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James Starley

 
Biography: James Starley

James Starley (1831-1881) was an inventor and manufacturer who is widely considered to be the father of the bicycle industry. His inventions and refinements made the bicycle practical for widespread use. Starley also contributed to the improvement of the sewing machine.

James Starley was born April 21, 1831, into an agricultural family. His father, Daniel Starley, was a farmer in Albourne, Sussex, England. When he was nine years old, Starley began working on the family farm, but, dissatisfied with farming, he set off on foot for London in 1846. There, he found work as a gardener and put his spare time to use cranking out inventions, including the adjustable candlestick, a one-stringed window blind, and a mechanical bassinet. He married Jane Todd on September 22, 1853, and had three sons, James, John Marshall, and William.

Sewing Machine Advances and Bicycle Prototypes

Around 1855 Starley got a job with Newton Wilson in London, where he worked on sewing machines. Within a few years, he moved to Coventry to work as foreman of the Coventry Sewing Machine Company. Starley spent the next dozen or so years working out improvements to the early sewing machine, including his own invention, "The European." His inventions, many of which were patented, survive in the workings of modern sewing machines.

In 1868 Starley saw his first bicycle, a French velocipede. Bicycles had been around since 1818, but the earliest two-wheeled, rider-propelled machines were rudimentary, requiring the rider to use his own feet to move the wooden monster along. The bicycle Starley encountered had cranks attached to the front wheel, which the rider could use to propel the machine. These early bicycles weighed as much as 160 pounds and had solid rubber tires and ball bearings.

Foreshadowing their future success in bicycle design, development, and sales (of which the Coventry region would eventually become a national leader), the Coventry Sewing Machine Company became the Coventry Machinists' Company in 1869 after worker Rowley B. Turner convinced management to produce bicycles. The company manufactured 400 bicycles for sale in France, but the outbreak of the Franco-German War made such export impossible, and so it turned to England for its market. Thus, Starley shifted his creative inventing energy from sewing machines to bicycles, seeking to improve the machines, first aiming to reduce the massive weight and clumsiness of the velocipedes, which had earned the nickname of "boneshakers." Within a few years, Starley had invented the "C Spring and Step Machine," or the Coventry Model, and secured his place as the father of the modern bicycle.

The Coventry bicycle featured a curved spring seat, a mounting step, and a small hind wheel. Next, Starley developed a bicycle with a smaller still rear wheel and large front wheel, both fashioned from iron and wire spokes. This creation was tagged the "penny-farthing," after England's smallest and largest copper coins. Its major improvement was a gear that turned the wheel twice for every revolution of the pedals, cutting the riders' work in half.

Bike Advances and the Masterpiece

Improving further on his initial designs, Starley invented the Ariel bicycle. After leaving the Coventry Machinists' Company in 1870, he went into business for himself and began producing his Europa sewing machines and Ariel bicycles. Historians consider the Ariel, a lightweight all-metal bicycle first sold in 1871, to be the first true bicycle. It was the first self-propelled two-wheeler to use pivot-center steering, which gave the bicycle the ability to turn, a leap in technology from the forward and reverse movements that limited the earlier wooden machines.

Next, Starley introduced what was to be his most significant contribution to bicycle advancement. His Tangent bicycle, introduced in 1874, was the first to feature alternating spokes. Starley's original wheels arranged the spokes in a straight line. Alternating spokes connected the spokes to the hub at an angle, easing the stress on individual spokes and making the wheels far stronger than earlier models. Starley's tensioned spoke wheels are found, virtually unmodified to this day, on nearly every contemporary bicycle. The Tangent bicycle weighed in at about 50 pounds, although 21-pound custom-made racing versions were soon available.

In 1876 Starley produced the Coventry Tricycle, a successful new invention that featured a double-throw crank, chains that drove the bike's wheels, and a rack. Combining all of his previous advancements into one four-wheeled machine, Starley next produced the Salvo which many of his contemporaries believed to be his creative masterpiece.

Starley's nephew John Kemp Starley "went on to design the Rover Safety Cycle, which has formed the basis of the shape of the bicycle ever since," wrote Anthony Hopker in the Coventry Evening Telegraph. The Rover, introduced in 1885, featured a triangular frame, equal-sized wheels, and chain drives. Manufacture of the Rover launched Coventry into the forefront of bicycle production. Starley's sons, James, John Marshall, and William, carried on the family business as Starley Brothers, a cycle manufacturing outfit.

