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Major Taylor
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Marshall Walter "Major" Taylor (November 26, 1878 – June 21, 1932) was an American professional cyclist. He has been called "the first Black American global sports superstar."[1]

Key Information

He was born and raised in Indianapolis, where he worked in bicycle shops and began racing multiple distances in the track and road disciplines of cycling. As a teenager, he moved to Worcester, Massachusetts, with his employer/coach/mentor and continued his successful amateur career, which included breaking track records.

Taylor turned professional in 1896, at the age of 18, living in cities on the East Coast and participating in multiple track events including six-day races. He moved his focus to the sprint event in 1897, competing in a national racing circuit, winning many races and gaining popularity with the public. In 1898 and 1899, he set numerous world records in race distances ranging from the quarter-mile (0.4 km) to the two-mile (3.2 km).

Taylor won the 1-mile sprint event at the 1899 world track championships to become the first Black American to achieve the level of world champion and the second Black athlete to win a world championship in any sport (following Canadian boxer George Dixon, 1890[2]). Taylor was also a national sprint champion in 1899 and 1900. He raced in the U.S., Europe and Australia from 1901 to 1904, beating the world's best riders. After a 2+12-year hiatus, he made a comeback in 1907–1909, before retiring at age 32 to his home in Worcester in 1910.

Towards the end of his life Taylor faced severe financial difficulties. He spent the final two years of his life in Chicago, Illinois, where he died of a heart attack in 1932.

Throughout his career he challenged the racial prejudice he encountered on and off the track and became a pioneering role model for other athletes facing racial discrimination. Several cycling clubs, trails, and events in the U.S. have been named in his honor, as well as the Major Taylor Velodrome in Indianapolis and Major Taylor Boulevard in Worcester. Other tributes include memorials and historic markers in Worcester, Indianapolis, and at his gravesite in Chicago. He has also been memorialized in film, music and fashion.

Major Taylor's Signature
Major Taylor's Signature

Early life

[edit]

Marshall Walter Taylor was the son of Gilbert Taylor, a Civil War veteran, and Saphronia Kelter Taylor. His parents migrated from Louisville, Kentucky, and settled on a farm in Bucktown, Indiana, a rural area on the western edge of Indianapolis. Taylor, born on November 26, 1878, in Indianapolis, was one of eight children in the family of five girls and three boys. Around 1887, his father began working in Indianapolis as a coachman for a wealthy white family named Southard.[3][4][5][6]

When Taylor was a child, he occasionally accompanied his father to work and soon became a close friend of the Southards' son, Daniel,[6] who was the same age. Approximately from the age of 8[7] until he was about 12,[8] Taylor lived with the Southards family and along with Daniel was tutored at their home. Taylor's living arrangement with the Southards provided him with more advantages than his parents could provide; however, this period of his life abruptly ended when the Southards moved to Chicago.[9][10][11][8] Taylor, who remained in Indianapolis, returned to live at his parents' home and "was soon thrust into the real world."[6]

The Southards had provided Taylor with his first bicycle. By 1891 or early 1892, he had become such an expert trick rider that Tom Hay, an Indianapolis bicycle shop owner, hired him to perform bicycle stunts in front of the Hay and Willits bicycle shop. Taylor earned $6 a week to clean the shop and perform the stunts, plus a free bicycle worth $35.[9][4][12] It is likely that Taylor received his nickname of "Major" because he performed the cycling stunts wearing a military uniform.[9][a]

Harry T. Hearsey's bicycle shop in Downtown Indianapolis in 1896, where Taylor worked as a bicycle instructor

Early years and move to East Coast

[edit]

Although Major Taylor competed in both road and track races during his amateur career, he excelled in the track sprints, especially the one-mile (1.6 km) race.[14][15] The first cycling race Taylor won was a ten-mile (16 km) amateur event in Indianapolis in 1890.[16][17] He received a 15-minute handicap (head start) in the road race because of his young age. Taylor subsequently traveled to Peoria, Illinois, to compete in another meet, finishing in third place in the under-16 age category.[18][19]

Major Taylor encountered racial prejudice throughout his racing career from some of his competitors. In addition, some local track owners feared that other cyclists would refuse to compete if Taylor was present for a bicycle race and banned him from their tracks.[20] In 1893, for example, after the 15-year-old Taylor beat a one-mile amateur track record, he was "hooted" and then barred from the track.[21] Taylor joined the See-Saw Cycling Club, which was formed by black cyclists of Indianapolis who were unable to join the local all-white Zig-Zag Cycling Club.[22][23]

Major Taylor won his first significant cycling competition on June 30, 1895, when he was the only rider to finish a grueling 75-mile (121 km) road race near his hometown of Indianapolis. During the race Taylor received threats from his white competitors, who did not know that he had entered the event until the start of the race. A few days later, on July 4, 1895, Taylor won a ten-mile road race in Indianapolis that made him eligible to compete at the national championships for Black racers in Chicago. Later that summer, he won the ten-mile championship race in Chicago by ten lengths and set a new record for Black cyclists of 27:32.[24][20][25][26]

The earliest press image of Taylor, aged 18, from the July 6, 1895, edition of Indianapolis News[27]

In 1895, Taylor and Munger relocated from Indianapolis to Worcester which, at that time, was a center of the U.S. bicycle industry and included half-a-dozen factories and thirty bicycle shops. Munger, who was Taylor's employer, lifelong friend, and mentor, had decided to move his bicycle manufacturing business to the state of Massachusetts,[21][28] which was also a more tolerant area of the country.[29]

Munger and business partner Charles Boyd established the Worcester Cycle Manufacturing Company with factories in Worcester and Middletown, Connecticut. For Taylor, who continued to work for Munger as a bicycle mechanic and messenger between the company's two factory locations,[21][30][31] the move to the East Coast offered "higher visibility, larger crowds, increased sponsorship dollars, and greater access to world-class cycling venues."[32] After Taylor's relocation to Massachusetts, he joined the all-Black Albion Cycling Club in 1895 and trained at the Worcester YMCA.[33][34] Taylor is first mentioned in The New York Times on September 26, 1895, as a competitor in the Citizen Handicap event, a ten-mile race on Ocean Parkway in Brooklyn, New York. Taylor raced with a 1:30 handicap in a field of 200 competitors that included nine scratch riders.[35]

In 1896, Taylor entered numerous races in the Northeastern states of Massachusetts, New Jersey, and Connecticut. After winning a ten-mile road race in Worcester, Taylor competed in the 25-mile (40 km) Irvington–Millburn race in New Jersey, also known as the Derby of the East. Within half a mile (0.8 km) of the finish line, someone startled Taylor by tossing ice water into his face and he finished in 23rd place. Taylor's first major East Coast race was in a League of American Wheelmen (LAW) one-mile contest in New Haven, Connecticut, where he started in last place but won the event.[36][37] In August 1896, Taylor made a trip to Indianapolis, where he set an unofficial new track record of 2:11 15 for a distance of one mile at the Capital City velodrome, beating Walter Sanger's official track record of 2:19 25. (Taylor was not allowed to compete with Sanger, a professional racer, in a head-to-head contest because he was still an amateur.)[38][39][40][41] Taylor's final amateur race took place on November 26, 1896, in the 25-mile Tatum Handicap at Jamaica, New York. Taylor finished the race in 14th place.[42][43]

Professional career

[edit]

1896: First races

[edit]
Madison Square Garden II (pictured in 1908) in New York City, the venue of Taylor's first professional race in 1896

Taylor turned professional in 1896, at the age of eighteen, and soon emerged as the "most formidable racer in America."[21] Taylor's first professional race took place in front of 5,000 spectators on December 5, 1896.

