History of the Wheelmen

Back in the day

The formation of the Queen City Wheelmen goes back to sometime around 1968 when Watson Nordquist and Bill Lapthorn started forming a racing branch of the Cincinnati Cycle Club. Other key founders of QCW were Les Gesell and John Gilmer. Les was earning a degree at the University of Cincinnati, while John was a student at Aiken high school. Meetings were held in the Gesell’s apartment, and Mary Gesell was instrumental in the overall management of club membership and organization.

In 1971 the racing branch had grown large enough to consider forming its own separate club and in 1972 the Queen City Wheelmen became club #924 recognized by the Amateur Bicycle League of America, the precursor to the United States Cycling Federation and USA Cycling. 

It was an “amateur” league because that was the only kind of bicycle racing there was in the United States at the time. To make sure riders remained amateur and eligible to compete in the Olympics, there were no cash prizes. Entry fees were usually around $2.25 and racers competed for bicycle components and trophies. 

The club was fully up and running by April 23rd, 1972 when members held their first ABL of A sanctioned event, the University of Cincinnati Criterium, held in conjunction with the U.C. Cycling Team with additional support from the University. This event would survive through 1981, although after the first year the event moved off campus to Burnet Woods and eventually lost any association with U.C.

In these early years, the only thing the club received resembling sponsorship came from Dan Humpert, the owner of a Montgomery Cyclery franchise in Clifton called Campus Cyclery. Dan’s shop was one of the very few places in Cincinnati that came close to being a pro-shop, almost the only shop where you could even buy a tubular tire, much less something like a bicycle built with Reynolds or Columbus tubing.

Dan was very supportive of the club, using his shop van to take riders to races, employing racers at his shop, and selling race program advertising to all his small business friends in Clifton to fund the annual race. In 1977 Dan dropped his Montgomery franchise, changed the name to Campus Cyclery and increased his sponsorship of the club for a few more years. Dan did a lot to nurture Junior riders and a few years later sold his shop to one of those grown-up Juniors by the name of Glenn Wolf.

Another force in the early forming of the club was Bill Gallagher and his wife Mary. They did a great deal of work in managing the organization and Bill was soon its’ most dominant rider. Bill was a teacher at Oak Hills high school and did a lot of training and coaching work with the Junior riders. Bill also organized a couple of “Little 500” style races for high school teams.

Bill went on to become a premier Senior rider in the Midwest. He eventfully joined the Cool Gear/Exxon team. Riding with the likes of Wayne and Dale Stettina, John Howard, and Tom Schuller on the very first carbon fiber frame the Exxon Graftek G-1.

The club got its start with the assistance of some very much older riders who raced the “Veteran” category age 40+. One of the club’s most important veterans was Watson Nordquist. Watson had an extensive racing resume which started while living in Connecticut in 1938 and carried through being one of the most prolific attendees to the Cleves Time Trial Series where he rode nearly 200 times from 1974 to 1989.

Watson played a large role in the club administration and nurturing Juniors. I can remember more than once traveling to races in Watson’s car where he always had a propane tank filled with compressed air for filling his tubbies. Another part of Watson’s passion for helping others was his work with the Blue Ash Lions Club which QCW co-sponsored a race with in Blue Ash called the Southwestern Ohio Bicycle Championship for a few years.

As Les, John, and Bill moved on others came into the organization to help fill the voids they left. One of these was Phil Kennedy Jr., his son Phil Kennedy III was a dominating Junior rider. Phil Jr. was an attorney and assisted greatly with the organization of the club and taking his son and other Junior riders around the Midwest in their Airstream trailer.

The club continued to chew through officers and around 1977 acquired a very helpful resource in the form of Greg Hanfbauer. Greg was Vice City Treasurer and possessed the ability to devise, organize and follow through on any task he put himself to. One of those tasks that he and I were determined to put together was a bike race in downtown Cincinnati. This culminated with a unique, one-time event called the Rivertown Rally Gran Prix of Cycling. The race was a serpentine course that incorporated Riverfront Stadium and a pedestrian bridge over Ft. Washington Way.

With the running of the Rivertown Ralley, the club acquired the assistance of Betty Lane who was our main liaison with the Downtown Council, the organization that runs Oktoberfest Zinzinnati. Betty would do much to hold the club together with her newsletter writing from 1980 through 1986, and then as one of the behind-the-scenes organizers of the Cyclebration race series that ran from 1988 through the 1990s.

That’s about it for my knowledge of the early years. Perhaps someone with better knowledge about the great Cyclebreation years can add to this.

Newsletters:
We’ve had a few prolific newsletter editors over the years. Visit the Grant Wearne Newsletter Library to read about the myriad of events QCW has undertaken throughout the years. If you have any newsletters we’re missing and would like to contribute, please contact us.

Website:
In 1995 a forward-thinking Curt Austin created the first QCW website. In 1997 Curt registered the qcw.org domain name narrowly beating out the Quaker City Wheelmen for the easy-to-remember name. The numerous photos that Curt posted in the early years were quite popular. The website has gone through a few hiccups in attempts to keep it relevant. In 2008 Mark Strecker created the format which has endured due to the ease of adding new content until 2018.  NKY Bluegrass Computers redesigned the newest site to mobile standards and new technology that is in place today.

Officers:
The club officers list provides the history of the leaders that have helped lead QCW. If you would like to add to content, history or provide bios for historic members, please contact us.