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Tour de France: About

Tour de France Bicycle Race

The Tour de France is an annual men's multiple-stage bicycle race, usually held in July. The 2025 Tour de France is set to take place from Saturday, July 5 to Sunday, July 27.

The Birth of the Tour de France

On July 1, 1903, 60 men mounted their bicycles outside the Café au Reveil Matin in the Parisian suburb of Montgeron. The five-dozen riders were mostly French, with just a sprinkle of Belgians, Swiss, Germans and Italians. A third were professionals sponsored by bicycle manufacturers, the others were simply devotees of the sport. All 60 wheelmen, however, were united by the challenge of embarking on an unprecedented test of endurance—not to mention the 20,000 francs in prize money—in the inaugural Tour de France.

At 3:16 p.m., the cyclists turned the pedals of their bicycles and raced into the unknown.

Nothing like the Tour de France had ever been attempted before. Journalist Geo Lefevre had dreamt up the fanciful race as a stunt to boost the circulation of his struggling daily sports newspaper, L’Auto. Henri Desgrange, the director-editor of L’Auto and a former champion cyclist himself, loved the idea of turning France into one giant velodrome. They developed a 1,500-mile clockwise loop of the country running from Paris to Lyon, Marseille, Toulouse, Bordeaux and Nantes before returning to the French capital. There were no Alpine climbs and only six stages—as opposed to the 21 stages in the 2013 Tour— but the distances covered in each of them were monstrous, an average of 250 miles. (No single stage in the 2013 Tour tops 150 miles.) Between one and three rest days were scheduled between stages for recovery.

The first stage of the epic race was particularly dastardly. The route from Paris to Lyon stretched nearly 300 miles. No doubt several of the riders who wheeled away from Paris worried not about winning the race—but surviving it.

Unlike today’s riders, the cyclists in 1903 rode over unpaved roads without helmets. They rode as individuals, not team members. Riders could receive no help. They could not glide in the slipstream of fellow riders or vehicles of any kind. They rode without support cars. Cyclists were responsible for making their own repairs. They even rode with spare tires and tubes wrapped around their torsos in case they developed flats. Continue reading from History

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From the Collection

Link to The Comeback : Greg LeMond, the true king of American cycling, and a legendary Tour de France by Daniel de Vis in Hoopla
Link to Tour Fever: the armchair cyclist's guide to the Tour de France by J.P. Partland in the catalog
Link to Three Weeks, Eight Seconds: Greg LeMond, Laurent Fignon, and the epic Tour de France of 1989 by Nige Tassell in the catalog
Link to The Secret Race: : inside the hidden world of the Tour de France : doping, cover-ups, and winning at all costs by Tyler Hamilton and Daniel Coyle in the catalog
Link to Slaying the Badger: Greg Lemond, Bernard Hinault, and the greatest Tour de France by Richard Moore in the catalog
Link to France: An Adventure History by Graham Robb in the catalog
Link to The Racer documentary directed by Kieron J. Walsh in Hoopla
Va Va Froome: The Remarkable Rise of Chris Froome in Freading
Link to Shut Up, Legs!: My Wild Ride On and Off the Bike by Jens Voigt and  James Startt in Hoopla
Link to Enter the Slipstream documentary directed by Ted Youngs in Hoopla
Link to Hell on Wheels documentary directed by Werner Schweizer, Pepe Danquart in Hoopla