He competed in a half-mile handicap event on an indoor track at New York City's Madison Square Garden II on the opening day of a multi-day event.[44][45] Although the main event was a six-day race from December 6–12, other contests in shorter distances were held on December 5 to entertain the crowd. These races included the half-mile handicap for professionals in which Taylor competed, a half-mile race between Jay Eaton and Teddy Goodman, and a half-mile scratch race. In addition, there were half-mile scratch and handicap races for amateurs.[46]

On December 5, Taylor began the half-mile handicap race with a 35-yard (32 m) advantage over the scratch racers. He beat a field of competitors that included Tom Cooper, Philadelphia's A.C. Meixwell, and scratch rider Eddie C. Bald, who represented New York's Syracuse, and rode a Barnes bicycle. Taylor won the race riding Munger's "Birdie Special" bicycle and beat Bald by 20 yards (18 m) in a sprint to the finish.[47][48][49]

From December 6–12, 1896, Taylor participated as one of 28 competitors in the six-day event. Although Taylor had just become a professional, he had achieved enough notoriety, possibly because of his stunning win on December 5, to be listed among the "American contestants" that also included A.A. Hansen (the Minneapolis "rainmaker") and Teddy Goodman. In addition, many "experts from abroad" participated in the meet such as Switzerland's Albert Schock, Germany's Frank J. Waller, Frank Forster, and Ed von Hoeg, and Canada's Burns W. Pierce. Several countries, including Scotland, Wales, France, England, and Denmark, were represented in the event.[46][49]

As the fascination with six-day races spread from its origins in the United Kingdom across the Atlantic, their appeal to base instincts was attracting large crowds. The more spectators who paid at the gate, the bigger the prizes, which provided riders with the incentive to stay awake–or be kept awake–in order to ride the greatest distance. To prepare for the event, Taylor went to Brooklyn, where he became a member of the South Brooklyn Wheelmen. An estimated crowd of 6,000 spectators attended the final day of the Madison Square Garden races in December 1896.[50][51] During these long, grueling races, riders suffered delusions and hallucinations, which may have been caused by exhaustion, lack of sleep, or perhaps use of drugs.[52][45][53][b]

Madison Square Garden's six-day event in 1896 was the longest race Taylor had ever entered. On the final day of the long-distance competition, he refused to continue racing, exhausted from physical exertion and lack of sleep; a Bearnings reporter overheard him comment: "I cannot go on with safety, for there is a man chasing me around the ring with a knife in his hand."[55] Nonetheless, Taylor completed a total of 1,732 miles (2,787 km) in 142 hours of racing to finish in eighth place.[56] Teddy Hale, the race winner, completed 1,910 miles (3,070 km) and took home $5,000 in prize money. Taylor never competed in another race that long.[57]

After Taylor's move to the East Coast in 1896, he initially lived in Worcester, where he worked for Munger, and in Middletown, the site of another of Munger's cycle factories.[35] Taylor also lived in other eastern cities, such as South Brooklyn, where he once had trained,[46] but it is not known how long he still resided in New York after he became a professional racer.[58]

1897–1898: Fame and records

[edit]
Taylor with the Boston pursuit team of 1897; one of the first known photographs of an integrated American professional sports team[59]

Taylor initially raced for Munger's Worcester Cycle Manufacturing Company. After the company went into receivership in 1897 he joined other racing teams.[60] 1897 was the first full year in which Taylor competed on the professional racing circuit.[61] Early in the season, at the Bostonian Cycle Club's "Blue Ribbon Meet" on May 19, 1897, Taylor rode a Comet bicycle to win first place in the one-mile open professional race.[62] On June 26, he won a quarter-mile (402 m) race at the track at Manhattan Beach, Brooklyn. Taylor also beat Eddie Bald in a one-mile race in Reading, Pennsylvania, but finished fourth in the prestigious LAW convention in Philadelphia.[63][64][65]

As a professional racer, Taylor continued to experience racial prejudice as a black cyclist in a white-dominated sport.[56] In November and December 1897, when the circuit extended to the racially-segregated South, local race promoters refused to let Taylor compete because he was black. Taylor returned to Massachusetts for the remainder of the season and Eddie Bald became the American sprint champion in 1897. Despite the obstacles, Taylor was determined to race.[66]

Yet, in the early years of his professional racing career, as he competed in and won more races, Taylor's reputation continued to increase. Newspapers began referring to him as the "Worcester Whirlwind," the "Black Cyclone," the "Ebony Flyer," the "Colored Cyclone," and the "Black Zimmerman," among other nicknames. He also gained popularity among the spectators.[67][68][69] One of his fans was President Theodore Roosevelt, who kept track of Taylor throughout Taylor's seventeen-year racing career.[21]

Taylor on the front of the November 1, 1898, edition of the French sports magazine La Vie au grand air [fr]

Early in the 1898 racing season Taylor beat Bald at Manhattan Beach, Brooklyn, New York. On June 17 at the Charles River Track in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in a 30-mile (48 km) fast-paced race, he lost to Eddie McDuffie, both of whom were on the same team and racing Orient Bicycles manufactured by the Waltham Manuracturing Company. One bicycle model and iinnovation that company owner Charles Metz developed was nicknamed the "Major Taylor," which featured a drop-down handlebar, a bar extension and a smaller wheel. [70]

On July 17 at Philadelphia, Taylor won his biggest victories of the season: first place in the one-mile championship and second place in the one-mile handicap races. On August 27, in a head-to-head race with Jimmy Michael of Wales, Taylor set a new world record of 1:41 25 for a one-mile paced match and beat the Welsh racer to the finish by 20 yards (18 m).[71][72]

Taylor was among several top cyclists who could claim the national championship in 1898; however, scoring variations and the formation of a new cycling league that year "clouded" his claim to the title.[21] Early in the year a group of professional racers that included Taylor had left the LAW to join a rival group, the American Racing Cyclists' Union (ARCU), and its professional racing group, the National Cycling Association (NCA). During the ARCU sprint championship in St. Louis and Cape Girardeau, Missouri, Taylor, who was a devout Baptist, refused to compete for religious reasons in the finals of the championship races because they were held on a Sunday. As a result of Taylor's decision not to race in the finals at Cape Girardeau, the ARCU suspended him from membership. Taylor petitioned the LAW for reinstatement in 1898 and was accepted, but Tom Butler, who had remained a LAW member after the break-up, was declared the League's champion that year.[73][74][75][c]

During 1898–99, at the peak of his cycling career, Taylor established seven world records;[29][21] the quarter-mile, the one-third-mile (531 m), the half-mile, the two-thirds-mile (1.1 km), the three-quarters-mile (1.2 km), the one-mile, and the two-mile (3.2 km) distances. His one-mile world record of 1:41 from a standing start stood for 28 years.[56]

1899: World sprint champion

[edit]
Taylor became the first Black American to win a world championship in any sport at the 1899 track world championships at the Vélodrome de Queen's Park in Montreal, Canada.

At the 1899 world championships in Montreal, Canada, Major Taylor won the one-mile sprint, to become the first African American to win a world championship in cycling. He was the second black athlete, after Canadian bantamweight boxer George Dixon of Boston, to win a world championship in any sport.[29][41] For decades he was the only black athlete to be a world champion in cycling.[77][78] Taylor won the one-mile world championship sprint in a close finish a few feet ahead of Frenchman Courbe d'Outrelon and American Tom Butler.[79][80] In addition, Taylor placed second in the two-mile championship sprint at Montreal behind Charles McCarthy and won the half-mile championship race.[21][81][82][83] Because the finals were held on Sundays, when Taylor refused to compete for religious reasons, he did not compete in another world championship contest until 1909 in Copenhagen, Denmark. Taylor lost in a preliminary heat at Copenhagen and did not compete in the finals.[84]

After Major Taylor's 1899 world championship win, many claimed that the event "had been a farce, because Taylor had not competed against the strongest riders."[85] World cycling's governing body, the International Cycling Association (replaced with the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) in 1900), did not allow NCA racers to compete at the world championships in Montreal. As a result, Taylor's accomplishments were somewhat diminished. Because the rival organizations (LAW and the NCA) would not recognize each other, two American champions were crowned in 1899. Tom Cooper was the NCA champion and Taylor was the LAW champion.[86][87]

In addition to the world championship wins in the one-mile and two-mile distances at Montreal and the LAW Championship, which he won on points, Taylor's victories in 1899 included twenty-two first-place finishes in major championship races around the U.S. Taylor's record-setting times were impossible to dismiss. No other rider had matched the "range and variety" of his winning performances, which made him an international celebrity.[21][88][85][89] In 1899, Taylor made several unsuccessful attempts to recapture his world record for a one-mile paced distance in two "strenuous record-breaking campaigns," before he finally achieved the new world record of 1:19 in November to regain the title of "the fastest man in the world."[90][91]

