Sydney Classic Bicycle Show

Sydney Classic Bicycle Show This will be held on Sun 30 Oct 2022 at the Lidcombe Oval. Starts at 10am and finishes at 5pm. We have an array of events to keep everyone happy.

Whether you like new or old bicycles, you will love this fun event. If you have an old bike, a sentimental favourite or a classic one-of-a-kind bicycle, bring it along and show it off. A Concourse event and prizes for the best bikes in their category. A Swap Meet selling vintage parts, bicycles and velo paraphenelia. And don’t forget Penny Farthing, Dandy Horse and Track Bicycle demonstrations and

races on the velodrome track. The Sydney Classic Bicycle Show was initiated and established by a handful of retro bike enthusiasts, collectors, riders/racers and historians. It was centred around a tight group of non-affiliated people across different clubs and individuals based in NSW, with a little input from Vic, Qld and SA. This grouping referred to themselves as the 'Valley Wheelers' have organised and coordinated this not-for-profit, community event since 2013. People like Marc R, Lindsay M, Roger W, the Johns (j & k), Ian C, both Peter Ts, Michele M, Linda M and Lizanne W are typical of the type of people who volunteer their time, expertise and effort into keeping this great event going.

If in Sydney, come for this event and meet up with the actual history makers who made this possible in the 1950s, 60s an...
13/04/2026

If in Sydney, come for this event and meet up with the actual history makers who made this possible in the 1950s, 60s and 70s.

SEEKING FORMER WOMEN CYCLE RACERS FROM THE 1950s ONWARDS.Beyond the Ban: Celebrating Women’s Racing in NSW Sport Cycling...
12/04/2026

SEEKING FORMER WOMEN CYCLE RACERS FROM THE 1950s ONWARDS.

Beyond the Ban: Celebrating Women’s Racing in NSW Sport Cycling 1958–1980
Marrickville Library Pavilion, 313 Marrickville Rd, Marrickville.
Saturday 30 May 2026
Time 2-4pm
The event aims to:
Honour the women who raced despite the 1896-1980 state and federal women's racing ban.
Recognise the groundbreaking leadership of the LACC, St George CC and Dulwich Hill CC.
Celebrate the long-awaited recognition of Margaret McLachlan and her recent induction into the AusCycling Hall of Fame.
Reconnect today’s riders with their clubs’ proud, rebellious history.
If are one of these women, or know of someone who was, please get in touch with me. We'd like to include them in this free event.
We have already invited old club racers from the 1950s to 70s, key officials and trainers and Margaret McLachlan herself. Come tell us your stories, show off your medals and meet up with old friends.

Please contact me on 0426 897 247 (mobile and Whatsapp), or email: [email protected].

RIP Geoff Scott (25.4.1951 - 3.12.2025)Geoff Scott was a legendary bicycle race frame builder. He built frames for the A...
03/12/2025

RIP Geoff Scott (25.4.1951 - 3.12.2025)

Geoff Scott was a legendary bicycle race frame builder. He built frames for the Australian national track and road teams throughout the 1980s.

Geoff Scott was interviewed by Marc Sebastian Rerceretnam on 29 March 2021
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Geoff Scott was born on the 25th April 1951 in Barmedman, in southwest NSW. He moved to Sydney with his family when he was around 8 years old. His father was a Toolmaker and Bondi Lifesaver and his mother was a Nurse from Darwin. She was retrained as a Hairdresser after World War II and opened her own hairdressing saloon in the western Sydney suburb of Fairfield.

Geoff lived with his family and older half-brother, Johnny Scott who was 10 years his senior, and a sister. Johnny was the cyclist in the family. Geoff also had uncles (his mother’s brothers) who were also cyclists. Geoff started riding bikes when he was fourteen. By this time, his older brother Johnny was riding with the NSW League of Wheelmen.

