Maurice Garin

Maurice Garin
Personal information
Full name Maurice-François Garin
Nickname Le petit ramoneur
The Little Chimney-sweep
Born (1871-03-03)3 March 1871
Arvier, Aosta Valley, Italy
Died 19 February 1957(1957-02-19) (aged 85)
Lens or Haute-Savoie,[1] France
Height 1.62 m (5 ft 4 in)
Weight 60 kg (130 lb)
Team information
Discipline Road and track
Role Rider
Rider type Distance rider
Amateur team(s)
1892 Maubeuge cycling club
Professional team(s)
1893–1904 La Française
1911 La Française
Major wins

Grand Tours

Tour de France
General Classification (1903)
3 Stages (1903)

One-day races and Classics

Paris–Brest–Paris (1901)
Paris–Roubaix (1897, 1898)
Bordeaux-Paris (1902)
Infobox last updated on
December, 2008
Maurice Garin

Maurice-Francois Garin[2] (pronounced: [mo.ʁis.fʁɑ̃.swa ɡa.ʁɛ̃]; 3 March 1871 – 19 February 1957)[3] was an Italian-born French road bicycle racer best known for winning the inaugural Tour de France in 1903, and for being stripped of his title in the second Tour in 1904 along with eight others, for cheating.[4][5][6]

Family life

Arvier, in the Aosta Valley, the birthplace of Maurice Garin

Garin was born the son of Maurice-Clément Garin and Maria Teresa Ozello in Arvier, in the Aosta Valley in north-west Italy, close to the French border. The name Garin was the most common in the village, which was French-speaking,[7] belonging to five of the seven families.[8] They married in 1864 when he was a 36-year-old labourer and she a 19-year-old employee of the town's hotel.[9] They had four daughters and five sons, of whom two were twins. Maurice was the first son. The cottage in which he was born, now a ruin, still exists.[8]

In 1885 the family left Arvier to work on the other side of the Alps, as most Valdotainians did at that time. The wish for a better life is a likely explanation but does not suggest why they travelled so far, almost to the Belgian border.[n 1] Speculation surrounds the move, possibly because it was in secret. To emigrate needed authority and mayors had been told by the sub-prefect of Aoste to refuse or at least make permission difficult.[9] If the family travelled separately, it would explain the legend that Maurice, then 14, was exchanged for a round of cheese:[8] it could have been payment to a guide to lead him clandestinely over the mountains or payment in return for custody of the son.

Garin worked as a chimney sweep, which again fits having been led individually across the mountains. Among the sub-prefect's reasons for stopping emigration was concern about "avid speculators who, claiming to teach a trade to young children, especially that of chimney sweep, set out to seduce their parents with promises and false hopes [to] get their children... to get a large profit from them by exploiting their fatigue, their misery and sometimes even their life.".[9]

Garin moved to France. By 15 he was living in Reims as a chimney sweep[8][9] He moved to Charleroi in Belgium but by 1889 he was back in France, at Maubeuge. If the family had travelled together, it had by then dispersed. The second son, Joseph-Isidore, died 100 km north-east of Paris in 1889. The father had returned to Arvier, where he died shortly afterwards. His brothers François and César seemed to have stayed in northern France because, with Maurice, they opened a cycle shop in the lower end of the boulevard de Paris[7] in Roubaix in 1895. His brother César Garin (16 December 1879, Arviers - 27 March 1951) also competed as a professional cyclist from 1899-1906, and lived in Paris (Seine) until his death at the age of 71. His best results were: Roubaix - Bray-Dunes 1899 3rd; Paris-Roubaix 1904 2nd; Tour de France, 1904 2nd on Stage 5 to Nantes.[10] Another brother Ambroise Garin (10 May 1875, Arviers - 31 March 1969) also competed as a professional cyclist from 1899-1903, and lived at Argenteuil, Val-d'Oise until his death at the age of 93. His best results were: Paris-Roubaix 1899 3rd, 1901 2nd, 1902 3rd; Bordeaux - Paris 1900 3rd, 1902 3rd.[11]