For the 1899 racing season, Major Taylor went to Syracuse and with Munger's assistance he signed a contract to race for the E. C. Stearns Company. Taylor, Munger, and Harry Sager, who was Taylor's bicycle parts sponsor, initially planned to negotiate a deal with the Olive Wheel Company; however, the men were able to work out a more lucrative contract with Stearns, who agreed to build Taylor's bicycles using a chainless gear mechanism that Sanger had designed. The bicycles only weighed about 20 pounds (9.1 kg) and had an 88-inch (2,200 mm) gear for sprinting and a 120-inch (3,000 mm) gear for longer, paced runs.[92][93] Stearns "also agreed to build Taylor a revolutionary steam-powered pacing tandem, behind which he could attack world records and challenge the leading exponents of paced racing."[94] Although the tandem was temperamental, it helped Taylor break his former teammate and competitor Eddie McDuffie's one-mile world record on November 15, 1899, with a time of 1:19 at a speed of 45.56 mph (73.32 km/h).[95] In late 1899, Taylor signed a contract to race with the Iver Johnson's Arms & Cycle Works team of Fitchburg, Massachusetts, during the 1900 racing season.[96]

1900: American sprint champion

[edit]

In 1900, when the LAW no longer governed professional bicycle races in the U.S., Taylor's future as a professional racer was in jeopardy. Fortunately, the ARCU and the NCA, who had banned Taylor from competing in their leagues, readmitted him after payment of a $500 fine.[90][97] Taylor won the American sprint championship on points in 1900. He also beat Tom Cooper, the 1899 NCA champion, in a head-to-head match in a one-mile race at Madison Square Garden in front of 50,000 to 60,000 spectators. In addition, Taylor set world records in the half-mile and two-thirds-mile sprints and raced indoors using a "home trainer" in head-to-head competitions with other riders as a vaudeville act.[98][99][100] Taylor eventually settled in Worcester, where, in 1900, he purchased a home on Hobson Street.[58]

1901–1904: Europe and Australia

[edit]
Taylor racing against Edmond Jacquelin at Paris' Parc des Princes in 1901

Following his record-setting successes in the U.S. and Canada, Taylor agreed to a European tour. In 1901, Taylor made his first trip to Europe, but returned to compete in the U.S. after the conclusion of the European spring racing season. During his European tour Taylor still refused to race on Sundays, when most of the finals were held, because of his religious convictions.[101][102][103][104] It was reported that Taylor took a Bible with him when he travelled and began each race with a silent prayer because of his religious beliefs.[21][105]

Trophy presented to Major Taylor at Parc des Princes, Paris on May 27, 1901, in the Indiana State Museum and Historic Sites Collection

Taylor was popular among the European race fans and news reporters: "Everywhere he went he was mobbed, talked about, or written up."[106] In 1901, Taylor won 18 of the 24 European races he entered, notching up 42 victories when the individual heats are counted.[107] A highlight of Taylor's European tour in 1901 was the two match races with French champion Edmond Jacquelin at the Parc des Princes in Paris, the winner in each decided over the best of three heats. Jacquelin won the first match, on May 16, two heats to nil, a wheel length sealing the win in the first heat, two lengths the gap in the second. Taylor triumphed in the second match, on May 27, two heats to nil, four lengths his margin of victory in the first heat, three the gap in the second.[107]

Major Taylor also participated in a European tour in 1902, when he entered 57 races and won 40 of them to defeat the champions of Germany, England, and France.[21] In addition to racing in Europe, Taylor also competed in Australia and New Zealand in 1903 and 1904. In February 1903, for example, Taylor, lured by a £1,200 appearance fee and a world record 1st prize of £750, competed in the inaugural Sydney Thousand handicap. His fee the next year hit £2,000.[108][109] During his world tour in 1903, Taylor earned prize money estimated at $35,000 ($923,352 in 2015 chained dollars).[110]

1907–1910: Later years

[edit]
Taylor and Léon Hourlier at a standstill during a race at Paris' Vélodrome Buffalo in 1909

Following a collapse from the mental and physical strain of professional competition, Taylor took a 2+12-year hiatus from cycling between 1904 and 1906, before returning to race in France. He set two world records in Paris in 1907 for the half-mile standing start at 0:42 15 and the quarter-mile standing start at 0:25 25. Taylor also returned to Europe for the racing season in 1908 and in 1909. He finally broke his long-standing decision to avoid Sunday races in 1909 when he was nearing the end of his racing career.

Taylor's last professional race took place on October 10, 1909, in Roanne, France, in a match race against French world champion Charles Dupré. Taylor won the race, but he did not return to Europe for the 1910 season and retired from competitive cycling.[111][112][113]

Taylor was still breaking records in 1908, but his age was starting to "creep up on him."[21] He retired from racing in 1910 at the age of 32. When Taylor returned to his home in Worcester at the end of his racing career, his estimated net worth was $75,000 ($1,978,611 in 2015 chained dollars) to $100,000 ($2,638,148 in 2015 chained dollars). Taylor won his final competition, an "old-timers race" among former professional racers, in New Jersey in September 1917.[114][115][116]

Racism in cycling

[edit]
A caricature published in the edition of February 23, 1894, of The Bearings cycling magazine, illustrating the ban of blacks from membership to the League of American Wheelmen

As Taylor gained fame as an amateur then as a professional, he did not escape racial segregation. In 1894, the League of American Wheelmen changed its bylaws to exclude blacks from membership; however, it did permit them to compete in its races. Although Taylor's cycling was greatly celebrated abroad, particularly in France, his career was still restricted by racism, particularly in the Southern U.S., where some local promoters would not permit him to compete against white cyclists.[117][118][119][120] Some restaurants and hotels also refused to serve him or provide him lodging.[9]

Taylor asserted in his autobiography that prominent bicycle racers of his era often cooperated to defeat him; the Butler brothers (Nat and Tom), for example, were accused of so doing in the one-mile world championship race at Montreal in 1899. At the LAW races in Boston, shortly after Taylor had won the world championship, he accused the entire field, that included Tom Cooper and Eddie Bald among others, of fouling him.[121][122] Taylor complained after the event that he had been "bumped, jostled, and elbowed until I was sorely tried."[123][124][125] Racing promoter William A. Brady, who was also Taylor's manager, chastised the other riders for their "rough treatment" of Taylor during the race.[122]

While some of Taylor's fellow racers refused to compete with him, others resorted to intimidation, verbal insults, and threats to physically harm him.[9] While racing in Savannah, Georgia in the Winter of 1898, he received a written threat saying "Clear out if you value your life;" the previous day, Taylor had challenged three riders together to a race after one of them had said they "didn't pace niggers."[126] Taylor recalled that ice water had been thrown at him during races and nails were scattered in front of his wheels. Taylor further stated in his autobiography that he had been elbowed and "pocketed" (boxed in) by other riders to prevent him from sprinting to the front of the pack, a tactic at which he was so successful.[127][128][124][125]

Taylor's competitors also tried to injure him. One incident occurred on September 23, 1897, after the one-mile Massachusetts Open race at Taunton. At the conclusion of the race, William Becker, who placed third behind Taylor in second place, tackled Taylor on the race track and choked him into unconsciousness. Becker, who claimed that Taylor had crowded him during the race, was temporarily suspended while the incident was investigated. Becker received a $50 fine as punishment for his actions but was reinstated and allowed to continue racing. In another incident, which occurred in February 1904 when Taylor was competing in Australia, he was seriously injured on the final turn of a race when his fellow competitor Iver Lawson veered his bicycle toward him and collided with his front wheel. Taylor crashed and lay unconscious on the track before he was taken to a local hospital; he later made a full recovery. Lawson, as a result of his actions, was suspended from racing anywhere in the world for a year.[9][129][130]

Life is too short for any man to hold bitterness in his heart and that is why I have no feeling against anybody.

