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Books > Sport & Leisure > Sports & outdoor recreation > Track & field sports, athletics > General
With cities across the country adding miles of bike lanes and
building bike-share stations, bicycling is enjoying a new surge of
popularity in America. It seems that every generation or two,
Americans rediscover the freedom of movement, convenience, and
relative affordability of the bicycle. The earliest two-wheeler,
the draisine, arrived in Philadelphia in 1819 and astonished
onlookers with the possibility of propelling themselves "like
lightning." Two centuries later, the bicycle is still the fastest
way to cover ground on gridlocked city streets. Filled with lively
stories, The Mechanical Horse reveals how the bicycle transformed
American life. As bicycling caught on in the nineteenth century,
many of the country's rough, rutted roads were paved for the first
time, laying a foundation for the interstate highway system.
Cyclists were among the first to see the possibilities of
self-directed, long-distance travel, and some of them (including a
fellow named Henry Ford) went on to develop the automobile. Women
shed their cumbersome Victorian dresses-as well as their restricted
gender roles-so they could ride. And doctors recognized that
aerobic exercise actually benefits the body, which helped to
modernize medicine. Margaret Guroff demonstrates that the bicycle's
story is really the story of a more mobile America-one in which
physical mobility has opened wider horizons of thought and new
opportunities for people in all avenues of life.
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