Garin moved to Lens, Pas-de-Calais in 1902 and lived there the rest of his life.[8][9] He bought his first bicycle for 405 francs (approx €1,400 at 2008 values[12]), twice what a forge worker would earn in a week of 12-hour days, in 1889.[9] Racing did not interest him but he did ride round the town fast enough to be called a madman — le fou.[9]

Amateur racing

Garin took French nationality when he was 21, in 1892[3][8] or 1901.[13] He began racing in northern France in the same year when the secretary of the cycling club at Maubeuge persuaded him to enter a regional race, Maubeuge-Hirson-Maubeuge, over 200 km. Garin finished fifth despite suffering from the sun[9] and decided to ride more.

His first win was in 1893, in Namur-Dinant-Givet in Belgium. He had sold his first bike and bought a lighter one — still 16 kg but with pneumatic tyres — for 850 old French francs (approx €3,000 at 2008 values)[12] The race was over 102 km. He was leading by Dinant when he punctured. Spotting a soigneur waiting with a spare bike for a rival, Garin rested his own against the wall of a bridge, grabbed the soigneur's spare bike and rode off. At the finish, winning with 10 minutes over the field, he gave back the bike and recovered his own the next day where he had left it.

Professional racing

Garin became a professional by chance. He planned to ride a race at Avesnes-sur-Helpes, 25 km from where he lived. He arrived to find it was only for professionals. Not allowed to compete, he waited until the riders had left, raced after them and passed them all. He fell off twice but finished ahead of the racers. The crowd was enthusiastic but the organisers less so. They refused to pay him the 150 francs (approx €525 at 2008 values)[12] due to the real winner, so spectators raised 300 francs (approx €1,050 at 2008 values)[12] among themselves. Garin became a professional.

His first true professional win was in a 24-hour race in Paris in 1893[n 2] It was held on the Champ de Mars, site of the Eiffel Tower. The riders competed, as was the custom, behind a succession of pacers. The event took place in February and the cold drove out riders one after the other. Garin rode 701 km in 24 hours, beating the only other rider to finish by 49 km. Garin said he had survived on[9]

  • lots of strong red wine
  • 19 litres of hot chocolate
  • seven litres of tea
  • eight cooked eggs
  • a mix of coffee and champagne
  • 45 cutlets
  • five litres of tapioca
  • two kilos of rice
  • and oysters.

In 1894 he won a 24-hour race in Liège, Belgium, and the following year set an hour record for cycling behind pacers.

1901 Advertisement with Paris–Brest–Paris winner Maurice Garin for "La Française"

The first Paris–Roubaix was in 1896; Garin came third, 15 minutes behind Josef Fischer. He would have come second had he not been knocked over by a crash between two tandems, one of them ridden by his pacers. Garin "finished exhausted and Dr Butrille was obliged to attend the man who had been run over by two machines," said the race historian, Pascal Sergent.[14]

In 1897 he won Paris–Roubaix, beating the Dutchman Mathieu Cordang in the last two kilometres of the velodrome at Roubaix.[n 3] Sergent said:

As the two champions appeared they were greeted by a frenzy of excitement and everyone was on their feet to acclaim the two heroes. It was difficult to recognise them. Garin was first, followed by the mud-soaked figure of Cordang. Suddenly, to the stupefaction of everyone, Cordang slipped and fell on the velodrome's cement surface. Garin could not believe his luck. By the time Cordang was back on his bike, he had lost 100 metres. There remained six laps to cover. Two miserable kilometres in which to catch Garin. The crowd held its breath as they watched the incredible pursuit match. The bell rang out. One lap, there remained one lap. 333 metres for Garin, who had a lead of 30 metres on the Batave.
A classic victory was within his grasp but he could almost feel his adversary's breath on his neck. Somehow Garin held on to his lead of two metres, two little metres for a legendary victory. The stands exploded and the ovation united the two men. Garin exulted under the cheers of the crowd. Cordang cried bitter tears of disappointment.[14]