Marshall Taylor[131]

Taylor explained that he included details of these incidents in his autobiography, along with his comments about his experiences, to serve as an inspiration for other African American athletes trying to overcome racial prejudice and discriminatory treatment in sports. Taylor cited exhaustion as well as the physical and mental strain caused by the racial prejudice he experienced on and off the track as his reasons for retiring from competitive cycling in 1910.[132][133] His advice to African American youths wishing to emulate him straightforward was that although bicycle racing had been the appropriate route to success for him, he would not recommend it in general. He suggested that individuals "practice clean living, fair play and good sportsmanship" and develop their best talent with a strong character, significant willpower, and "physical courage."[134] Despite many obstacles, Taylor rose to the top of his sport and became "one of the dominant athletes of his era."[17]

Retirement and death

[edit]
Taylor in 1926, aged 47–48
1914 newspaper ad offering shares of the Major Taylor Manufacturing Company
Taylor's grave at Mount Glenwood Memory Gardens South

After retiring from competition, Major Taylor applied to Worcester Polytechnic Institute to study engineering although he did not have a high school diploma, but he was denied admission[135] and took up various business ventures.

Nearly 20 years after his retirement, Taylor wrote and self-published his autobiography, The Fastest Bicycle Rider in the World: The Story of a Colored Boy's Indomitable Courage and Success Against Great Odds: An Autobiography (1928).[d] According to his book, Taylor was upbeat about his retirement: "I felt I had my day, and a wonderful day it was too." Taylor also claimed he had no regrets and "no animosity toward any man," but his autobiography included hints of bitterness in regard to his treatment as a competitor: "I always played the game fairly and tried my hardest, although I was not always given a square deal or anything like it."[137]

By 1930, Taylor had experienced severe financial difficulties from bad investments (including self-publishing his autobiography), the stock market crash, and businesses that proved unsuccessful. Taylor's home in Worcester and some of the family's personal property were sold to pay off debts. He also suffered from persistent ill health in his later years.[138][139][140]

Little is known of Taylor's life after the failure of his marriage and his move to Chicago around 1930. Taylor spent the final two years of his life in poverty, selling copies of his autobiography to earn a meagre income and residing at YMCA Hotel in Chicago's Bronzeville neighborhood.[141]

In March 1932, Taylor suffered a heart attack and was hospitalized in the Provident Hospital. After an unsuccessful heart operation, he was moved to Cook County Hospital's charity ward in April, where he died on June 21, at age 53. The official cause on his death certificate is "nephrosclerosis and hypertension," contributed by "Chronic myocarditis."[142] His wife and daughter, who survived him, did not immediately learn of his death and no one claimed his remains. He was initially buried at Mount Glenwood Cemetery in Thornton Township, Cook County, near Chicago, in an unmarked pauper's grave.[143] In 1948, a group of former professional bicycle racers used funds donated by Frank W. Schwinn, owner of the Schwinn Bicycle Co. at that time, to organize the exhumation and reburial of Taylor's remains in a more prominent location at the cemetery.[144][145] The plaque at the grave reads: "World's champion bicycle racer who came up the hard way without hatred in his heart, an honest, courageous and God-fearing, clean-living gentlemanly athlete. A credit to his race who always gave out his best. Gone but not forgotten."[146]

Legacy

[edit]

Major Taylor's legacy lies in his willingness to challenge racial prejudice as an African American athlete in the white-dominated sport of cycling. He was also hailed as a sports hero in France and Australia. Taylor, who became a role model for other athletes facing racial prejudice and discrimination,[9] was "the first great black celebrity athlete" and a pioneer in his efforts to challenge segregation in sports. He also paved the way for others facing similar circumstances.[56] Taylor explained in his autobiography that he had no other African Americans to offer him advice and "therefore had to blaze my own trail."[134]

An image by Kadir Nelson of Major Taylor racing down a tree-lined street with bicyclists from the past and the present trying to keep up behind him was the illustrated cover and cover story of the "New Yorker" magazine online edition of May 26, 2025 and print edition of June 2, 2025.[147]

Honors and tributes

[edit]
Honors and tributes
A plaque commemorating the 1982 dedication of the Major Taylor Velodrome in Indianapolis, Indiana
Memorial to Taylor outside the Worcester Public Library
Major Taylor Boulevard in Worcester
Major Taylor Museum in Worcester
Karen Brown Donovan, great-granddaughter of Major Taylor, at the grand opening of the Major Taylor Museum in Worcester (2021).

Taylor's legacy remained largely unknown until 1982, when the Major Taylor Velodrome in Indianapolis opened for the city's hosting of the U.S. Olympic Festival.[148] Annual events taking place in the velodrome or the wider Indy Cycloplex include the Major Taylor Racing League track series, and from 2015, the Major Taylor Cross Cup second division UCI cyclo-cross event.[149] Taylor was posthumously inducted into the U.S. Bicycling Hall of Fame in 1989.[150] In 1996 and 1997, Taylor was posthumously awarded with the USA Cycling Korbel Lifetime Achievement Award and the Massachusetts Hall of Black Achievement, respectively.[151][152] In 2002, he was one of the nine track cyclists inducted into the UCI Hall of Fame, created to commemorate 100 years of the Paris–Roubaix one-day road race and the inauguration of the World Cycling Centre.[153] In 2003, he was named a Sports Ethics Fellow by the Institute for International Sport.[154] During the 2005 UCI Track Cycling World Championships in Los Angeles, a Peugeot bicycle that Taylor had owned and then was donated to the U.S. Bicycling Hall of Fame, was put on display inside the ADT Event Center.[155] In 2009, a state historical marker was installed as a tribute to Taylor near the Indiana State Fairgrounds in Indianapolis, where the Capital City track once stood, and where he had set an unofficial track record in 1896.[41] In 2018, he was honored with a special tribute award at the International Athletic Association's Jesse Owens Awards held at the National Museum of African American History and Culture.[156]

In 1998, in Taylor's adopted hometown of Worcester, MA, where he had lived for 35 years, the Major Taylor Association was formed by locals with the goal of erecting a permanent memorial to Taylor outside the Worcester Public Library and telling his story.[157][158][159][160] On July 24, 2006, the city renamed the Worcester Center Boulevard, a high-traffic downtown street, to Major Taylor Boulevard.[161][162] At the same time, funding for the memorial was secured with the Massachusetts Legislature approving $205,000, signed by governor Mitt Romney.[161] The opening ceremony took place on May 21, 2008, attended by Tour de France winner Greg LeMond.[158] The memorial features a bronze sculpture of Taylor surrounded by granite, created by Antonio Tobias Mendez, who was chosen from more than 60 others.[163] At the grand opening of Worcester's Applebee's restaurant in 2000, Taylor was selected as its "hometown hero" and has a display of his memorabilia.[164] In 2002, the Educational Association of Worcester and the Worcester Public Schools, together with the Major Taylor Association, developed a curriculum guide on Taylor,[165] which has since been expanded and used in schools nationwide.[164] Since 2003, Worcester has hosted the annual "George Street Bike Challenge for Major Taylor" amateur hillclimb event.[166]

In 1979, the first of what came to be numerous cycling clubs across the country named in Taylor's honor was organized in Columbus, Ohio.[167][168] In 2008, a number of these clubs joined with other African-American clubs to form the National Brotherhood of Cyclists (NBC), a nonprofit organization that aims to further diversity in cycling.[169] The Major Taylor Trail, a six-mile-long (9.7 km) rail trail that navigates through South Side, Chicago, opened in 2007. Eleven years later, Chicagoan artist Bernard Williams oversaw the creation of a 400-foot-long (120 m) community mural honoring Taylor along the metal siding of the Little Calumet River bridge, which the trail crosses.[170] Taylor is also celebrated along the Alum Creek Greenway Trail in Columbus, Ohio.[171] In 2009, the Cascade Bicycle Club community organization of Washington state launched The Major Taylor Project, a youth cycling program.[172]

A small museum devoted to Taylor opened in 2021 in the former Worcester County Courthouse.[173] Taylor's great-granddaughter attended the dedication.[173] A mural, painted by Shawn Michael Warren, was dedicated in Indianapolis, in September 2021, to honor his legacy.[174]

The Charles River Museum of Industry and Innovation, in Waltham, MA, has several displays dedicated to Major Taylor and his rivalry with Eddie McDuffee, both of whom rode Orient Bicycles, manufactured by the Metz Waltham Manufacturing Company.

