You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in French. (October 2021) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in German. (October 2021) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
Personal information | |
---|---|
Birth name | Léopold-Marie Dangla[1][2] |
Nationality | French |
Born | 16 January 1878[3] Laroque-Timbaut, Aquitaine, France[1][2] |
Died | [1] or June 25, 1904[2] (22 or 26) Magdeburg, Province of Saxony, Germany[1][2] | June 18, 1904
Resting place | Dolmayrac, France[1][2] |
Years active | 1899-1904[2] |
Sport | |
Sport | Road bicycle racing |
Léopold-Marie "Paul" Dangla (Laroque-Timbaut, Aquitaine, 16 January 1878[3][1] – Magdeburg, Province of Saxony, 18[1] or 25[2] June 1904) was a French professional road bicycle racer.
Paul Dangla was born to Marie Pelegrin and Ferdinand Dangla. Ferdinand, a former gendarme, worked as a garde champêtre (rural guard) in his birthplace, Le Passage. A brother had died a year before Dangla's birth at the age of nine months. From 1896 Dangla gained a reputation in his home region as a good amateur in sprint and tandem races.[1]
In 1899 Paul Dangla, actually a trained accountant,[4] went to Paris to start as a professional in motor-paced racing and became a popular local hero.[2] He competed in non-medal cycling events at the 1900 Summer Olympics in Paris and placed second in the sprint event at the 1901 Grand Prix d'Angers.[5]
After Dangla had beaten all the world records of the German Thaddäus Robl on 16 August 1903, he became a "national hero".[2] On 18 October, he again set an hour record behind pacemakers over 84.577 kilometres (52.554 mi) at the Parc des Princes, as the August record had now been beaten by Tommy Hall of England.[1][2][6]
In 1903 Dangla placed second in the motor-paced event at both the European Championship and French Championship.[5] In April 1904, he was injured in a fall and unable to race for a month.[4] On 12 June 1904, Dangla crashed at a speed of nearly 50 miles per hour (80 km/h) while racing in Magdeburg,[4][7] shortly after winning the "Goldenen Rad von Magdeburg" (Golden Wheel of Magdeburg).[4] He died two weeks later.[7]
In Agen, a school was named after Dangla, "Collège Paul Dangla". As of 2016[update] the school still bore this name.[8] For many years, the bicycle Dangla was riding when he had his fatal accident stood on his grave in the cemetery of Dolmayrac; on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of his death, it was to be placed in a glass display case. After this was announced in the press, the bike was stolen.[2][9]