Geoff married his wife Sue around 1971, at age 19, just before he was enlisted to the Australian Armed Forces. Fortunately, he was not shipped off to fight in Vietnam because he was downgraded for medical reasons. He moved around a bit in the following years, for short stints in Melbourne and then back to the Sydney suburb of Liverpool, shortly after.

From 1976, Geoff was a qualified Tool maker in Industrial Design. While in Sydney, he worked in several firms. Firstly, with the furniture company Harry Sebel, and later with Minto-based engineering company Space-made Precision Wireworks, as a project manager.

While he pursued his engineering career, he rode and raced with the (professional) NSW League of Wheelmen, to ‘make some money on the side’. ‘Sometimes we might have 200 riders and we all put 10 bucks in, that’s nearly a week’s wages’, he said.

While in Sydney he made life-long friendships with the likes of Bob Hines (Bob Hine’s Cyclemart), Alan Reynolds and later, NSW cycle luminaries like Alex Fulcher (long-time national cycling coach) and Ray Godkin. By about 1980, Bob’s bicycle business expanded considerably, and Geoff set up all his engineering gear in Bob’s workshop soon after. Through their connections with Alex Fulcher and Ray Godkin, Geoff was tasked to build racing frames for the Australian cycling team. From 1981, Geoff was tasked to build Time-Trail racers for the 1982 Commonwealth Games and for the upcoming 1984 Los Angeles Olympic Games, along with many other national and state competitions through the 1980s. The 4000m pursuit team won a gold medal using Geoff’s bikes! Geoff, Alex Fulcher and Bob Hines became such celebrities, Fairfield Council gave them the keys to Fairfield City shortly after. From 1989, Geoff built bike race frames for the New Zealand team.

By the 1980s, Geoff was largely working as an independent frame builder, supplying various Sydney bike businesses. As observed by old friend Bob Hines, Geoff was an exceptional bike frame builder because he was able to ‘adapt and change stuff and think out new ideas’. It was during this decade, he met Tony Cook, the then owner of Clarence Street Cyclery. Cook employed Geoff to supply his business with high-end road race frames. However, by 1993, Trek USA wanted to set up shop in Australia and with Clarence Street Cyclery being their Australian distributor, they needed a Trek-qualified and certified repair specialist. In turn, Geoff travelled to the US to get trained and certified and came back to Sydney to set up Trek Australia at Clarence Street Cyclery.

By 2000, Geoff worked in various positions, not always related to cycling or frame building. By 2008, Tony Cook approached Geoff again, but this time Geoff was only willing to supply frames independently. He built frames at his home workshop in Camden, until Clarence Street Cyclery discontinued this around 2018. Around this time, Geoff also stopped manufacturing new frames, largely because of the high cost of liability insurance. He concentrated on frame repair and painting.

Geoff moved to Orange in the early 2020s.

MEDIA RELEASEWoman cyclist’s 59-year wait for recognition - Induction into national AusCycling Hall of Fame 17 Nov 2025 ...
17/11/2025

MEDIA RELEASE

Woman cyclist’s 59-year wait for recognition - Induction into national AusCycling Hall of Fame
17 Nov 2025

This month, the national Australian governance body for sport cycling, AusCycling, announced their intention to induct 81-year-old Margaret McLachlan into their AusCycling Hall of Fame, at a special ceremony in Brisbane, on the 3rd of Dec 2025. https://auscycling.org.au/people/margaret-mclachlan

In 1961, a 17-year-old Margaret McLachlan, from Sydney’s ‘Dulwich Hill Bicycle Club’, started cycle racing and training with both her home club and the neighbouring ‘Lidcombe-Auburn Cycling Club’, at Lidcombe Oval. She showed promise, however by 1966, the NSW Amateur Cyclists Union (predecessor of today's AusCycling) restricted and eventually banned her outright by 1967. No official reason was provided despite several requests.

Angered by her treatment, she set four ultra cycle marathon records between June 1966 and February 1968.