In Dec. 2023, U.S. Rep. Jim Baird of Indiana, (R) and U.S. Rep. Jonathan L. Jackson of Illinois, (D), spearheaded an effort to award the Congressional Gold Medal to Taylor. The measure was, co-sponsored by U.S. Rep. James P. McGovern, D-Worcester. (Status of that unknown.)

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Actor Philip Morris portrayed Taylor in the 1992 television mini-series Tracks of Glory.[175] Blues musician Otis Taylor (no relation) recorded "He Never Raced on Sunday," a song about Taylor for his 2004 album Double V.[176] In 2007, Nike produced the Major Taylor "premium" collection of their most iconic sneakers in a light brown/neon yellow/white colorway.[177] In the same year, SOMA Fabrications began making a set of bicycle handlebars called the Major Taylor Bar, which is a replica of 1930s drop handlebar that was named for Taylor.[178][179] Dewshane Williams portrayed Taylor in the 2013 episode of television drama series Murdoch Mysteries, "Tour de Murdoch."[180]

Major Taylor was used in a 2018-19 promotional campaign by the drinks brand Hennessy, part of a series focusing on "inspirational stories" of "culturally influential people". The campaign included TV commercials aired during the Super Bowl and the NBA Finals, featuring a voiceover from rapper Nas, as well as television documentary short The Six Day Race: The Story of Marshall "Major" Taylor; directed by Colin Barnicle, it features interviews with contemporary African-American athletes, road cyclist Ayesha McGowan and BMX rider Nigel Sylvester.[181] Other parts of the campaign were a limited run replica track bicycle, a bronze sculpture of Taylor by Kadir Nelson and a series of tribute bicycle rides took place across the U.S. in November and December marking Taylor's birth date, and the creation of the $25,000 "MMT Higher Education Scholarship".[169][181] Also in 2019, Taylor's name and likeness was licensed to Major Taylor Cycling Wear of Columbus Ohio to manufacture and distribute official sports- and cycling-wear bearing the image of Major Taylor.[182]

Graphic novel publisher Drawn and Quarterly announced plans to publish a biography of Taylor by comic artist Frederick Noland.[183] This was originally planned for 2023 but an autumn 2026 publication date was announced at the 2025 Comic Con in San Diego, where the cover was revealed.[184]

Marriage and family

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Taylor with his wife, Daisy, and daughter, Sydney, c. 1906–1907

Taylor's wife, Daisy Victoria Morris, was born on January 28, 1876, in Hudson, New York. Taylor married Morris in Ansonia, Connecticut, on March 21, 1902. Taylor met her around 1900 when she was living in Worcester, with her aunt and uncle.[185][186][187][188][189][143]

While in Australia in 1904, Taylor and his wife had their only child, a daughter that they named Rita Sydney in honor of Sydney, where she was born on May 11.[190][191] When Taylor, his wife, and daughter were not traveling, they lived in a large home on Hobson Avenue in Worcester that Taylor had purchased in 1900.[58]

After his retirement from racing in 1910 and the failure of subsequent business ventures in the 1920s, Taylor and his wife became estranged. In 1930 she left him and moved to New York City. Around the same time Taylor left Worcester and moved to Chicago; he never saw his wife or daughter again. [192]

Taylor's daughter Sydney, who graduated from the Sargent School of Culture in Boston in 1925 and the University of Chicago in 1936, taught physical education at West Virginia State University. She died in 2005 at age 101; her survivors include a son, Dallas C. Brown Jr., and his five children.[110][193] In 1984, Taylor's daughter Sydney donated an extensive scrapbook collection on her father to the University of Pittsburgh Archives.[194] The original scrapbooks were donated to the Indiana State Museum and Historic Sites in 1988.[105]

World records

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List of world records set by Major Taylor
Date Distance Pacing/start Time Location Refs
September 2, 1896 15 mile (0.32 km) Unpaced, flying start 0:23 35 Capital City Track, Indianapolis [195][196]
August 27, 1898 1 mile (1.6 km) Paced, standing start 1:43 25 Manhattan Beach, New York City [197][198]
1 mile (1.6 km) Paced, standing start 1:41 25
September 5, 1898 12 mile (0.80 km) Single-paced competition 0:58 45 Hampden Park, Springfield, MA [199][200]
November 4, 1898 1 kilometer (0.62 mi) Paced 0:57 35 Woodside Park, Philadelphia [201][202]
November 5, 1898 14 mile (0.40 km) Paced 0:22 25 [202][203]
2 miles (3.2 km) Paced 3:13 35
November 12, 1898 1 mile (1.6 km) Paced 1:32 [204][205]
12 mile (0.80 km) Paced 0:45 45
12 mile (0.80 km) Paced 0:45 35
November 14, 1898 13 mile (0.54 km) Paced 0:29 45 [206]
November 15, 1898 12 mile (0.80 km) Paced 0:45 25 [207][208]
1 mile (1.6 km) Paced 1:32
14 mile (0.40 km) Paced 0:22 15
13 mile (0.54 km) Paced 0:29 35
12 mile (0.80 km) Paced 0:45 25
34 mile (1.2 km) Paced 1:08 35
1 mile (1.6 km) Paced 1:32
November 16, 1898 14 mile (0.40 km) Paced 0:22 15 [209][210]
13 mile (0.54 km) Paced 0:29 35
12 mile (0.80 km) Paced 0:45 25
23 mile (1.1 km) Paced 1:00 45
1 mile (1.6 km) Paced 1:31 45
12 mile (0.80 km) Paced 0:45 15
34 mile (1.2 km) Paced 1:08 25
August 3, 1899 1 mile (1.6 km) Motor-paced 1:22 25 Garfield Park, Chicago [211][212]
November 9, 1899 14 mile (0.40 km) Motor-paced 0:20 [213][214]
November 10, 1899 12 mile (0.80 km) Motor-paced 0:41 [215][216]
November 15, 1899 1 mile (1.6 km) Motor-paced 1:19 [217]
December 14, 1900 14 mile (0.40 km) Unpaced 0:25 45 Madison Square Garden, New York City [218]
August 1908 12 mile (0.80 km) Standing start 0:42 15 Vélodrome Buffalo, Paris [219][220]
14 mile (0.40 km) Standing start 0:25 25
August 26, 1908 1 mile (1.6 km) Motor-paced 1:33 25 [221]

See also

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Notes

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References

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Bibliography

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Marshall Walter "Major" Taylor (November 26, 1878 – June 21, 1932) was an American professional track cyclist who earned international acclaim as a sprint specialist, most notably by winning the one-mile world championship in 1899, marking him as the first Black athlete to claim a global title in cycling. Born in Indianapolis, Indiana, to parents descended from enslaved people, Taylor acquired his nickname from childhood performances mimicking military drills while delivering newspapers on a bicycle, which propelled his entry into competitive racing as a teenager. Taylor's career peaked in the late 1890s and early , during which he secured multiple national titles, established over 20 world records in distances from the quarter-mile to two miles, and triumphed in major events across , , and , often outpacing white competitors who resorted to tactics like crowding him on the track to induce crashes. Despite his dominance, racial prejudice permeated the sport; the League of American Wheelmen barred members in 1894, effectively excluding him from many U.S. amateur races and compelling reliance on professional circuits abroad where acceptance varied. He retired at age 32 in , worn down by relentless travel, opposition from rivals, and the psychological toll of discrimination, subsequently facing financial ruin that culminated in his death from pneumonia in a charity hospital. Taylor's legacy endures as a testament to individual excellence amid institutional barriers, inspiring later generations of cyclists and underscoring the intersection of athletic merit with societal constraints on achievement. His autobiography, The Fastest Bicycle Rider in the World, published in , provides a firsthand account of these struggles, drawing from personal records rather than secondary interpretations.

Early Life

Birth and Family Background

Marshall Walter Taylor was born on November 26, 1878, in Indianapolis, Indiana. He was one of several children born to Gilbert Taylor, a veteran of the U.S. Colored Troops who had served in the Civil War, and Saphronia Kelter Taylor. The family had migrated northward from Kentucky to Indiana following the war, seeking improved prospects in a post-emancipation era marked by persistent racial segregation. Gilbert Taylor supported the family through employment as a and carriage driver for a prominent white household, indicative of their working-class status amid economic constraints typical for Black families in late 19th-century . Saphronia Taylor managed the , fostering an environment shaped by the resilience required in a society where opportunities for remained severely limited. Both parents descended from enslaved ancestors, a heritage that underscored the intergenerational emphasis on perseverance and physical within the household.

