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National Clarion Cycling Club

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National Clarion Cycling Club
FormationEaster 1895 in Ashbourne
Typecycling club
Legal statuscurrent - continuous operation and membership since its formation in 1894
PurposeThe Clarion’s objects shall be: To protect and further the interests of cycling and cyclists. To promote Mutual Aid, Good Fellowship and support for the Principles of Socialism.
Region served
Great Britain
Membership
as of 2017, c1900 members, organised in 29 sections
Official language
English
Main organ
Boots & Spurs
AffiliationsBritish Cycling, Cycling Time Trials
Websitehttp://www.clarioncc.org

The National Clarion Cycling Club is a British cycling club founded in 1894, and which retained strong links with the labour movement through the 20th century. At its peak, in 1936, it had 233 UK sections and 8,306 members. In 2021, it replaced its “support for the principles of socialism” with support for “fairness, equality, inclusion and diversity”. Today it has some 30 member sections across Great Britain and over 1,900 members.

History

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Clarion Cycling Clubs

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The first club was formed in February 1894 in Birmingham, England[1] as the Socialists' Cycling Club. At its second meeting it renamed itself the Clarion Cycling Club after The Clarion socialist newspaper. This was at the peak of the bicycle boom, when the old penny farthing had been swept away by the new safety bicycle, the diamond-frame design widely used today.

By the end of 1894, readers of The Clarion formed local socialist cycling clubs in five industrial centres: Birmingham, The Potteries, Liverpool, Bradford and Barnsley.[2]

In 1895 at Ashbourne, Derbyshire the five clubs gathered for their first annual Easter Meet.[1] Together they formed the National Clarion Cycling Club, which is

"the association of the various Clarion Cycling Clubs for the purpose of Socialist propaganda and for promoting inter-club runs between the clubs of different towns".[1][2]

Clarion Scouts

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In 1894 a writer in the Clarion under the pen-name "Numquam" suggested a "cycling corps of Clarion Scouts".[2] That summer, a meeting between The Potteries and Birmingham Clarion Clubs decided to put it into effect: "scouts" using their cycling trips to circulate socialist leaflets and copies of the Clarion wherever they visited.[2]

In November 1894, members of the Bradford and Liverpool CCC's campaigned for socialist candidates in local council elections.[3] By the end of that year, 22 of the Bradford CCC's 25 members were working as Scouts, distributing propaganda to villages around the town.[3] In March 1895 a new socialist magazine, The Scout, was launched for Scouts to read and circulate.[3] It was subtitled "A Monthly Journal for Socialists" and its first edition included a set of "Instructions for Scouts" written by The Clarion's editor Robert Blatchford.[3] The Clarion Clubs also did much to circulate The Clarion, Blatchford's book Merrie England and the socialist ideas that they expressed.[2]

When the Clarion Clubs were formed, socialists in Britain were divided between the Social Democratic Federation founded in 1881, the Independent Labour Party founded in 1893 and smaller organisations. The Labour Representation Committee that evolved into the current Labour Party was not founded until 1900. Clarion Scouts were encouraged to support either SDF or ILP candidates in elections, and Scouts in districts that lacked local socialist groups were encouraged to form either a local group of either SDF or the ILP, and to build unity between the disparate organisations of Britain's labour movement.[3]

The number of local Clarion Clubs/sections grew to 30 by the end of 1895, including London Clarion Cycle Club,[4] and 70 by the early part of 1897.[2] They reached the peak of their extent and influence in 1914, when their Easter Meet was at Shrewsbury.[2] The illustrator and socialist Walter Crane designed the National Clarion Cycle Club's letterhead.[1][2]

The Clarion membership reached its peak in 1936, with 233 sections across the UK and 8,306 members.[5] At that time they had an educational scheme within the National Council of Labour Colleges.[6]

Membership then fell, to 5000 by 1951, 4000 by 1953, 3000 by 1957, 2000 by 1961 and 1000 by 1965. From 2000, the Clarion limped along with only 500-600 members until 2010, when sections were urged to support youth development, and new sections were encouraged. This coincided with a UK 'golden era' of international cycling success; it had 1,300 members in 30 sections in 2014,[5] and by the end of 2017 membership reached 1,895 members.