In 1898 he won Paris–Roubaix again, this time by 20 minutes, and in 1901 he won the second edition of Paris–Brest–Paris, finishing almost two hours ahead of Gaston Rivierre after covering 1,208 km in 52h 11m 1s.[15] He started by chasing another Frenchman, Lucien Lesna, who rode the first 600 km at 28kmh and had two hours' lead at Brest. At Rennes he stopped for a bath to recover from the tiredness, filth and heat, then found he could not get racing again into the headwind. Garin passed him at Mayenne and Lesna gave up shortly afterwards with 200 km to go. Garin finished 19h 11m better than Charles Terront ten years earlier.[16]

In 1902 Garin won Bordeaux–Paris, a race of 500 km from south-west France.

Tour de France

1903 Tour de France

Garin with his masseur and son in 1903.

The Tour de France began to promote a new daily sports newspaper, L'Auto ahead of the largest paper in France, Le Vélo,[17] which sold 80,000 copies a day.[18] Some of Le Vélo 's advertisers had disagreed with the paper's support for Alfred Dreyfus, a soldier found guilty of selling secrets to the Germans but eventually acquitted after being sent to Devil's Island.[19] The Tour was to promote their new rival paper, L'Auto.

The editor, Henri Desgrange, planned a five-week race from 31 May to 5 July. This proved too daunting and only 15 entered. Desgrange cut the length to 19 days and offered a daily allowance.

The race began at the Au Reveil Matin café at a crossroads in Montgeron, south of Paris, and ended in Ville-d'Avray, another suburb, having circuited France in six days of racing over 2,428 km. One stage, between Nantes and Paris, was 471 km. Sixty riders started at an entry fee of 10 francs — €87.50 today with inflation[20] — and 21 finished. Garin won 3,000 francs[21] (approx €10,500 at 2008 values)[12] for finishing first in 94h 33m 14s, or 6,125 francs (approx €21,500 at 2008 values)[12] in all with his other prizes.[22] Lucien Pothier was second and Fernand Augereau third.

Pierre Chany wrote:

In the town which adopted Maurice Garin, at Lens, an immense procession was organised with the participation of all the notables of the region. Before leaving Paris on Monday evening, the day after the race finished, the winner paid a visit, out of politeness, to Henri Desgrange and, in a gesture without precedent, pulled a sheet of paper from his pocket. It was an article 'in order to simplify the interview', he explained! There he gave his feelings during the race, gave his opinion on the formula by which the race was run, gave a word of congratulation to his rivals.[23]

Garin's written note said:

The 2,500km that I've just ridden seem a long line, grey and monotonous, where nothing stood out from anything else. But I suffered on the road; I was hungry, I was thirsty, I was sleepy, I suffered, I cried between Lyon and Marseille, I had the pride of winning other stages, and at the controls I saw the fine figure of my friend Delattre, who had prepared my sustenance, but I repeat, nothing strikes me particularly.[23]
But wait! I'm completely wrong when I say that nothing strikes me, I'm confusing things or explaining myself badly. I must say that one single thing struck me, that a single thing sticks in my memory: I see myself, from the start of the Tour de France, like a bull pierced by banderillas,[n 4] who pulls the banderillas with him, never able to rid himself of them.[23]

1904 Tour de France

Of the 1904 race, Edward Boeglin asked:
Was Garin the subject of an injustice? It's not impossible. But the rigour of the sanctions can be explained by the discredit into which professional cycling had (already!) fallen. An example had to be made of a champion.
Garin was incontestably the strongest rider of the period, so he was first choice. He was 34. The suspension for two years ... broke his career. We never again saw him at the front of the peloton 'this little and stubborn rider of formidable consistency ... who won all the races that mattered',
... "this rider, intelligent, crafty, instinctive and calculating,
... the little chimney sweep from Arvier, in the Aoste valley near Mont Blanc'

Edouard Boeglin, Franco Cuaz.[9][24]