Introduction to Cycling and Apprenticeship

Marshall Walter Taylor, born in Indianapolis, Indiana, in 1878, first engaged with bicycling around age 13 in 1891, when he was hired by the local Hay & Willits bike shop to perform stunts and tricks on a bicycle to attract customers. Dressed in a soldier's uniform during these street performances, Taylor executed feats such as riding backwards, standing on the handlebars, and other maneuvers requiring precise balance and control, which honed his foundational riding skills through repetitive, practical application. This role not only introduced him to the mechanical aspects of bicycles but also earned him the lifelong nickname "Major" due to his military attire. Taylor's entry into more structured cycling came via apprenticeship under Louis "Birdie" Munger, a prominent bicycle racer, mechanic, and shop owner in Indianapolis, beginning in the early 1890s. Munger, who had competed in high-wheel bicycle races and understood the engineering demands of the emerging safety bicycle, employed Taylor as a machinist's apprentice at the Moore & Munger Company, where he learned frame construction, component maintenance, and repair techniques essential for competitive riding. This hands-on training emphasized empirical skill-building, as Taylor disassembled and reassembled bikes, gaining an intuitive grasp of gearing, tire pressure, and alignment that directly informed his riding efficiency. Under 's mentorship, Taylor transitioned from informal stunts to deliberate physical conditioning, focusing on endurance and sprint techniques without reliance on formal coaching programs. , recognizing Taylor's natural aptitude, introduced systematic practices like interval rides and resistance training using shop tools, fostering causal development of speed and stamina through consistent, observable progress rather than theoretical instruction. This period laid the groundwork for Taylor's prowess, as 's guidance—rooted in his own experience—prioritized mechanical reliability and rider , enabling Taylor to refine his form independently. In fall 1895, at age 17, Taylor relocated to , with , who established a new bike manufacturing venture, continuing this apprenticeship amid a burgeoning hub.

Professional Career

Amateur Beginnings and Professional Debut (1895–1896)

In 1895, at the age of 16, Marshall Taylor secured his first significant amateur victory in a 75-mile road race from to Matthews, , where he was the only rider to complete the course. He subsequently won additional amateur contests across states, including , , New York, and , demonstrating emerging sprinting prowess on both road and track. However, a controversial win that year prompted a temporary suspension from the League of American Wheelmen, as authorities ruled he had violated amateur regulations by competing against professionals. Taylor turned professional in 1896 at age 18, marking his transition amid ongoing barriers in organized . His debut professional season included participation in high-stakes events, culminating in his first professional victory on June 26, 1896, when he won a quarter-mile sprint at the Manhattan Beach track in , New York, outpacing established competitors. This win highlighted his characteristic explosive acceleration from the pack, a tactic that relied on sudden bursts of speed rather than sustained pacing, setting the foundation for his competitive style.

Rise to National Fame (1897–1898)

In 1897, Taylor shifted his competitive emphasis to sprint events within the national racing circuit, where he secured numerous victories and established several U.S. records, including those for the one-third-mile and two-thirds-mile distances. These performances demonstrated his explosive and tactical positioning, outmaneuvering established competitors through superior pacing and finishes. His success in these races marked a pivotal step in building public recognition, as crowds attended events featuring the young sprinter's high-speed duels on banked tracks across the Midwest and Northeast. By 1898, Taylor's dominance intensified, culminating in a half-mile handicap win at , where he defeated prominent riders such as Eddie Bald, Tom Cooper, Earl Kiser, and Arthur Gardiner. That August 27, he further shattered the paced one-mile record from a with a time of 1:41 2/5, contributing to his sweep of sprint records across distances from the quarter-mile to two miles. These feats, achieved via relentless training and strategic racecraft against rivals like Tom Butler, propelled him to national sprint championships amid circuit disputes, yielding substantial purses that underscored his meritocratic ascent in a merit-testing .

World Championship and American Dominance (1899–1900)

In August 1899, at the world track championships in , , Taylor captured the professional one-mile sprint title, defeating American rival Tom Butler in the final heat after dominating his qualifying rounds. This achievement, verified by contemporary race reports, established Taylor as the first African American world champion in , highlighting his explosive acceleration from standing starts and ability to maintain velocity against seasoned opponents who relied on blocking tactics. Official timings from the event underscored his edge in short-distance bursts, where he outpaced fields averaging speeds exceeding 30 miles per hour on wooden tracks. Taylor's tactical prowess was evident in his wide maneuvers to evade interference, a strategy corroborated by eyewitness accounts of the era's high-stakes match sprints, where starters' reflexes and mid-race positioning determined outcomes over alone. Following this global triumph, he set a paced one-mile in later that year, clocking an average of 45.5 miles per hour, which affirmed his peak physiological conditioning for sustained high-intensity efforts. In 1900, Taylor defended his domestic supremacy by winning the American professional sprint championship, defeating top U.S. riders like Frank Kramer in key circuit events and accumulating points across multiple venues. This title, his second consecutive national sprint crown, involved victories in over 40 races against fields, with documented performances emphasizing his superior in two-heat sprints lasting up to 1,000 meters. Race data from the season, including sub-two-minute mile finishes, confirmed Taylor's quantitative lead in start-to-finish pacing, outdistancing challengers by margins of seconds in finals witnessed by thousands at tracks like .

International Tours and Global Recognition (1901–1904)

In 1901, Taylor embarked on his first major European tour from March to June, competing against top continental sprinters on varied tracks in , , and other nations, where he secured 42 victories, including individual heats, against established champions. Crowds in and greeted him with enthusiasm, hailing his explosive sprints and earning him the affectionate French moniker "le nègre volant" for his airborne-like speed, a stark reception from the adulation he received without the racial antagonism prevalent in American events. He adapted swiftly to the smaller, steeper European banked tracks and temperate climates, setting records in match sprints and demonstrating tactical prowess in handicap races over distances from 500 meters to a mile. Returning in 1902, Taylor entered 57 races across , , and , winning 40 and decisively defeating national champions such as 's Willy Schuitte and 's Bill Samuel, further solidifying his global dominance. His performances drew record attendances at venues like the Friedenau in , where he triumphed in his debut European event on April 7, 1901, and continued to captivate audiences with consistent sub-10-second flying starts in quarter-mile dashes. These tours highlighted his versatility, as he navigated everything from concrete outdoor pistes to indoor wooden bowls, often under cooler, rain-affected conditions unlike the dry U.S. circuits. Shifting focus to the Southern Hemisphere, Taylor's 1903–1904 tour of and yielded over 30 victories, including key defeats of local stars like Sydney's Jack A. Munro in Melbourne's Motordrome events, amassing purses estimated at $35,000—equivalent to substantial wealth for the era. Competing in scorching summer heat on expansive, dust-prone tracks like Sydney's Cricket Ground, he claimed sprint titles on December 26, 1903, during holiday carnivals, adapting his gearing and pacing to longer Oceanic straightaways and prevailing winds. These successes elevated his international stature, with promoters offering escalating appearance fees up to £2,000 annually, recognizing his draw as a reliable winner who boosted gate receipts across distant colonies. By 1904, Taylor's global odyssey had cemented his reputation as the preeminent sprinter, unburdened by domestic barriers and celebrated for raw athleticism in receptive foreign markets.

Later Competitions and Career Winding Down (1907–1910)

After a hiatus of over two years following his extensive international tours, Taylor returned to competition in 1907 with a brief European comeback centered in . On May 10, he raced at , marking his first event since 1904. Later that summer, on August 15, he defeated French riders Poulain and Friol in two of three match races, demonstrating flashes of his former speed but not the dominance of his peak years. These results were mixed, as Taylor, then 29, struggled against younger European sprinters who had advanced during his absence, compounded by the physical toll of re-entering high-stakes racing after extended inactivity. Taylor's appearances remained sporadic in 1908 and 1909, shifting between the U.S. and with fewer victories overall. In 1908, he competed in a rare winter indoor race at Boston's track, an atypical format for the sprinter that highlighted his limited U.S. engagements. By 1909, at age 31, he raced in , including events in , where he occasionally prevailed but faced stiffer competition from riders like Léon Hourlier. His self-imposed refusal to race on —rooted in religious convictions—further restricted participation, as many key meets occurred on that day, limiting his opportunities and contributing to a perception of waning form. Taylor's final professional races occurred in 1910 in , , under a contract requiring him to compete starting in early July. On August 16, he faced Iver Lawson at the track but lost the match the following day, underscoring his diminished edge against active professionals. These outings, at age 32, effectively ended his career, as age-related decline, prior breaks, and selective racing choices eroded his ability to secure consistent wins amid evolving competition. Taylor retired later that year, citing exhaustion from the sport's demands.

