Monday, June 30, 2014

The Bicycle As An Emblem of the Women's Movement

Here's yet another reason I love bicycles- they helped further the women's rights movement. In the 1890s, bicycling became a craze across America, for men and women. It provided the lower classes a means of getting places they hadn't been able to afford before, as horses, carriages and wagons were expensive, required extensive maintenance and were often only attainable to the wealthy or upper classes. Bicycles were affordable and easy for everyone to ride and offered a new independence to women who had been constrained by a lack of transportation options in the past.

Bicycles also changed the fashions of the day for women, making it more acceptable to see the occasional ankle or a glimpse of bloomers. This shift in fashion lead to other advances for women in the long run.

The Atlantic's Citylab shows how the bicycling fad kicked off women's lib.

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About SRTC

SRTC is the federally designated Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO) for Spokane County. Urbanized areas with populations exceeding 50,000 people are required to have an MPO. SRTC was formed to address the county's transportation planning needs. It provides coordination in planning between the public, cities, small towns, the county, the state, transit providers, and tribes.

SRTC offers services including transportation monitoring, transportation modeling, census information analysis, travel demand forecasting, historical traffic count analysis, geographic information systems, and trip generation rates.