The world's most famous cycling race
Every year, the Tour de France is watched by audiences in 190 countries and attracts over 15 million spectators. A lot has changed since the first Tour de France in 1903. The first Tour contained only 6 stages and attracted around 70 entrants. Every stage started in the evening, with riders riding throughout the night and arriving the following afternoon. The original Tour de France was created to promote the magazine l'Auto, with the first place rider winning 12 thousand francs. 12.000 francs was about six times the average income of a worker at that time, so this was a fortune!
Here are some beautiful vintage photographs of Le Tour participants. Explore thousands of Tour de France related items through Europeana.
Lucien Petit-Breton, winner of the 1907 and 1908 Tour de France, arrives in Paris while the crowd cheers him on ecstatically.
1914, the last Tour de France before the First World War. Two Belgians pose with flowers: Jean Rossius on the left, Philippe Thys on the right. Thys was the first to win the Tour three times.
Winners from the 1906 edition.
Georges Passerieu poses during the 1908 edition. He would finish third this year.
Madame Lapize kisses her son Octave, the winner of the 1910 edition
Arrival at Parc des Princes, 1922 edition.
Cyclists refill their water bottles with water from big metal buckets on the side of the road in Nîmes during the 1926 edition.
Cars with loudspeakers broadcasted the position of the runners and the goings-on in the race to the spectators. Here one of those cars is in Toulon, in 1926.
The Belgian Lucien Buysse crosses the finish line and wins the 1926 edition of the Tour de France.
Louis Peglion poses during the 1932 edition.
Cyclists Prior, Cardona, Bachero and Bover, before giving a lap of honour at the Montjuic Circuit, 1935 edition
Gino Bartali in the 1938 edition.
Last étape of the 1938 Tour.
Vlaemynck gains on Cosson and Tassin 15km before the finish line in Pau, during the 1939 edition.
Vietto in front of Sylvère Maes during the leg in the Pyrenees. Maes would go on to win the 1939 Tour. The Tour de France would not be held for eight years due to the Second World War, until 1947.
Journalists follow the Tour on motorbikes to be as close to the action as possible, 1952 edition.
During the 41st edition of the tour in 1954 the Tour de France would start outside of France for the first time ever. This image shows the runners leaving the Olympic stadium in Amsterdam, this years' starting point of the Tour.
Who are you cheering for in this years' Tour de France? Find vintage photographs and much more cultural heritage related to the Tour de France throughout the ages on Europeana.