![]() In the early part of 1887, while looking for a good specimen of the then new safety bicycle, I came across a Raleigh in London. Bowden described how this led to him visiting the Raleigh works: įrank Bowden, a recent convert to cycling who on medical advice had toured extensively on a tricycle, first saw a Raleigh bicycle in a shop window in Queen Victoria Street, London, about the time that William Ellis's investment in the cycle workshop was beginning to take effect. It was one of 15 bicycle manufacturers based in Nottingham at that time. By 1888, the company was making about three cycles a week and employed around half a dozen men. Thanks to Ellis, the bicycle works had now expanded round the corner from Raleigh Street into former lace works on the adjoining road, Russell Street. ![]() He was a lace gasser, a service provider involved in the bleaching and treating of lace, with premises in nearby Clare Street and Glasshouse Street. Like Woodhead and Angois, Ellis's background was in the lace industry. ![]() ![]() Russell Street Cycle Works.’ William Ellis had recently joined the partnership and provided much-needed financial investment. Nearly two years later, the 11 April 1887 issue of The Nottingham Evening Post contained a display advertisement for the Raleigh ‘Safety’ model under the new banner ‘Woodhead, Angois, and Ellis. ![]()
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