Garin also won the 1904 Tour de France, by a small margin over Lucien Pothier, but was subsequently stripped of the title which was awarded to Henri Cornet. The race aroused a passion among spectators, who felled trees to hold back rivals and beat up others at night outside St-Étienne.[6] Garin was one of the mob's victims. Pierre Chany wrote:

In the climb of the col de la République, leaving St-Étienne, supporters of the regional rider, Faure, assault the Italian, Gerbi. He is thrown to the ground, beaten like plaster. He escapes with a broken finger...[6]
... 'A bunch of fanatics wielded sticks and shouted insults, setting on the other riders: Maurice and César Garin got a succession of blows, the older brother [Maurice] was hit in the face with a stone. Soon there was general mayhem: "Up with Faure! Down with Garin! Kill them!" they were shouting. Finally cars arrived and the riders could get going thanks to pistol shots. The aggressors disappeared into the night.'[6]

Garin said:

"I'll win the Tour de France provided I'm not murdered before we get to Paris."[25][26]

Misbehaviour was rife too between riders and nine were thrown out during the race for, among other things, riding in or being pulled by cars.[5] There were claims, too, that the organisers had allowed Garin to break rules — at one stage being given food where it was not permitted by its chief official — because his sponsor, La Française, had a financial stake in the race.[27]

The French cycling union, the Union Vélocipédique Française, heard from dozens of competitors and witnesses and in December disqualified all the stage winners and the first four finishers: Garin, Pothier, César Garin, and Hippolyte Aucouturier.[28] The UVF did not say precisely what had happened[29] and the details were lost when Tour archives were transported south in 1940 to avoid the German invasion and never seen again. Stories spread of riders spreading tacks on the road to delay rivals with punctures, of riders being poisoned by each other or by rival fans. Lucien Petit-Breton said he complained to an official that he had seen a rival hanging on to a motorcycle, only to have the cheating rider pull out a revolver.[30]

Tales were also said to include 'Garin taking a train', a claim confirmed by a cemetery attendant looking after his grave who, as a boy, heard Garin tell his stories as an old man.[4] In December 1904 Garin was stripped of his title and banned for two years.[4]

Retirement

Garin retired from cycling and ran his garage in Lens until his death. The garage is still there, although wholly changed from Garin's era. An unnamed writer recalled:

I remember Maurice Garin well. I met him and talked to him almost every day because we lived in the same area, 200m from each other, at Lens. Le Père Garin, as my father and grandfather called him[n 5] used to bring out a chair in fine weather and sit in the doorway of the little office of the service station he owned at 116 rue de Lille in Lens, under the sign for Antar fuel and oil. My barber was in the neighbouring house and I used to go there once a month to have a crew cut, [couper en brosse] which was the fashion in those days. My friends and I were aged seven to ten and on our one-speed bikes we used to pin numbers on our back... and we never missed riding past Maurice Garin in a tight group so that he would see. It's strange that nobody thought to take a picture of me, the little kid, alongside the first great champion of the biggest race in the world. But life's like that.[31]
Maurice Garin was far from an adulated hero, even less a rich champion (he spent his retirement running the service station), and I don't remember any special celebration in his honour. Television crews didn't come from home and abroad to interview him. [They showed no interest] until he died in 1957. And the rue de Lille, where he lived, still hasn't been renamed the rue Maurice Garin.[31]

Garin kept his interest in cycling. He returned just once to his birthplace, in 1949, to see the Tour pass through. He began a professional team under his name after the second world war. The Dutchman Piet van Est won Bordeaux–Paris in 1950 and 1952 in the team's red and white jersey. On the Tour's 50th anniversary in 1953, Garin was among several old stars waiting at the finish as part of a celebration.

