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Repack Rider
05-30-2018, 08:42 PM
The bane of my existence is that I still have every document I ever had. Because of the places life has taken me, that includes the most comprehensive library on mountain biking before 1990.

I have everything, race results, club newsletters, press releases, personal correspondence, thousands of photos, product files on every potential advertiser for my long-gone magazine, the Fat Tire Flyer. And of course, every issue of every magazine.

After using what amounted to a microscopic percentage of all these data to write my book, I still have the immense pile, well over a ton of paper. For years now I have paid for the space to store it, I have moved it and protected it, but I would like this unique archive to outlast me and be of use to others.

My close friend Joe Breeze, who wrote the foreword in my book, is the curator of the Marin Museum of Bicycling. The museum recently expanded its footprint after the other tenant of the building moved out, and they have offered me a space in it. I still have to pay rent on it, but at least it is now a charitable donation and a tax write-off.

The next phase of the project looks like it will take the rest of my life, and I'm in pretty good health. In addition to my own archive, I have a filing cabinet and a dozen bankers boxes from Gary Fisher's collection, Joe Breeze has his own personal archive, and the museum itself has archives dating back to the 19th Century. We plan to solicit scans from anyone who has them, and put them online.

Which is the next subject. Although it would be nice to make money from this, I would be happy if I could get the rental for the space and the bandwidth covered. Plan is to sell access to the collection for a small amount to cover the expense of making it available. With literal terabytes of data, the bandwidth charges could be a problem.

I may need volunteers who want to poke through old bicycle documents and scan them, because this will take a lot of person-hours.

That's about as far as the "plan" has gone. I always worried that if I got hit by a bus while all this was still in storage, it would have disappeared entirely, so at least it is in a safe location.

Here's what it looks like, minus Gary Fisher's contribution.

Cicli
05-30-2018, 08:45 PM
Wow, this is cool.

Repack Rider
05-30-2018, 08:55 PM
I forgot to do this. Here are a few .pdf links of the sort I have in the collection.

First issue of Fat Tire Flyer (http://sonic.net/~ckelly/Seekay/ckimages/ftf01.pdf)

Co Evolution Quarterly, 1978, first mention of this new sport.
(http://sonic.net/~ckelly/Seekay/ckimages/Co_Evo_1978.pdf)
1983 catalog from Kelly-Fisher MountainBikes. (http://sonic.net/~ckelly/Seekay/ckimages/K&F%20Catalog.pdf)

Results of the 1986 Plumline Classic (http://sonic.net/~ckelly/Seekay/ckimages/plumline.pdf) (In which Cindy Whitehead won a 50-mile race with no saddle on her bike.)

Here's the photo of that.

paredown
05-31-2018, 06:47 AM
Sounds like a great project.

I have a musician friend who is part of a similar project to make accessible all the documents/audio/pictures that have survived from the Bottom Line club in Greenwich Village from its heyday.

It's a similar situation--the surviving owner of the club saved everything, and of course anyone who was anybody played (and was likely recorded and photographed) at the club so it is a treasure trove like yours.

FWIW, I have been urging him to get a librarian for their operating group--even if it is in the form of hitting up the local uni for a couple of bright interns who are still completing their degrees.

As I joke with him, you need to copy it, and then make sure you can find the copy in accurate and helpful ways--that's what librarians do best.

mt2u77
05-31-2018, 12:09 PM
My unsolicited two cents: A GoFundMe type of deal might be a better way to pay for this.

In the era of free information, it will be hard to get people to pay to access your files. Maybe a couple would-be authors here or there will pony up to put together a book, but your average Joe will just stop when they encounter a pay wall. Yet, if you polled the cycling public, I think there would be almost unanimous agreement that the content has value and would be "cool" to be digitized. I bet people would donate to help you do it. Plus, your costs will be upfront, but paid access won't give you any revenue until after the fact.

If you own rights to any of the cool old photos, maybe incentivize donations above a certain level with a print to hang in the pain cave.

cribbit
05-31-2018, 07:10 PM
Google is actively trying to digitize everything they can get their hands on. See if you can reach out to someone in https://www.google.com/googlebooks/library/

jumphigher
06-03-2018, 04:12 PM
Love that First issue of Fat Tire Flyer, and love that Kelly-Fisher Mountainbikes catalog. :)

Repack Rider
06-04-2018, 12:48 PM
My friend Rob Korotky has set up a GoFundMe (https://www.gofundme.com/mountain-bike-legacy-project) page to help cover the expenses of the archive.

After three decades of storing, moving and protecting this collection, I am not looking to recover the tens of thousands of dollars it has already cost me. I just want to get out from under the $300 a month it is currently costing me just to own it, and maybe buy some computer equipment to proceed with making it available to the public.

The big expense will be the bandwidth.