George Leander Explained

Birth Place:Chicago, United States
Death Place:Paris, France
Sport:Track cycling
Show-Medals:yes

George Leander (12 May 1883 – 23 August 1904) was an American track cyclist. He became professional in 1902.

Leander was one of the first generation of six-day cyclists. He won the Six Days of New York in 1902 at Madison Square Garden together with Floyd Krebs. He finished second a year later with Nat Butler behind Robert Walthour and Ben Munroe.[1] He became the first American stayer champion in 1903.[2]

Due to his success in the United States, Leander started competing in Europe during the summer of 1904 and won multiple competitions. On 23 August 1904 he died as a result of a fall during a stayer competition in Paris, France, aged 21. While traveling at the rate of 92kph, Leander was attempting to pass another cyclist when his bicycle slipped on the track and he had a terrible crash. He was taken to an area hospital but never regained consciousness.[2] [3]

Achievements

1902[2]
  • 3rd - Philadelphia, Six Days, Philadelphia (Pennsylvania)
  • 2nd - Boston, Six Days, Boston (Massachusetts)
  • 1st - New York City, Six Days, New York City (New York) (with Floyd Krebs)
    1903[2]
  • 1st - National Championship, Track, Stayers, Elite, United States
  • 2nd - New York City, Six Days, New York City (New York)

    See also

    Notes and References

    1. Andrew . Homan . The Windy City Fat Boy . Road Bike Action Magazine . January 2010 . bloges.wiki .
    2. Web site: George Leander . May 25, 2024 . Cycling Archives . en . de Wielersite.
    3. News: . live . Cycling. The Wheel. . . May 25, 2024 . 28 September 1904 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190814182201/https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/164910439 . August 14, 2019 . Page 824, columns 3-4 . . There are technical issues with the webarchiving-link..