maandag 19 december 2011

The story of Annie Londonderry

I just finish reading the book of the woman that cycle around the World.
Or wasn't she??

On June 25, 1894, Annie Cohen Kopchovsky, a young mother of three small children, stood before a crowd of 500 friends, family, suffragists and curious onlookers at the Massachusetts State House. Then, declaring she would circle the world, she climbed onto a 42-pound Columbia bicycle and “sailed away like a kite down Beacon Street. 

























Fifteen months later one New York newspaper called it “the most extraordinary journey ever undertaken by a woman.”















The trip was reportedly set in motion by a wager that required Annie not only to circle the earth by bicycle in 15 months, but to earn $5,000 en route, as well. This was no mere test of a woman's physical endurance and mental fortitude; it was a test of a woman's ability to fend for herself in the world.

Annie turned every Victorian notion of female propriety on its ear.
Not only did she abandon, temporarily, her role of wife and mother, but for most of the journey she rode a man's bicycle attired in a man's riding suit. She earned her way selling photographs of herself, appearing as an attraction in stores, and by turning herself into a mobile billboard, renting space on her body and her bicycle to advertisers eager to benefit from this colorful spectacle on wheels.






















A charismatic master of public relations, a consummate self-promoter, and a skillful creator of her own myth.
Annie was a woman of boundless fantasies.
Indeed, as Annie Cohen Kopchovsky reinvented herself as a new woman, the daring globetrotter and adventurer but most of all a fantastic story teller.
Annie Londonderry a she became known, one of the most celebrated women of the 1890s.
A remarkable story with a dark side.

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