Career
Walthour turned professional in 1896. Walthour’s cycling career continued until the early 1920s. Walthour learned to ride a bike in the early 1890s just about the time when the safety bicycle, the one we are most familiar with today, replaced the cumbersome high-wheeled bicycle.
Walthour became employed in Atlanta, Georgia as a bike messenger and showed a great aptitude on the bicycle.
Walthour began his amateur career in 1895 in road races in and around Atlanta. Walthour quickly developed into a good professional sprinter, but was never good as the best in the game.
However, with the development of the petroleum motorcycle, motor-pacing became as popular as, or more popular than sprinting. Motor-pacing was a fast, extremely hazardous occupation in which riders followed perilously close to their “pacers” on motorcycles, drafting within the protection of their slipstream.
Walthour gave up sprinting for motor-pacing completely in 1901.
In the United States, Walthour raced indoors and outdoors on highly banked wooden surface or cement tracks. Many, like the track inside Madison Square Garden, were ten laps to the mile, but some were as big as five laps to the mile, such as the Charles River track in Boston. Cycle tracks dotted the east coast in cities such as Jacksonville, Atlanta, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Newark, New York City, Boston and Manchester and Walthour rode on them all.
After several years of offers to ride in Europe, Walthour finally went in 1904.
He arrived in Paris March as an underdog and left in May as L’imbattable Walthour (The Unbeatable Walthour). Amos G. Batchelder, chairman of the racing board of the National Cycling Association in the United States, received a cable from a high-ranking French official (probably Victor Breyer, the director of the Buffalo velodrome in Paris) indicating that Walthour was the “best ever seen in Europe and by far the best that has ever come from America, and is distinctly superior to all other riders now following mechanical pacing machines."
By 1904, over a dozen motor-pacing professionals, including some of the best in the world, had been killed from high speed crashes.
Although Walthour had been lucky enough to avoid serious injury, he had seen several of his cohorts carried out on stretchers. In 1907, the dangers of motor-pacing caught up to Walthour and he was nearly killed twice.
Though Walthour had some success after 1907, his career was never the same.
He finished his career with a litany of broken ribs, broken collar bones, broken fingers and dozens of concussions. Walthour spent most of his retirement years living in New Jersey. Walthour Senior died in Boston at the age of 71.