Fall Exhibition

Bicycles: Technology that Changed the World

October 17 - December 17, 2023

UPDATED 60 inch Columbia Expert Bicycle 1887 Photo by Rob Futrell

 The Flagler Museum’s fall exhibition, Bicycles: Technology that Changed the World, highlights the development and evolution of the bicycle and the profound impact bicycles had on American society and culture.

Bicycles emerged during the Gilded Age as a revolutionary means of transportation and leisure, allowing individuals to move freely and easily, without the burden and expenses associated with acquiring and maintaining horse and carriage.

At its peak, in a single year, the bicycle revolution in the United States resulted in nearly three hundred companies producing more than a million bicycles, making it one of the Nation’s largest industries. From the earliest prototypes of the 1860s to the sophisticated designs of the 1890s, the Flagler Museum’s fall exhibition offers an unparalleled opportunity to see many rare examples of early bicycles and to understand their tremendous impact on American society and culture during the Gilded Age. 

The Fall Exhibition is sponsored in part by:

  Bill Bone Bike Law Logo RGB 72 4w

and

Templeton logo color Trans RGB 72

Image captions, Left: William Henry Bradley (American, 1868-1962), Victor Bicycles advertisement for Overman Wheel Company, 1896.

Center: Ligna Wood Bicycle, 1898. Keith Pariani collection. Photo: Rob Futrell

Right: Pope Manufacturing Company, Columbia 56” Expert High Wheel, 1886. Collection of Keith Pariani. Photo: Rob Futrell.