Modern Clarion movement

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Since 2007, the Clarion Cycling Club has doubled its membership to over 2,000 members across some 14 sections. In 2024, the club had active sections in Brighton & Hove, Cotswold, Fenland, Heanor, Gosport, Ironbridge, Lancashire (Barnoldswick, Blackpool, Clitheroe), Greater Manchester (Bolton, Bury, Manchester, Saddleworth, Stockport), London Clarion Cycle Club, North Cheshire,[7] Nottinghamshire (Nottingham, Tuxford), Scotland (Coatbridge, West Lothian), Sunderland, Teesside, and Yorkshire (Calder, Yorkshire Coast). A 'private' membership category caters for members who do not live close to a regional section or who do not want to join a local club.

Today the Clarion stands less for political activism and more for all forms of cycle activities, including cycle touring, sportives, time trials, road, track and cyclo-cross racing. The staple diet of the Clarion cyclist is the club run, an organised group ride, usually at a weekend, covering distances from 20 miles to over 100 miles in a day.[1]

The club has a biannual newsletter, Boots and Spurs, and holds an annual conference.

In June 2021, an AGM of the National Clarion Club voted to remove a reference to socialism from its constitution. A majority of members felt it was "divisive and non-inclusive". Two-thirds voted to replace “support for the principles of socialism” with support for “fairness, equality, inclusion and diversity”. Critics accused the club of "trying to erase history" and warned the step may lead to a breakaway organisation.[8]

Splintering

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Concerns about dilution of the Clarion's political aims had already created splinter clubs. In 2006 the National Clarion Cycling Club 1895 (North Lancs Union) was formed as a breakaway group from the original National Clarion CC. According to the splinter organisation's secretary Charles Jepson, writing in 2021, it was established "to protect the (original National Clarion CC) founders' commitment to 'combine the pleasures of cycling with the propaganda of socialism'".[9]

Sporting successes and champions

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The Clarion has several champions among its membership including:

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e "Home". National Clarion Cycling Club. Retrieved 20 July 2011.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h "The Clarion Cycling Club". Working Class Movement Library. 6 January 2009. Archived from the original on 20 July 2011. Retrieved 20 July 2011.
  3. ^ a b c d e "The Clarion Scouts". Working Class Movement Library. 10 January 2009. Retrieved 20 July 2011.
  4. ^ London Clarion Cycle Club website
  5. ^ a b Kidd, Marie-Claire (2 July 2014). "Co-operation on wheels". Co-operative News. Retrieved 18 August 2020.
  6. ^ J. P. M. Millar (1936). "Something Never Done Before". The Clarion Cyclist (5, November 1936): 64.
  7. ^ Rearden, Nick (14 April 2010). "New Warrington cycling club launched". Road CC. Retrieved 18 August 2020.
  8. ^ Pidd, Helen (14 June 2021). "Keir Hardie's cycling club jettisons socialism". Guardian. Retrieved 15 June 2021.
  9. ^ "Clarion call from cyclists to carry on the fight for socialism on two wheels". theguardian.com. 16 June 2021. Retrieved 17 June 2021.
  10. ^ Bailey, Mark (5 February 2020). "Yorkshire gold: Barry Hoban profile". Cyclist. Retrieved 18 August 2020.
  11. ^ Walker, Sarah (4 August 2008). "Champion cyclist Chris Newton is a down-to-earth guy". Teesside Live. Retrieved 18 August 2020.
  12. ^ Knott, Paul (28 December 2018). "Home roads: Riding with the Yates brothers's first club". Cycling Weekly. Retrieved 18 August 2020.

Further reading

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  • Pye, Dennis (2004). Fellowship is Life; The Story of the Clarion Cycling Club. Bolton: Clarion Publishing. ISBN 0-9525071-1-0.