1. 16 June 1966: Sydney to Melbourne: Elapsed time, 58 hours and 33 minutes.
2. 23 April 1967: Canberra to Sydney: Elapsed time, 12 hours, 5 minutes and 19 seconds.
3. 21 July 1968: Sydney to Newcastle: Elapsed time, 6 hours, 14 minutes and 30 seconds.
4. 3 February 1968: First Australian Women’s 1-hour unpaced record: Elapsed distance, 20 miles and 717 yards.

For 59 years, her achievements remained unrecognised.

Her story is covered in a 2025 book, ‘Sydney’s Cycling Communities: Pioneers and Unsung Heroes of its Cycling Past 1820s to 2020s’. https://www.booktopia.com.au/sydney-s-cycling-communities-pioneers-and-unsung-heroes-of-its-cycling-past-1820s-to-2020s-marc-sebastian-rerceretnam/book/9780645236415.html

The book was recently launched by the Inner West Council at their Marrickville Library on Sunday, 15 June 2025. View video of Inner West Council presentation from 15 June 2024: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m5RK4aYijxw
Further information and book contents: https://www.facebook.com/CyclingHistoryAustralia
Online book purchases: https://www.booktopia.com.au/sydney-s-cycling-communities-pioneers-and-unsung-heroes-of-its-cycling-past-1820s-to-2020s-marc-sebastian-rerceretnam/book/9780645236415.html
Recent IWC publicity videos: https://www.instagram.com/reel/DKvKOTBzA_d/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link and https://www.facebook.com/reel/1254792945987162

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION AND REQUESTS FOR INTERVIEWS WITH MARGARET McLACHLAN OR AUTHOR, KINDLY CONTACT:
Name: Dr Marc Sebastian Rerceretnam (pronounced rer-sir-ret-num)
Mobile: (+61) 0426 897 247
e-mail: [email protected]

A very special pedal festival will take place in Dungog, located in NSW's beautiful Mid North Coast region, or a pleasan...
16/09/2025

A very special pedal festival will take place in Dungog, located in NSW's beautiful Mid North Coast region, or a pleasant 200km drive from Sydney.

The 2025 Dungog Pedalfest is organised by the Rotary Club Dungog and will be held over 3 days, from Fri 26th to Sun 28 Sept 2025.

There will be kid's rides, Dandy Horse, Penny Farthing and Footbike races. For more information go to PEDALFEST.ORG.AU

FIRST SIGHTING OF A DANDY HORSE IN SYDNEY Excerpt from the 2025 book 'Sydney's Cycling Communities: Pioneers and Unsung ...
11/05/2025

FIRST SIGHTING OF A DANDY HORSE IN SYDNEY
Excerpt from the 2025 book 'Sydney's Cycling Communities: Pioneers and Unsung Heroes of its Cycling Past 1820s to 2020s'

The original Dandy Horse was the brainchild of Karl von Drais in 1817 and was made of wood and iron. A rider sat astride atop this ‘lauf-maschine’ (running machine) very much in the style of what would become the modern bicycle. With its release, the invention had different names in different countries. In France, it was a ‘Velocipede’ (Latin for swift of foot) or a ‘Draissine’ after its inventor. In the United States, it was sometimes referred to as a ‘Tracena’, a misspelt form of Draissine. In Britain, it was called a ‘Hobby Horse’ but also referred to as a ‘Pedestrian Accelerator’. In the Australian colonies, this new machine was variously referred to as a ‘Velocipede’ or ‘Dandy Horse’. The invention was reported in local German papers in 1817, in Britain in 1818 and the United States in 1819. There appears however to be no acknowledgment of the new invention in the Australian colonies until 1820.

