Clarence Leslie Davis

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02 MAY 1873 • California DEATH 18 JUN 1946 • Trinity, California

Clubs

Garden City Cyclists

THE BIG ONE ON THE END. 

Clarence L. Davis was born twenty-two years ago and began bicycle-racing, like hundreds of other famous racing men, when he was nineteen years of age. He is the largest man on the quadruplet team, weighing 174 pounds and standing 5 feet and 10 1/4 inches.

Davis' first work was on August 27, 1893, when he won the mile handicap of the Bay City Wheelmen meet. Just two months later, at San Jose, he broke the coast record for the half mile in his heat of the half-mile handicap, but had the bad luck to fall in the final.

In the Admission Day races of the Garden City Cyclers, the same year, Davis won the five-mile championship of San Jose and the mlle handicap.

On October 2d at the Sacramento meet, where Edwards rode his greatest race, Clarence Davis won the two-mile, beating both Ziegler and Wells, and in the mile and three-mile State championships he beat out Ziegler, Wells and Edwards, besides other fast Coast riders less known than them. That was a great year for Davis as well as Edward and Zeigler and at the beginning of last year Davis was considered the equal of both of them, but 1894 proyed a bad year for Clarence, who only raced two months, and almost at the beginning of his track work got an ugly fall while training on the quarter at San Jose and injured both knees. He found it almost impossible to get in shape, and, finally, after the San Diego meet, gave up the racing until he went into actual training for the work on the quadruplet. As Davis needs hard work to get in winning form, the judgment of a trainer is required to fit him. How well Aylward has looked after him the wonderful mile of Saturday shows.

TONY DELMAS, HENRY C. SMITH, ALLAN N. JONES AND CLARENCE L. DAVIS OF THE GARDEN CITY CYCLERS ON THE QUADRUPLET AS THEY APPEARED WHILE PACING W. J. EDWARDS WHEN HE LOWERED THE WORLD'S MILE RECORD TO 1:34 1-5.
[Drawn by an "Examiner" artist from a photograph by Bushnell.]

CLARENCE L. DAVIS 

Hails from the cycling center of the Pacific Coast, San Jose. In 1892 at Sacramento a surprise was sprung on the public in the form of a dark horse, or a 100 to 1 shot. All the cracks had been in continual training and each considered himself in fine form, but their disappointment was great when Davis jumped the bunch and went down the stretch a clean winner. He has won many races since then, and will win many more, although he has been racing probably longer than any rider now in competition on the Coast. Clarence has very little to say, but is a deep thinker, and this class of riders keep the rest guessing all the while.


CLARENCE L. DAVISCLARENCE L. DAVIS 06 Mar 1897, Sat The Record-Union (Sacramento, California) Newspapers.com
Clarence L. Davis, a giant in stature and a lion on the track, is now for the first time this season in fine form. Davis in 1893 rode like a whirlwind and man after man went down before his terrific sprint. He is the largest racer on the count, weighing in condition 190 pounds, and this weight along with mighty strength gives him the power to send a bicycle along with the speed of an avalanche. Davis is now preparing himsell for a big match race at twenty-five miles unpaced and it is safe to predict that he will make the other fellow hustle. 

CIRCUIT RIDERS.
The Thirty-Mile Relay Race a Local Event.CIRCUIT RIDERS. The Thirty-Mile Relay Race a Local Event. 12 Jun 1897, Sat Woodland Daily Democrat (Woodland, California) Newspapers.com

Marriage of Davis / PooleMarriage of Davis / Poole 05 Dec 1900, Wed The Fresno Morning Republican (Fresno, California) Newspapers.com
Obituary for Clarence Leslie DAVIS
I think Clarence L. Davis of Garden City Cyclists.Obituary for Clarence Leslie DAVIS I think Clarence L. Davis of Garden City Cyclists. 25 Jun 1946, Tue Oakland Tribune (Oakland, California) Newspapers.com

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