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Bicycle training rollers used by Ron Cazey, 1930 - 1939
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Object statement
Bicycle training rollers, metal / rubber, maker unknown, used by Ron Cazey, Ashfield, New South Wales, Australia, 1930s
The training rollers were used by Ron Cazey who participated in bicycle racing with a 'Blackbird' racing bicycle. The 'Blackbird' is a rare example of a 'named' racing bicycle. It was usual for cycling 'stars' to have their name painted on the frame. Such named racing bicycles are now sort after by collectors. Ron Cazey, the owner of the 'Blackbird' and whose name appears on the bicycle's top tube, was a member of the Ashfield and District bicycle club and was proficient enough to be classified as a 'professional' racer. He raced in the prestigious Goulburn to Sydney road race several times in the 1930s as well as participating in track events. It was said that he missed out on a position with the 1938 Australian Empire Games cycling team by 'half a wheel' in a 117 mile road race.

The 'Blackbird' bicycle was manufactured by Ashfield bicycle shop owner Don Blackman, a champion bicycle rider in his own right and now considered one of the 'elite' cycle racers of New South Wales. Cazey has not, so far, been classified as an 'elite' rider as the voluntary work of collecting data on the participants in bicycle racing over the past century is ongoing. Further research will provide data to place Ron Cazey in his position as a 'professional' rider.

Bicycle racing in the 1930s in Australia was more popular and newsworthy than today. Long distance events and track racing were more commonplace and publicly supported. The sports-minded public was eager to read of the exploits of the bicycle racers and thus, articles on the races appeared in the front section of some newspapers.
The maker of the training rollers is unknown.
The bicycle training rollers were used by Ron Cazey. Ronald (Ron) Leo Cazey was born at Lidcombe, NSW, in 1917 and as a young man was a keen cyclist competing in both road and track events with considerable success. He won a number of awards in the late 1930s, during the halcyon days of cycle racing, and apparently missed out on selection in the of the 1938 Empire Games team by half a bike wheel length after a 117 mile road race. He was also a regular competitor in the famous gruelling Goulburn to Sydney road race along the old Hume Highway. Cazey was a tall man, and a strong and aggressive rider.

Cazey worked in the bush during the pre-War years then joined the 1st Cavalry Division Remount Depot at Holsworthy when the War commenced. He later returned to his trade as a builder and always owned a series of utes. At Thomas Street, Ashfield, he owned and operated a hardware and timber company called N & R Hardware, (the initials of Ron and Noreen his wife whom he had married in 1958). During the early 1960s Cazey was State President of the Master Builders Association and helped establish a chair of Building Science at the University of New South Wales. He was also an active Rotarian and successfully stood for the position of Alderman on Ashfield Council. Also about this time he bought a property in the Megalong Valley and became a 'Pitt Street farmer'.

During the drought of 1969 he adjusted stock on Araluen, near Mullion Creek, Orange, and subsequently sold the Megalong Valley property and moved his family from Sydney to Mullion Creek. He enjoyed farming sheep and immersed himself in the local community holding some authority in the local rural fire brigade. He stayed on the land until his 80s when ill health forced him into a house at Orange in 1999. He died in 2006.

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Description
Bicycle training rollers, metal / rubber, maker unknown, used by Ron Cazey, Ashfield, New South Wales, Australia, 1930s

Adjustable, folding tubular metal frame enclosing three rollers: two in close proximity to support the rear wheel and the third roller to support the front wheel of the bicycle. The forward roller for the rear wheel has a groove at each end to hold rubber or elasticised loops which couple this roller to the roller for the front wheel which is similarly grooved. By this method the rear bicycle wheel powers the front wheel which provides stability to the rider while training on the rig. The tubular frame is painted blue while the rollers are red with a broad white stripe in the centre. The rubber loop is green.

Made: 1930 - 1939
2007/53/2
Production date
1930 - 1939

 This text content licensed under CC BY-SA.
Acquisition credit line
Gift of the family of the late Ron Cazey, 2007
Subjects
+ Bicycle racing
Short persistent URL
Concise link back to this object: http://from.ph/126859
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{{cite web |url=http://from.ph/126859 |title=Bicycle training rollers used by Ron Cazey |author=Powerhouse Museum |accessdate=25 May 2013 |publisher=Powerhouse Museum, Australia}}


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