Legacy

James Starley died on June 17, 1881, in Coventry, Warwickshire. Among his lasting contributions is the reputation of Coventry as the cradle of bicycle production. Since 1884 the community has displayed a granite monument to Starley featuring his profile, carvings of two of his bicycles, and a statue of Fame on top. The site of his factory is now home to the Museum of British Road Transport.

By the 1970s Starley's statue had fallen into disrepair. Starley's nose and Fame's arms were broken off. Further, vandals attacked the statue during a renovation project. Townspeople mounted a campaign to save the memorial, calling in descendants of the original Victorian-era craftspeople for consultation and considering a proposal to move the statue to a more prominent location near Starley's original factory. "When you think of what Coventry used to produce," Coventry resident Edna Walker told Hopker, "it's so sad that their work is not being appreciated."

In 1999 the town of Coventry launched a campaign to commemorate the most important people in the town's 1,000-year history, soliciting nominations from towns-people. Starley's 57 votes ranked him the third most important native, behind Sir Frank Whittle, who invented the jet engine, and Provost Howard, who ran the Coventry Cathedral, but ahead of eleventh century heroine Lady Godiva and Coventry native William Shakespeare, who garnered only 14 votes.

Books

The Dictionary of National Biography, edited by Sir Leslie Stephen and Sir Sidney Lee, Oxford University Press, 1922.

Merriam-Webster's Biographical Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Inc., 1995.

Periodicals

Bicycling, June 2000, p. 62.

Coventry Evening Telegraph (England), February 10, 1999, p. 10;February 21, 2000, p. 17.

Online

"Bicycle" and "Starley, James," Britannica.com, 2001.

The Bicycle Industry in Coventry,www.coventry.org.uk, 2001.

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Wikipedia: James Starley
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James Starley

Statue commemorating James Starley in Coventry
Born April 21, 1830 (1830-04-21)
Albourne, West Sussex, United Kingdom
Died June 17, 1881 (1881-06-18)
Coventry, West Midlands, United Kingdom
Nationality British
Occupation Inventor
Known for Development of the Bicycle

James Starley (Born April 21, 1830, died June 17, 1881) was an English inventor and "Father of the Bicycle Industry." He was born in 1831 at Albourne. James Starley ran away from home and later settled in Coventry where he became one of the most innovative and successful builders of bicycles and tricycles. His son, William Starley, and his nephew, John Kemp Starley, also entered this industry and one of the outcomes was the Rover car company.

As a teenager, James Starley ran away from his parents' Sussex farm to Lewisham. With the industrial revolution in full swing the quiet farm life was not for him and his head seems to have been bursting with mechanical ideas. Initially, he worked as a gardener but soon gained a reputation for mending clocks and devising useful gadgets. He married Jane Todd when in his early 20s.

James' employer, John Penn, bought a then rare and expensive sewing machine for his wife which shortly broke down. James of course fixed the problem and, what is more, could envision improvements to the mechanism. Penn knew Josiah Turner, one of the partners of the makers of the machine, and in due course Starley was taken on at the London factory. His talent was such that Turner and Starley started their own sewing machine company in Coventry around 1861.

Turner's nephew brought one of the new French bone-shakers to the factory in 1868 and the company soon started making bicycles. At this time velocipedes (cycles) had wheels of nearly equal size, the front slightly larger, although to grow much larger in the famous penny-farthings such as Starley soon manufactured with William Hillman. Their Ariel was all-metal and had modern-style wire-spoked wheels, much lighter than the old compression spoke ones. Tangent spokes were patented in 1874. Lever-driven and chain-driven tricycles, often in strange configurations, were also devised for ladies and for two riders. It was steering problems, while riding a tricycle tandem, caused by the unequal power input of the ageing James on one side and his more vigorous son on the other that prompted James Starley to invent the (open) differential in 1877. It is still used in some tricycles and was ready and waiting when the car needed the device.

Starley's sons continued manufacturing cycles after his death but his nephew John Kemp Starley made more of a mark in the long run. It was (John Kemp -) Starley and Sutton who devised the recognisably modern Rover safety bicycle with 26" wheels (still a standard size), chain drive, and a diamond shaped frame (no seat-tube as yet) in 1884, showing it in 1885. The penny-farthing or ordinary cycle was not a safe machine, with a "header" accident being an ever-present danger. Others had experimented with chain-driven "safety cycles" but the Rover really made its mark to the extent that "Rover" means "bike" in some countries such as Poland.

In due course, motor-driven bicycles became motor-cycles and were followed by motor cars. John Kemp Starley experimented with an electric tri-car around 1888 but the petrol-driven Rover 8 h.p. car was released in 1904, two years after his death.

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