleigh 'sports bike' given to me as a present for passing my 11+
examination (it came from Halfords for 11 guineas)- with semi-dropped
handlebars. As the guy living next door to me was an RTTC Time
triallist, he gave me help in trying to make the bike more 'racy'
but obviously to no avail.
Twelve months later I contracted Rheumatic Fever, missed quite a bit of
school and eventually when I returned I was 'excused all
sports’ - to protect my heart! Becoming bored I saved up to
buy a frame, a Sibbitt track bike, from our next door neighbour and
over time bought all the bits to make a myself a racing bike.
Rod (on right) with two cycling friends
I joined a local CTC club and started their Sunday rides. On
club-night
they had a set of rollers and we could all have a go on them.
In
between touring on a Sunday and club-night I accidently saw a club time
trial (a 10-mile event on the A580 East Lancs Road). I joined the
organising club, Walkden CC, and started 'training' doing the odd
10-mile time trial with disastrous results! Then my original club
invited me to train and enter the NCU/RTTC Time Trials. After terrible
results and hating the 6.00am starts, as well as having to wear black
in
those days, I started to look around for something else.
Those were the days of Reg Harris, Cyril Cartwright & Alan
Bannister. As I was heavily built I was ideal for the 'big sprint' Thus
we used to go down to Fallowfield Track in Manchester (no longer in
existence) to train, practice circuits and the last '200 metre sprint'.
That was with 'The Master's '(Reg Harris) permission-it was
quite polite and even encouraging for a 14 year old. I was even given
the privilege of 'sweeping the track' between events at International
Track events. Some honour for a youngster!
To pay for my new bike I took two newspaper delivery rounds each
morning before school and then each evening after. Plus, on a Saturday,
I delivered what were called 'periodicals', i.e. supplements, for which
I
was given an old heavy delivery bike with a single free wheel
– no
gears. Great training.
Eventually I saved enough money to buy my 'proper' racing bike which
started with a CNC (French) frame with ten gears (derailleur) and alloy
Conloy sprint rims with 'tubs' for racing. With this machine I joined a
The Domino Road Club which had massed start races, usually held in the
afternoon.
In this new club we did lots of miles in Derbyshire, one evening plus
Saturday and Sunday, and whenever the 'seniors' went racing I tried to
join them. Oh what days - riding down to Bournemouth for a two day race
and sleeping rough! Because we were all broke due to buying new bike
bits, tubs etc. we always rode everywhere, nobody's family having car -
though one time I can remember Harry Hall giving us a lift on his
father’s coal cart.
We did anything we could to allow us to ride to and visit the races: I
was not yet racing properly. This included roller racing on local
theatre stages. The two rollers had a large clock behind the two bikes.
They showed the speed and position of each rider. It was
tough considering that my prize for being in the final was a 'tatty'
pseudo-leather saddlebag. We never used them anyway, preferring the
musette.

In
1951 for my summer holidays I did a solo
ride from Manchester,
through Wales, Somerset, Cornwall, across to Brighton, then up to the
Festival of Britain in London and finally on to York. On my way back to
Manchester both my tyres were in shreds and held together by insulation
tape – no chance of using the brakes. Finally, a
truck driver gave me a lift home. What an experience and what a tan.
On the left is the machine I used for the tour. At this stage I
couldn't afford gears so was riding it on fixed. The frame
was
72° parallel with a long wheelbase and fork rake for climbing
as
per all the 50's heroes, Coppi, etc.
In the
Winter we usually found an old frame, such as a Raleigh Tourer, fitted
26" wheels (as against 27) with the fattest tyres we could find. The
handlebars were usually an old pair of 'Maes' bend bars - cut off to be
simply a horizontal bar.
Gears
non-existent, simply 'fixed wheel'. Off we would go through
mud and snow to keep the legs turning. Maybe these were
the fore runner of to-days 'Mountain Bikes'?
Having spent most of my time riding my bikes and neglecting school
work,
I left at 16 and started work. This was the real beginning of my short
racing career. The year was 1952 and throughout the winter I rode
everyday about 11 miles each way regardless of the weather and other
road users - I was hit by a dust cart and run-over by a taxi!! No
lasting injuries though.

As
my work was in Stockport (on the way to
Derbyshire) and one of the
'tinbashers' in the factory (namely Frank Garvey) used to train every
evening by riding to Buxton and back usually via Long Hill or The Cat
& Fiddle, I decided to emulate him. I did put in the
miles and started proper road racing in 1952. My first success was to
finish equal fifth in the Moorside Junior Grand Prix with
about 20 others! We all crashed in the final
sprint.
Right: Rod, arrowed in the Moordide
Junior Grand Prix, 1953
Organised by
Swinton Coureurs Road Club
More success the following week where I finished third over a tough
Pennine course in the Grey Mare Road Race.
This was all a build up for a special event - we had persuaded the
event organisers in the Isle of Man that they should invite at least
one team from the BLRC. Up until then it was run under NCU
rules but we were more experienced at mass-starts and road racing
rather than time trialling. To our surprise they accepted us.
Unfortunately, without my knowledge we had been invited to ride in the
75-mile Viking Trophy Race. This was OK for the other two of our team -
they were seniors but I would only be just 17 on Race Day. I had never
raced for more than 35 miles before. Hence I was designated to the
sprints and to be general 'Dogs Body' if anything happened. Of course
it did and our best rider (Bert Hope) was involved in a bad crash and
received a head injury (no helmets in those days). Once I knew he was
OK and had retired I continued, way behind the bunch and stayed that
way for the rest of the race. When I finished they carried a few of us
to a medical tent with 'Ice Beds' to cool us down - it must have been
middle 20's plus.
As you can see from the results our other team member finished in the
top 20 .
Start of Isle of
Man Viking Race 1953
(click for larger image)
Above: two images of the Isle of Man
Viking Race, 1953 (click for larger image)
I was quite pleased, as I had only one season as a senior and did not
have a 1st class licence. Following this I was entered in the Junior NW
Championship event around the Derbyshire hills and
particularly finishing not long after climbing Mam Tor (Now closed!).
Nobody knew me and I was considered an outsider - but the
pain
and suffering of having climbed 'the Mountain' twice in the IOM
helped me. I chased the favourite who had broken away before Mam Tor
because he was known as a superb mountain climber. I followed but he
left me for dead. But remembering the IOM Mountain I pushed on and
caught him on the flat 200-300 yards from the finish. My first and
most important win.
A couple of months later I won the Rhuallt Junior Circuit Race, twice
up Rhuallt hill (Near St Asaph), also I won both primes.
This win
including the 2 prime awards netted me less than the cost of 1 tub!
After that came
the Junior National Championship Race, on my own territory but I had
not been accepted to ride! Thus for the NW Junior
Champion to be excluded was a disaster and they entered me as a
reserve. See Circuit of Hyde Cycle Road Race details - particularly
note the massive prizes, equivalent of £2.10s for the Junior
National Champion !!
After 2 laps of the circuit I decided to quit! Just not worth it, why
train and flog yourself for £2.10 - my tubs each cost more
than that. I went home, told everybody I was quitting cycling, and sold
all my gear the same evening. It was bought by a neighbour Norman
Blackshaw who went on to become Junior Champion himself in 1954.
When he bought the gear off me he was just starting as a
racer so he achieved a lot in a short time.
I started in October at the Manchester College of Science &
Technology studying Metallurgy and never rode again though I had a few
offers from manufacturers for support but I had finished with all that
physical pain.
We did not know anything about diet, had no people to train us: the
nearest we got to 'aftercare' was one of the boys massaging your legs
after a race.