National Clarion Cycling Club 1895
Motto | Fellowship is life |
---|---|
Formation | 2006 |
Type | cycling club |
Purpose | To protect and further the interests of cycling and cyclists. To promote Mutual Aid, Good Fellowship and support for the Principles of Socialism. |
Official language | English |
Parent organization | National Clarion Cycling Club |
Website | http://www.nationalclarioncc1895.co.uk/ |
In 2006 a splinter group from National Clarion Cycling Club called National Clarion Cycling Club 1895 North Lancs Union was formed but this is not affiliated to the National Clarion Cycling Club.[1]
Purpose
National Clarion Cycling Club 1895 (North Lancs Union) is a politically active cycling club[2][3] that remains committed to the objectives of the founders of the Clarion Cycling Club in 1894 namely
'to combine the pleasures of cycling with the propaganda of Socialism'
NCCC1895(NLU) was formed to ensure that the Clarion's century old link with Socialism is maintained and the fight to achieve the fairer society the founders sought is never forgotten. From its inception in 1894 the Clarion Cycling Club was a politically active organisation and by maintaining a commitment to socialist principles and actively supporting their comrades in the Labour and Trade Union Movement, NCCC1895 are following in the footsteps of the founders of the first Clarion Cycle Club in Birmingham (1894). Tom Groom, the Club's first National Secretary wrote shortly before his death in 1945
'Of all the Clarion organisations...the Clarion Cycling Club alone remains fully alive. And so long as it keeps true to its objectives: Mutual Aid, Good Fellowship, and the Propaganda of the Principles of Socialism, it will have good cause and reason for keeping alive'
National Clarion CC 1895 stands firmly by the Clarion motto of old: 'Socialism: the Hope of the World', the Socialist Ten Commandments and the fight for a new society with Love as its Law and Justice its Foundation.
References
- ↑ "The National Clarion Cycling Club 1895".
- ↑ Manners, William (9 June 2015). "The secret history of 19th century cyclists". The Guardian. Retrieved 30 September 2016.
- ↑ https://1938glasgow2barcelona2008.wordpress.com/the-national-clarion-cycling-club-1895/. Missing or empty
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