Racial Discrimination and Adversities

Specific Incidents of Racial Bias in U.S.

In February 1894, the League of American Wheelmen (), the primary governing body for U.S. , amended its constitution to limit membership to "white persons only," instituting a formal color bar that excluded from sanctioned races and events. This policy directly barred Taylor from LAW-affiliated competitions despite his amateur successes, forcing him to seek professional circuits outside the organization's control. Taylor encountered deliberate physical interference from white competitors during track races, including attempts to box him in, elbow him, and swerve into his path to cause crashes, tactics substantiated in his 1928 The Fastest Bicycle Rider in the World and corroborated by contemporary accounts of on-track violence. In one documented instance from 1897 in , rival cyclist Tom Butler collided with Taylor during a race, exemplifying the hazardous fouls motivated by racial animosity amid Jim Crow-era norms. These incidents contributed to repeated threats of violence and death, with Taylor reporting multiple attacks and warnings from opponents intent on preventing his victories. Under Jim Crow segregation laws, Taylor was denied entry to races across Southern states, where local authorities and track operators enforced racial bans that prohibited Black competitors from velodromes and events. He also faced routine refusals of hotel accommodations and dining services in the South and border regions, compelling him to sleep in train stations or rail cars during tours, as evidenced by period newspaper reports and his personal records. Post-race mob hostility erupted in several instances, with crowds hurling racial epithets and threats after his wins, underscoring the pervasive enforcement of in American sports venues.

Personal Responses, Resilience, and Self-Imposed Principles

Taylor adhered strictly to principles of fair play on the track, refusing to retaliate against opponents' aggressive or unsportsmanlike tactics despite frequent provocations. In his 1928 , he emphasized, "I always played the game fairly and tried my hardest, although I was not always given a square deal or anything like it," underscoring his commitment to integrity over vengeance. This approach extended to his self-imposed code of clean living, which included abstaining from alcohol, , and , as he believed such built the mental fortitude necessary to endure adversities without compromising his conduct. To cultivate resilience, Taylor relied on rigorous training regimens and a mindset of positivity, rejecting bitterness as counterproductive. He wrote, "Life is too short for a man to hold bitterness in his heart," attributing his ability to persist amid exclusionary practices to focused effort and moral clarity rather than resentment. Complementing this, he incorporated into his routine for inner strength, later reflecting on instilling track-learned ideals through faith-based guidance, which reinforced his resolve during high-stakes competitions. Taylor advocated these habits broadly, advising youths to "practice clean living, fair play and good ," principles he credited for enabling success against entrenched barriers. Demonstrating strategic self-reliance, Taylor prioritized international circuits where racial animus was comparatively muted, allowing him to compete on merit and secure lucrative engagements in and following his 1899 world championship. This choice reflected a pragmatic focus on controllable factors like performance over domestic victimhood narratives, as he blazed his path as a pioneer: "I was a pioneer, and therefore had to blaze my own trail." Empirical outcomes validated this agency; despite U.S. bans and boycotts that limited domestic opportunities, Taylor captured U.S. circuit championships in 1899 and 1900, along with numerous world records, outcomes he linked directly to disciplined preparation and ethical conduct rather than external validation. He asserted that such achievements proved "it is possible to achieve the highest ambitions" through hard work, offering a model of causal efficacy grounded in personal accountability.

Personal Life and Beliefs

Marriage, Family, and Domestic Life

Marshall Walter Taylor married Daisy Victoria Morris, a well-educated woman from , on March 21, 1902, in . The union provided Taylor with personal stability during his demanding professional travels, as the couple established a household that served as a amid his international racing commitments. The Taylors had one daughter, Sydney Taylor Brown, born in 1904 in Sydney, , during her father's tour of the country; the child was named after the city. Sydney, their only child, later lived into her 101st year, reflecting on her father's life in interviews. The family primarily resided in , where Taylor purchased a two-story home at 4 Hobson Avenue in the Columbus Park neighborhood, offering a semblance of normalcy and domestic routine despite racial hostilities from some local residents who opposed the Black champion's presence. Taylor prioritized his responsibilities as provider, channeling earnings from his to support his wife and daughter, though the frequent separations due to competitions shaped their home life around his returns and the maintenance of family bonds.

Religious Faith and Its Influence on Conduct

Marshall Walter Taylor, known as Major Taylor, became a devout Baptist following the death of his mother in 1898, seeking baptism and joining the John Street Baptist Church in Worcester, Massachusetts, where he remained a devoted member. His Christian profoundly shaped his professional conduct, particularly through strict observance of the , which led him to refuse participation in races despite their prevalence in major competitions and the substantial earnings they offered. This principle caused him to decline lucrative European contracts until 1901, when promoters accommodated his beliefs by scheduling events midweek, allowing him to compete without violating his convictions. Taylor explicitly credited for his successes, viewing as essential for building confidence amid racial threats and hostility during races. In his 1928 autobiography, The Fastest Bicycle Rider in the World, he detailed entering agreements with fellow riders to avoid Sunday racing under certain auspices, underscoring how his imposed self-restrictions that contemporaries sometimes dismissed as but which he upheld as moral imperatives. These choices reflected a broader commitment to temperance and clean living—abstaining from alcohol, tobacco, and profanity—which Taylor linked to sustained physical and mental , empirically aiding his endurance in an era when many athletes indulged in vices that shortened careers. This faith-driven restraint extended to his responses to , fostering resilience through reliance on spiritual strength rather than retaliation, as he prioritized ethical consistency over immediate financial gain. By forgoing high-stakes events, Taylor sacrificed potential records and income—estimated in thousands of dollars annually—but maintained personal integrity, demonstrating how his religious principles causally directed career decisions toward long-term self-mastery over short-term opportunism.

Retirement, Financial Struggles, and Death

Transition to Business Ventures

Following his retirement from professional in 1910 at age 32, Marshall Taylor transitioned to business pursuits to sustain his livelihood, leveraging earnings accumulated from his racing career estimated at over $60,000 by that point. He established the Major Taylor Manufacturing Company around , venturing into the production of an innovative patented automobile wheel designed to improve durability and performance amid the burgeoning . This initiative reflected a strategic pivot from bicycles to emerging technologies, as the popularity of cycle racing waned with the rise of motorized vehicles, which diminished demand for bicycle-related enterprises and limited sponsorship opportunities. The manufacturing endeavor, however, proved unsuccessful, resulting in a substantial financial loss of approximately $15,000 for Taylor prior to U.S. entry into in 1917, exacerbated by inadequate capitalization and competitive pressures in the nascent auto sector. Subsequent business attempts in the , including other investments, similarly faltered due to economic volatility and Taylor's limited access to networks for scaling operations, compounded by persistent racial barriers that hindered partnerships and . These setbacks eroded his capital reserves, forcing divestitures of personal assets to maintain . In 1928, amid ongoing financial strain, Taylor self-published his autobiography, The Fastest Bicycle Rider in the World: The Story of a Colored Boy's Indomitable Courage and Success Against Great Odds, a 270-page account detailing his life and achievements to both preserve his legacy and generate income through sales. Priced at around $2 per copy and distributed via personal networks, the book provided modest revenue but insufficient to reverse his trajectory, as broader market shifts and lack of institutional support constrained its commercial viability.