Introducing the Dandy Horse to the Australian colonies
The earliest recorded use of the Dandy Horse was on 19 March 1831 in Sydney (present-day Hyde Park), where a Sydney newspaper observed:

QUOTE "A Sydney Exquisite was observed on Wednesday afternoon, sporting his figure on a velocipede on the Race Course. All went on well for some time, and the Exquisite was chuckling inwardly at the admiration he excited, but, unfortunately coming in contact with one of the drains leading to the Bore, he was capsized head over heels, and the guiding wheel of his machine was wrenched off. He appeared considerably chagrined at the accident."

However, use of the Dandy Horse (largely referred to as a ‘velocipede’ before the early 1870s) may have already taken hold in Sydney even earlier than the recorded sighting. According to a Tasmanian newspaper report from 6 February 1830:

QUOTE: "Some of the dandies at Sydney now sport coloured silk shirts, which are plaited in the breast and worn without waistcoats. They are very ugly. The people that wear them, according to the last Bond street nomenclature, are called 'exclusives' …. The dandies and the velocipedes then started together, but they soon ran themselves out of breath and were succeeded by the exquisites."

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This book is available for only $30 from either Ashfield Cycles (353 Liverpool Rd, Ashfield NSW 2131. Ph. (02) 9797 9913) or the Resistance Book Shop (4/22-36 Mountain St, Ultimo NSW 2007. Ph 8070 9341).
If purchasing online within Australia, I suggest purchasing from Booktopia Australia.
https://www.booktopia.com.au/sydney-s-cycling-communities-pioneers-and-unsung-heroes-of-its-cycling-past-1820s-to-2020s-marc-sebastian-rerceretnam/book/9780645236415.html

A new book on the 200-year history of Sydney cycling is available now on Barns & Noble, AbeBooks and Amazon. Expect more...
30/04/2025

A new book on the 200-year history of Sydney cycling is available now on Barns & Noble, AbeBooks and Amazon. Expect more distributors to list it in the coming weeks.

The book provides accounts of the first Dandy Horse riders in 1830, the controversial existence of a cranked bike in 1845, identifies the first cyclists in Australia, racing women in 1869, club formation, bike businesses, bicycle use as a barrier to social inclusion, and even the sexist 90-year ban of women's racing.

Barnes & Noble: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/sydneys-cycling-communities-pioneers-and-unsung-heroes-of-its-cycling-past-1820s-to-2020s-marc-sebastian-rerceretnam/1147355324?ean=9780645236415

AbeBooks: https://www.abebooks.com/Sydneys-Cycling-Communities-Pioneers-Unsung-Heroes/32190270326/bd

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com.au/dp/0645236411/ref=sr_1_2?dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.KorQRjTKSiUotMh2F0OiYZUt0HIftWvgno5A3IDLcno.vrFzZTKf9-J8pLsyttORovk-GFeCi6uVdTFJKkHBZXI&dib_tag=se&qid=1745992546&refinements=p_27%3AMarc+Sebastian+Rerceretnam&s=books&sr=1-2&text=Marc+Sebastian+Rerceretnam

I strongly suggest picking up a copy for only $30 at either Ashfield Cycles (353 Liverpool Rd, Ashfield NSW 2131. Ph. (02) 9797 9913) or the Resistance Book Shop (4/22-36 Mountain St, Ultimo NSW 2007. Ph 8070 9341).

Call them first to confirm if they have a copy in stock.

Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet or computer—no Kindle device required.

A public talk on a subject, one of many, covered in an upcoming book, due for launch very soon. The title of this talk i...
15/04/2025

A public talk on a subject, one of many, covered in an upcoming book, due for launch very soon.

The title of this talk is 'Maybanke and the Ladies’ Velocipede Races of 1869: An early challenge to male supremacy in colonial Australia'.

Event organised by the Marrickville Heritage Society.

Date & time: Saturday 26 April 2025, 10.15 for 10.30 am
Venue: The Pavilion, Marrickville Library, cnr Marrickville & Livingstone Roads.

Address

Church Street
Sydney, NSW
2141

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