| Home » Reading Room » Travel Stories » In Praise of Bicycling and Women by Nineteenth-Century American Women: Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Robins Pennell and Frances Willard In Praise of Bicycling and Women by Nineteenth-Century American Women: Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Robins Pennell and Frances Willard “The world is our great book of beauty and romance, and on your cycle you can gradually master it, chapter by chapter, volume by volume” (Elizabeth Robins Pennell 1890). “Sighing for new worlds to conquer, I determined that I would learn to bicycle” (Frances E. Willard 1895). “Let me tell you what I think of bicycling. I think it has done more to emancip Nineteenth-century women, and more specifically bourgeois and upper class women, had become the human embodiments of domesticity and religious piety, thanks to a convergence of economic, religious and social factors and events. These women were repressed at many levels: physically by corsets and long, heavy skirts, financially by complete dependence on the male members of their immediate family and emotionally and intellectually by the unwritten but powerful roles that societal mores had imposed on them as “angels of the hearth” and “managers” of the household. The scholar Eric Leed, urges us to consider women’s traditional association with what he calls “sessility” or settlement, fixed place, as an historical event, “in which human groups achieve permanent relation to territory” and “not a national female predisposition” (116). Nonetheless, it is a fact that throughout history and until recently, very few women, compared to men, benefited from mobility, described by Leed as “the first, pre-historical human condition” (4). Woman’s identification with a fixed place, or home, has prevented most women from experiencing the pleasures and tribulations of motion, as well as the benefits and miseries of travel. Throughout the centuries and especially after different human groups achieved a certain level of settled life, woman’s travels from “home” has been considered indecorous, dangerous or uncomfortable to be socially acceptable. The perceived need to protect and shelter women from real or imaginary dangers and discomforts has led to the creation of a taboo around women’s mobility, achieved either through women’s own physical means (as in walking and hiking) or through the use of an external agent, be it a horse or a bicycle.
Elizabeth Robins was born in 1855 in Philadelphia and as a young child was sent, with her younger sister, to a Catholic convent outside of Philadelphia by her widowed father. There she learned every necessary “spiritual grace,” while at her grandmother’s house, where she spent some of her school holidays, she learned those “virtues” that would help her become a proper Philadelphian housewife. This was done by “cultivating the calm of manner expected of her [the young Philadelphia girl] where she, in her turn, would have just such a red brick house and just a delectable back-yard of her own” (Robins Pennell 1914, 47). Although Robins Pennell recognizes the stiffness and the hypocrisy of many aspects of Philadelphian life, she unequivocally defines herself as “one of those old-fashioned Americans” with a deep and strong affection for Philadelphia, its beauty, its character and its history (Preface to Our Philadelphia). Young Elizabeth Robins excelled in academic work at a time when "it was unfeminine, if not unladylike, to be learned" (Robins Pennell 1914, 94) While never openly belonging to any pro-feminist movement or rebelling against the mores of her time and class, Robins Pennell was quite aware of the secondary role that women played in her culture and the expectations that society had for women. She thus comments in her memoirs, Our Philadelphia: "If you had asked any girl anywhere what was woman’s mission, she would have answered promptly – had she been truthful – 'to find a husband as soon as possible;' a convent girl would have added ‘or else to become a nun"(98). Young Elizabeth Robins showed a stubborn reluctance at pursuing either of these two paths when family and society believed she should and, after graduating from the convent school, lived for two years in total physical and intellectual paralysis, uncertain of her destiny. This apathy was enhanced by the shock of finding out that her feeling of self-importance, highlighted by her academic successes at the convent, was inadequate vis-à-vis the indifference that her native city showed her and that the role that family and society expected her to play as an adult was purely a domestic one. In 1890 Elizabeth Robins Pennell published a brief article titled “Cycling” in the July issue of St. Nicholas, a New York illustrated magazine for young readers. In this essay she methodically expounds the virtues of cycling, that she compares favorably with other sports. She mentions the pleasure of leaving behind the bustling city on a bicycle and riding through the peaceful countryside; she highlights the health benefits of “breathing pure, sweet air;” she praises the ready accessibility of such exercise, which needs only the existence of roads, and she celebrates the thoroughness and joys of sightseeing from a cycle, as compared to other means of transportation (733). Robins Pennell provides glimpses of what one cannot see from a train and the pleasure she had just experienced riding her ‘wheel’ through the Italian countryside. In fact she and her husband had completed a few years before, in 1884, a cycling tour of rural central Italy. They were probably among the first tourists to go on a tricycle tandem “from fair Florence to the Eternal City of Rome,” as they subtitled their narration of this trip in their Two Pilgrims’ Progress. Elizabeth Robins recounts a personal anecdote from her Italian trip to exemplify her advice to would be cyclists to care for their wheels, “as if it were a horse or a dog.” She writes that she and her husband made a special trip from Rome to Naples to have a last look at the tricycle that “had carried us so well and so far” and which they had reluctantly sold to an English clergyman living in Naples (739). Later, in the 1890s, Elizabeth and Joseph would continue their touring and exploration of various parts of France and Eastern Europe, either on a tandem tricycle or a bicycle. They left us a record of their adventures in several books that Elizabeth wrote and Joseph illustrated. TO BE CONTINUED! Check next month's Rambler Newsletter for the conclusion of "In Praise of Bicycling and Women". WORKS CITED |