Decline, Poverty, and Final Days

Following his retirement from competitive cycling, Taylor encountered severe financial hardship stemming from unsuccessful investments and the dissolution of his to Daisy Victoria Morris, which culminated in the sale of his home and left him destitute by the late 1920s. He relocated to Chicago's Bronzeville neighborhood, where he lived in isolation and poverty during the early years of the , residing at a local without steady income or family support. In June 1932, Taylor was admitted to the charity ward of Cook County Hospital in Chicago, succumbing to heart failure on June 21 at the age of 53. He died alone and penniless, with hospital records reflecting his indigent status, and was initially interred in an unmarked pauper's grave at Mount Glenwood Memory Gardens Cemetery in Glenwood, Illinois. On May 23, 1948, a group of former professional cyclists, supported by funding from Frank Schwinn of the , exhumed and reinterred Taylor's remains at the same cemetery with a proper headstone, marking a belated recognition of his contributions to the sport. ![Grave of Marshall Walter Taylor](./assets/Grave_of_Marshall_Walter_Taylor_18981898%E2%80%931932

Achievements and Records

Major Championships and Victories

Marshall Walter "Major" Taylor won the International Cycling Association (ICA) world professional sprint championship in the one-mile event on August 10, 1899, at the Queen City Velodrome in Montreal, Canada, defeating American rival Tom Butler in the final heat. This victory marked him as the first African American to claim a world title in international track cycling. Taylor also captured the American professional sprint championship on points in 1899, prevailing over top domestic competitors after completing the national series unhindered by prior racial exclusions. He defended the U.S. title successfully in 1900, again accumulating the highest points tally against elite sprinters including Tom Cooper. In addition to these championships, Taylor secured over 100 professional victories across U.S. tracks from 1896 to 1907, often dominating match races against prominent rivals such as Eddie McDuffee, whom he defeated in multiple sprint events despite occasional losses in longer distances. His win rate in unrestricted competitions exceeded 90% in peak seasons, underscoring his sprint supremacy.

World Records Established

In 1898 and 1899, Marshall Taylor established at least seven world in sprint cycling events, primarily on indoor velodromes using bicycles of the with pneumatic tires and single-gear setups, verified via stopwatches officiated by race organizers and witnessed by competitors. These encompassed distances from the quarter-mile to the two-mile, often in paced conditions where riders followed a or pacemaker to achieve maximum speeds, with times measured from standing or flying starts. A pivotal achievement came on August 27, 1898, during a match race against in , where Taylor recorded 1:41 2/5 for the one-mile paced standing start, surpassing prior marks and demonstrating explosive acceleration from a dead stop. This one-mile standing start record endured unchallenged for 28 years, underscoring its rigor amid rudimentary timing methods reliant on human observation rather than modern electronics. Additional records included improvements in the quarter-mile, half-mile, and two-thirds-mile sprints, many set in rapid succession during competitive meets, with Taylor's times reflecting superior power output—estimated at over 1,000 watts in bursts—against white European and American rivals under similar equipment and track conditions. On November 15, 1899, he further marked a one-mile flying start paced record at 1:19, highlighting endurance in sustained high-velocity efforts. These feats, ratified by contemporary cycling authorities like the International Cycling Association precursors, stood as benchmarks until surpassed by motorized pacing advancements in the 1920s.
DistanceTimeDateConditions
One mile (standing start, paced)1:41 2/5Aug 27, Match race verification
One mile (flying start, paced)1:19Nov 15, Competitive meet timing
Taylor's sprint records from one-fifth to one mile were broken or improved by him up to 33 times across his career, though the core 1898–1899 cluster remains the most cited for global recognition.

Legacy

Influence on Cycling and Sports

Major Taylor pioneered effective sprint strategies in , including the "come from behind" approach where he positioned last entering the final stretch before accelerating explosively to overtake rivals, alongside exploiting race openings and maintaining leads when strategically advantageous. These tactics demanded superior acceleration and power output, setting empirical benchmarks for sprint execution that later competitors emulated to achieve similar come-from-behind victories. Taylor's rigorous training regimen, emphasizing systematic conditioning on hilly terrain, avoidance of tobacco and alcohol, and consistent fitness maintenance, contributed to his dominance and influenced subsequent sprinters' preparation methods for high-intensity efforts. By 1898, he established seven world records across distances from the quarter-mile to the two-mile, including a paced one-mile standing start time of 1:41.4, records that underscored the physiological limits attainable through merit-based performance in speed events. These marks, achieved via objective metrics of velocity and endurance, inspired athletes to prioritize evidence-based advancements in power development over anecdotal practices. High-profile matchups, such as those against top European riders in and during his 1902 tour, drew crowds of 20,000 to 30,000 spectators, filling velodromes and elevating track cycling's visibility in both the and abroad. Taylor's consistent victories in these events, often by margins reflecting tactical precision and raw speed, boosted attendance at professional meets and demonstrated cycling's meritocratic nature, where records and timings provided irrefutable validation of competitive edge.

Broader Social and Cultural Impact

Taylor's dominance in professional during the 1890s and early 1900s challenged prevailing racial norms in a sport overwhelmingly dominated by white participants, demonstrating that exceptional athletic performance could pierce institutional barriers like organizational bans and competitor boycotts. As the first African American to win a in 1899, his repeated victories—often against fields employing aggressive tactics to impede him—served as empirical refutation to of inherent inferiority, underscoring individual talent and rigorous training as causal drivers of success rather than mere symbolic gestures. Critics and contemporaries alike noted that while external imposed constraints, Taylor's self-imposed restrictions, such as refusing to compete on Sundays due to his Baptist faith, independently magnified those barriers by forgoing lucrative events and titles, including European finals where observance clashed with scheduling. This choice highlighted a prioritization of personal principles over expediency, illustrating how internal discipline could both enable triumphs and compound obstacles in ways not solely attributable to . In his 1928 autobiography, The Fastest Bicycle Rider in the World, Taylor articulated a of , attributing his achievements to "clean living" and adherence to "the of true " as foundational to championship caliber, rather than external validation or grievance against adversaries. He positioned himself as a "pioneer" who blazed his own trail through indomitable effort, offering this narrative as testimony to the efficacy of personal agency and moral fortitude in surmounting adversity. This emphasis on internal factors—discipline, character development, and ethical conduct—contrasted with contemporaneous defeatist interpretations that overemphasized systemic forces, providing instead a model where capability is proven through verifiable results like his world records in sprints and paced events. Taylor's example thereby influenced subsequent Black cyclists by exemplifying disciplined pursuit over perpetual complaint, validating the potential for merit-based ascent in segregated arenas and countering narratives that normalized underperformance as inevitable. While some analyses frame his legacy symbolically as resistance to Jim Crow-era exclusion, the causal primacy of his talent—evidenced by outpacing international fields despite handicaps—affirms a substantive impact: achievements rooted in effort reshaped perceptions of viability, encouraging self-directed paths amid bias without excusing it.

Modern Commemorations and Tributes

In 1989, Taylor was posthumously inducted into the U.S. Bicycling Hall of Fame as a veteran road and track competitor, recognizing his pioneering achievements in professional cycling. Major Taylor Cycling Clubs emerged starting in 1979 with the founding of the first club in Columbus, Ohio, followed by chapters in cities including Dayton, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and others, promoting cycling participation and hosting annual rides, races, and youth programs in his name. These organizations, often focused on community engagement, have awarded scholarships and organized events such as the George Street Bike Challenge to commemorate his records. Public monuments include a life-sized statue of Taylor unveiled on May 21, 2008, outside the , depicting him with his amid a crowd of spectators, the city's first such tribute to an individual African American. In , a state historical marker at 38th Street and the was dedicated on August 13, 2009, highlighting his birthplace and early career. Worcester renamed a section of road as Major Taylor Boulevard on July 24, 2006. The Major Taylor in , an outdoor track facility, opened in 1982 as the city's first publicly funded structure named for an African American . The Major Taylor Museum, located in Worcester's renovated former county courthouse at 2 , opened to the public on , 2021, featuring artifacts like one of Taylor's practice bicycles, photographs, and exhibits on his racing and records. In 2024, Major Taylor: Champion of the Race, produced by WTIU , premiered on February 26 via affiliates, retracing Taylor's world records—over 20 in sprint events—and his competitive dominance in the late and early . These tributes underscore sustained recognition of Taylor's empirical successes, including his 1899 world sprint championship and speed benchmarks unmatched until decades later.

References

  1. https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Fastest_Bicycle_Rider_in_the_World/Chapter_8
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