Death and commemoration

He is buried in a family grave with his wife Desirée. The inscription on the headstone says —

Familles Brot, Garin et Darnet.
Desirée Maille (1890-1952),
— Épouse de
Maurice Garin (1871–1957)
Mme Vve Marie Brot, (1863–1948)
Henri Darnet (1905–1970)
Denise Darnet (1904–1982)

'Cimetière Est' (section F3), Sallaumines, near Lens. [4]

In 1933 the "Stade Vélodrome Maurice Garin" was built in Lens, and named in his honour.[1][n 6]

In 1938 Garin was awarded the gold medal of Physical Education by the Minister of Sport for France, Leo Lagrange.[2]

Garin is remembered as a short, determined man, even authoritarian. As an old man he became confused. His biographer, Franco Cuaz, said:

... He [Garin] wandered through Lens asking "Where is the control? Where is the control?" as his mind brought back images of the hotels where riders signed check sheets in the first Tours.[9][24]
... He regularly ended up at the town's police station, from where he was escorted back home. Often he was far from home, without knowing where he was or where he was going.[8][24]

In 2003 a street was named after him in Maubeuge on the 100th anniversary of his 1903 win in the Tour de France.

In 2004 Les Amis de Paris–Roubaix placed a cobblestone on his grave, a traditional trophy for winners of the Paris–Roubaix race.[7]

In Arvier, the village in Italy where he was born, there is a monument in his honour. His biographer, Franco Cuaz, said:

Every year, the municipality sends me French people who want to see the house where he was born. It's like a pilgrimage.[8]

Palmarès

1893
Dinant-Namur-Dinant
Paris 80km (vélodrome)
1894
Liège 24hr (vélodrome)
Paris-Saint-Malo
1895
24hr Arts libéraux de Paris (vélodrome)
Guingamp-Morlaix-Guingamp
World record 500km behind human pacer on the road 15h 2m 32s
1896
Paris-Le Mans
Paris-Mons
Liège-Thuin
3rd Paris–Roubaix
1897
Paris–Roubaix
Paris-Royan
Paris-Cabourg
Tourcoing-Béthune-Tourcoing
1898
Paris–Roubaix
Tourcoing-Béthune-Tourcoing
Valenciennes-Nouvion-Valenciennes
Douai-Doullens-Douai
50km Ostend (vélodrome)
2nd Bordeaux–Paris
1899
3rd Bordeaux–Paris
3rd Bol d'Or (vélodrome)
1900
2nd Bordeaux–Paris
2nd d Bol d'Or
3rd Paris–Roubaix
1901
Paris–Brest–Paris
1902
Bordeaux–Paris
1903
Tour de France
Winner overall classification[n 7]
Winner 3 stages

Grand Tour General Classfication results timeline

Grand Tour 1903 1904
Tour 1 DSQ
Giro N/A N/A
Vuelta N/A N/A
Legend
1 Winner
2–3 Top three-finish
4–10 Top ten-finish
11– Other finish
DNE Did Not Enter
DNF-x Did Not Finish (retired on stage x)
DNS-x Did Not Start (no started on stage x)
DSQ Disqualified
N/A Race/classification not held
NR Not Ranked in this classification

Notes

  1. A possible (undocumented) reason why the whole Garin family travelled so far, from the Aosta valley to the Belgian border, is that the region had France's coal mines and industrial cities, which always needed workers. See Moving Europeans, Migration in Western Europe since 1650. By Leslie Page Moch.
  2. Races at the time were largely of extremes, velodrome races being short sprints or paced behind motorcycles, road races becoming ever-longer trials of endurance which culminated in the Tour de France, which Garin won
  3. In 2004 Les Amis de Paris–Roubaix marked Garin's victories in the Paris–Roubaix event by placing a cobblestone — traditional trophy for winners of the race, on his grave. See Les Amis de Paris-Roubaix, Manifestations, 3rd Mars, 2004, Hommage à Maurice Garin
  4. Banderillas — the spears used to aggravate animals in a bull-fight
  5. Père — father — is a dated mark of respect
  6. The "Stade Vélodrome Maurice Garin" was razed and rebuilt in 1990, and re-opened by the Minister of Youths and Sports Roger Bambuck. It was again due for demolition in 2007 as part of the 'Lens Louvre' reconstruction project
  7. The yellow jersey image is symbolic, it was not used in the Tour de France before either 1913 or 1919. Garin wore a green armband.

