Chas Messenger

Chas Messenger
Personal information
Full name Charles William Messenger
Born (1914-01-01)1 January 1914
London, England, United Kingdom
Died 26 July 2008(2008-07-26) (aged 94)
Team information
Discipline Road
Role Rider
Infobox last updated on
13 August 2008

Charles William "Chas" Messenger (January–March 1914 – 26 July 2008)[1][2] was a British cyclist, a former Milk Race organiser and British road team manager.

Messenger was born in London. He began cycling in the King's Cross area, and despite being a "mediocre" rider in his own words, he beat the hour for a 25-mile time trial at a time when this was rarely achieved.[2]

Tour of Britain

Messenger was an official of the British League of Racing Cyclists,[3] which started during the Second World War to promote massed cycle racing on public roads. The BLRC organised several Tours of Britain under different names and sponsors and then in 1958 secured sponsorship from the Milk Marketing Board. Messenger was the BLRC's event organiser and he and other officials visited the board at a hotel in central London. He said:

Our first meeting with the sponsor's PRO, Reg Pugh, was a near-fiasco, for the three of us, Eddie Lawton, Les Keith and myself, were working and groping in the dark, having to rely on figures conjured out of thin air by treasurer Ruben Smith. So poor, too, were we at this time that we arrived at the posh West End hotel with only enough money between the three of us to get back home. We came away elated, with more or less the 'Tour' in our pockets. We also came away with a budget well below what was needed for we had promised foreign teams (but no one said how we were going to get them.)[4]

Messenger ran the Tour of Britain, known as the Milk Race, from 1958 to 1965, when he was followed by Maurice Cumberworth. His stewardship of the Tour saw an emphasis on long, hilly stages.[5]

Merger with the NCU

Messenger and Peter Itter, chairman of the rival National Cycling Union, forged the links which merged the two organisations to form the British Cycling Federation in 1959. He negotiated with the police to hold races on open roads.[6] He became vice-chairman of the BCF's racing committee, which picked teams, for seven years. He managed the British road team four times between 1962 and 1967, culminating in the world championships in which Graham Webb won the men's amateur road race and Beryl Burton the women's event.

He was sacked in September 1967 without explanation from the British Cycling Federation.[7]

He subsequently stepped in to run the 1982 UCI Road World Championships, which were held at Goodwood.[5]

Honours

The Chas Messenger road race, established in 2001, was named in his honour. It is a Premier Calendar event. Messenger was at the 2008 race.[6]

In 2009, he was inducted into the British Cycling Hall of Fame.[8]

Writing

Messenger wrote several books in a style described as "intensely personal" and his "grasp of history doesn't always follow a chronological pattern", "but he's always an entertaining and exciting writer who never allows himself to worry unduly about such obstacles as spelling, grammar, punctuation."[9]

Private life and personality

Messenger spent all his adult life in west London, where he worked in local government. He was a member of the Chequers Road Club and an official of the British Cycling Federation's west London division. He was a prolific organiser of cycle races. He was known for a brusque personality. An obituary by British Cycling[10] said: "His propensity for direct action and getting things done rather than long-winded committee debate made him a controversial figure to some then amateur attitudes."[11]

Bibliography

References

  1. "England & Wales Birth Register Index; January–March quarter 1914; Charles W Messenger; Mother's Maiden Name: Mac Laren; district: Pancras; volume: 1b; page: 67". Ancestry.co.uk.
  2. 1 2 "Obituary: Chas Messenger". British Cycling. 28 July 2008.
  3. "Chas Messenger". Willesden CC. August 2008.
  4. Messenger, Chas (1998), Ride and Be Damned, Pedal Publishing, UK, p142
  5. 1 2 Fotheringham, William (3 September 2008). "Obituary: Chas Messenger". theguardian.com. Retrieved 16 June 2014.
  6. 1 2 "CHAS MESSENGER DIES AGED 94". Cycling Weekly. 29 July 2008.
  7. Cycling, UK, 23 September 1967, p25
  8. "50 Cycling Heroes Named in British Cycling's Hall of Fame". British Cycling. 17 December 2009.
  9. "Shot-and-shell days". Association of British Cycling Coaches.
  10. The "federation" was dropped
  11. http://www.britishcycling.org.uk/web/site/BC/bcf/News2008/20080728_chas_messenger_obituary.asp
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