Thomas McCall

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McCall's first (top) and improved velocipede of 1869 - later predated to 1839 and attributed to MacMillan
McCall's first (top) and improved velocipede of 1869 - later predated to 1839 and attributed to MacMillan

Thomas McCall (1834-1904) was a Scottish cartwright.

He built, in 1869, two versions of a two-wheeled velocipede with levers and rods tossing a crank on the rear wheel (English Mechanic 5/14/1869 and 6/11/1869). This was a reaction to the French velocipedes, of the mid 1860s, with their front-wheel pedal cranks. In fact, this rear-wheel idea occupied five more inventors in that year (Lessing 1991).

When in the 1880s a rich corn-trader named James Johnston started a campaign to attribute the "first true" bicycle to his uncle Kirkpatrick MacMillan and his native country of Dumfries in general, he attributed the McCall designs to MacMillan and dated them as of 1839. Skeptics allege that the reason McCall built a replica of his machines to be exhibited as MacMillan's at the 1889 Stanley Show, at the behest of Johnston, can only be a need of money (Clayton 1987). That alleged replica is now at Dumfries Observatory.

[edit] Further reading

N. Clayton: The First Bicycle, in: The Boneshaker #113, spring 1987, pp. 25-29

H. E. Lessing: Around Michaux - myths and realities, in: Proc. of the 2nd ICHC, Saint Étienne 1991

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