References

  1. 1 2 Ethno62, Culture et Traditions in the Pas de Calais. Lens — destruction programmée du stade Maurice Garin, Who was Maurice Garin?
  2. 1 2 Trans-Alpine du Livre, Vallée d'Aoste, Article on Maurice Garin
  3. 1 2 Memoire du Cyclissme, Rider database, Maurice Garin Palmares
  4. 1 2 3 4 The Unknown Tour de France, by Les Woodland. Van der Plas Publications. ISBN 1-892495-26-0
  5. 1 2 Chany, Pierre (1986), La Fabuleuse Histoire du Tour de France, La Martinière, France, pp 54—55
  6. 1 2 3 4 Chany, Pierre (1986), La Fabuleuse Histoire de Cyclisme, La Martinière, France, p60
  7. 1 2 3 Les Amis de Paris-Roubaix, Manifestations, 3rd Mars, 2004, Hommage à Maurice Garin
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Journal du Dimanche, France, 29 June 2003
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Journal L'Alsace-Le Pays, 20 February 2001, Profile of Maurice Garin Archived 1 November 2005 at the Wayback Machine
  10. Cycling Archives - César Garin
  11. Cycling Archives - Ambroise Garin
  12. 1 2 3 4 5 6 This Chart showing Value of French franc in Euros says that 1 French franc was worth circa 3.5 Euros around 1900.
  13. Le premier vainqueur du Tour était-il Italien ?
  14. 1 2 Sergent, Pascal (1997), trans Yates, D., A Century of Paris–Roubaix, Bromley Books, UK, ISBN 0953172902
  15. "Site officiel du Paris Brest Paris 2007". Paris-brest-paris.org. Archived from the original on October 11, 2007. Retrieved 2009-10-02.
  16. Chany, Pierre (1988), La Fabuleuse Histoire de Cyclisme, vol 1, Nathan, France, p162
  17. Boeuf, Jean-Luc, and Léonard, Yves (2003), La République du Tour de France, Seuil, France, p23
  18. Nicholson, Geoffrey (1991) Le Tour, the rise and rise of the Tour de France, Hodder and Stoughton, UK
  19. Boeuf, Jean-Luc and Léonard, Yves (2003); La République de Tour de France, Seuil, France
  20. Wheatcroft, Geoffrey (2003), 'Le Tour: a history of the Tour de France, 1903–2003', Pocket Books, UK
  21. Augendre, Jacques (1996), Le Tour de France, Panorama d'un Siècle, Société du Tour de France, France, p7; for comparison, a kilo of bread cost 40 centimes
  22. Chany, Pierre (1988), La Fabuleuse Histoire du Tour de France, La Martinière, France, p45
  23. 1 2 3 Chany, Pierre (1988), La Fabuleuse Histoire du Tour de France, La Martinière, France, p46
  24. 1 2 3 Garin. Il ciclismo di un secolo fa. (The cycling of a century ago). Musumeci, 1997.
  25. Chany, Pierre (1986), La Fabuleuse Histoire du Tour de France, La Martinière, France, p61
  26. Chany, Pierre (1986), La Fabuleuse Histoire du Tour de France, vol 1, La Martinière, France, p181
  27. Chany, Pierre (1986), La Fabuleuse Histoire du Tour de France, La Martinière, France, p62
  28. Augendre, Jacques (1996), Le Tour de France, Panorama d'un Siècle, Société du Tour de France, France, p8
  29. Chany, Pierre (1986), La Fabuleuse Histoire du Tour de France, La Martinière, France, p65
  30. Chany, Pierre (1988), La Fabuleuse Histoire du Tour de France, vol 1, Nathan, France, p184
  31. 1 2 Grincheux Grave, 1st juillet 2006, Tour de France, Memories of Maurice Garin Archived 26 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine

External links

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