Touring Club de France explained

The Touring Club de France (1890-1983) was a French social club devoted to travel, founded by enthusiasts of the velocipede.[1] [2] Its headquarters sat on the Avenue de la Grande Armée in Paris.

History

The idea of the Touring Club de France was inspired by the British Cyclists' Touring Club, founded in 1873 and also devoted to cyclism, and promoted in France under the impulse of Paul de Vivie.

The archives of the Touring Club de France were given in 1984 to the French National Archives (number 53 AS).[3]

Prize

The Touring Club de France used to award several prizes to support mountain guides fathers of large families.[4] The Jean S. Barès Prize was awarded to mountain guides from the Pyrénées, living above an altitude of 500 meters and raising at least seven children, all born at that altitude or above. The recipient of that prize in 1928 was Pierre Mayneris, a mountain guide from Baillestavy, near the Canigou, who received 2400 francs as a support to raise his nine children. The Brunier Prize was the equivalent for mountain guides living in the French Alps above an altitude of 1000 meters.

See also

Bibliography

Issued by the club

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Patrick Young . Enacting Brittany: Tourism and Culture in Provincial France, 1871–1939 . 2012 . Ashgate . 978-1-4094-8381-6.
  2. Book: Astrid Swenson. The Rise of Heritage: Preserving the Past in France, Germany and England, 1789–1914. 2013. Cambridge University Press. 978-1-107-46911-2.
  3. Description of the TCF archives at the French National Archives
  4. Web site: Lukasz . Exploring Poland Through Its Rivers: Why River Cruises Are a Must . 2023-04-23.