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Your Position: Home - Toys & Hobbies - THE EVOLUTION OF CHILDREN'S TRICYCLES: 1800s- ...

THE EVOLUTION OF CHILDREN'S TRICYCLES: 1800s- ...

THE EVOLUTION OF CHILDREN'S TRICYCLES: s- ...

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THE EVOLUTION OF CHILDREN&#;S TRICYCLES

s-s

The Great Exhibition of , had on show a cart wheel shod with rubber, and a contempory report states &#;it was allowed to roll over the hands and feet of the bystanders without causing the slightest sensation of pain&#;, adding optimistically &#;running over a living being would cause no injury to life or limb.&#;

The first velocipede tricycles with driving treadles and tiller steering appear to have been made around . (See the example below at the Science Museum in London). Only one rear wheel was driven, with the other having a brass-bushed hub revolving freely on the driving axle. The wheels were wooden with iron tyres. The one illustrated below has a 24&#; front wheel and 35&#; rear wheels.

After the invention of the front-wheel driven Velocipede captured the public imagination in , the cycle industry was created. Design evolved and, by , the Ordinary (&#;penny farthing&#;) and the high wheel tricycle ruled the roads.

Treadle-controlled velocipede tricycles for children were made by a variety of manufacturers. They were expensive items in their day, purchased by rich families for their children. The earliest examples used wooden hubs and parts but, by the s, wheels were made of steel, with cast iron fittings.

Although rubber tyres were already available, the earliest models had metal wheel rims that did not take a tyre; by the s, steel wheels with solid rubber tyres were offered as an option.

Smaller manufacturers of velocipede tricycles were less likely to fit a head badge. Some were made in the same style as those from better known manufacturers, so their maker&#;s name would have been a disadvantage; others were supplied wholesale. Department stores, catalogue companies and local shops often fitted their own badges and sometimes gave the tricycles new model names. This meant that the same tricycle could have a different name at various outlets.

Larger manufacturers also supplied these retail outlets, as well as using their own distribution networks and agents. They were more likely to add their own company or model names, particularly to those sold they sold direct to the public. Popular larger American manufacturers included Gendron, Fay, and Kirk.

 

LEVER DRIVE FAIRY v CHAIN DRIVE FAIRY

Clarification regarding terminology will help the following research. At the time, there was no universal description beyond the name &#;velocipede tricycle&#; to define children&#;s tricycles. But various styles emerged, and I will refer to each as follows:

THE TILLER & TREADLE TRICYCLE: The tiller was developed from farm equipment. A small wheel at the front was controlled by a long steering handle (tiller) that stretched back to the seat. The tiller could be reversed so the tricycle could be pulled along. Peter Gendron was an early patentee in the USA (). The cycle companies marketed the tiller & treadle style of tricycle at girls. This design was still in use at the end of the s (though outdated by then). Some early variations had the treadle connected to a sprocket with chain to one rear hub.

THE MANUMOTIVE TRICYCLE: The steering of manumotive tricycle was controlled by a handle on one side of the seat, with the brake on the other side. Tiller steering was the cheapest design, but some makers created juvenile versions of the adult manumotive tricycles that were popular with fashionable ladies in the s and s.

THE HORSE TRICYCLE (HAND-LEVER CHAINDRIVE): These were particularly popular in France in the late s and s. 99% of those available today are recent &#;aged&#; replicas made in Eastern Europe.

 

THE VELOCIPEDE TRICYCLE: Boys were encouraged to buy velocipede tricycles with pedals in the front wheels. The first boy&#;s tricycles were scaled down versions of the / style adult velocipede with a rear axle added, plus smaller versions of the velocipede hub, spoke and wheel rim (the technology for such already in existence for wheels for horse carts). They had wood frames to start with, followed by metal frames. By the s, most had metal wheels too. With added styling features, the velocipede tricycle became very popular in the s (and were now marketed at both boys and girls), and was the most common kid&#;s tricycle until the s.

CHAIN DRIVEN &#;DIRECT STEERING&#; TRICYCLE (Large Rear Wheels): Referred to in a French catalogue as a &#;Criper&#; tricycle (after the Humber Cripper), and described in as &#;Direct Steering,&#; adult versions with large rear wheel became very fashionable among women in the late s. Many juvenile versions were also made.

CHAIN DRIVEN TRICYCLE (Equal Size Wheels): By the late s, children&#;s tricycles with pedal and chain and equal size wheels were being made too, though they were more popular to start with in Europe than in North America. Chain-driven tricycle design took a major step forward during WW1 as a result of invalid-carriages made for wounded soldiers in the war.

It&#;s not easy to describe the age of children&#;s tricycles accurately, as many continued to be made in the older styles for longer than you might suppose. So I&#;ve started this page as a database, to observe the changing styles of tricycle in close-up views. I&#;ll add to it over the coming months to help our understanding of how the children&#;s tricycle evolved.

Various modifications to the basic tricycle design were necessary for children&#;s tricycles to evolve. One example is adjustable seat height:

G.E WHITMORE TRICYCLE: ADDITIONAL PATENT FOR ADJUSTABLE SEAT

This invention relates to an improvement in tricycles for which Letters Patent No. 226,578 were granted to me ApriL, . The said &#; By making the seat adjustable the tricycle can adapt itself to any child, thereby overcoming the difficulty experienced in tricycles having a stationary seat.

s MANUMOTIVE JUVENILE TRICYCLE

An alternative form of steering was offered in the Manumotive tricycle seen above (sold a few years ago to a museum abroad). Similar examples include the Centaur &#;School&#; tricycle.

THE CHAIN DRIVEN &#;DIRECT STEERING&#; TRICYCLE (Large Rear Wheels)

Centaur&#;s &#;Juvenile Automatic&#; in the catalogue above was one of many offered in this style after . Singer offered similar&#;

You can see similar described as a &#;Criper&#; in the Spanish catalogue below. Humber introduced the &#;Cripper&#; in , the year after chain-driven bicycles were introduced.

 THE HORSE TRICYCLE

TO SEE AN ORIGINAL

 FRENCH HORSE TRICYCLE

PLEASE CLICK HERE

With competitive price and timely delivery, ChiSure sincerely hope to be your supplier and partner.

TILLER & TREADLE CHAIN-DRIVEN TRICYCLE (aka CRIPPER)

Spalding&#;s &#;Petite&#; tricycle was offered in wood and steel, with rubber tyres optional. This version has the treadle system connected by sprocket and chain to one rear hub.

THE JUVENILE TILLER & TREADLE TRICYCLE

These were scaled down versions of adult tiller and treadle tricycles which had gone out of fashion due to the popularity of adult manumotive tricycles and pedal tricycles in the s.

: WROUGHT IRON BOY&#;S & LITTLE BEAUTY GIRL&#;S

METAL WHEEL & RUBBER TYRE

WORTHINGTON MFG CO &#;FAIRY&#;

TO SEE THE WORTHINGTON MFG CO &#;FAIRY&#;

BADGED AS A RH MACY &#;TRIUMPH&#;

PLEASE CLICK HERE

: EDWARD K. TRYON Co &#;KEYSTONE&#; TRICYCLES

 

: KIRK-LATTY MFG CO

: FAIRY

: SEARS & ROEBUCK

THE VELOCIPEDE TRICYCLE

TO SEE AN

s VELOCIPEDE TRICYCLE 

PLEASE CLICK HERE

THE CHAIN DRIVEN TRICYCLE (Equal Size Wheels)

TO SEE A

LINES BROS FAIRY TRICYCLE 

PLEASE CLICK HERE

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