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1910

8th Edition

“Crossed the Tourmalet. Very good road. Perfectly passable. Steines.”

Alphonse Steines’ telegram to boss Henri Desgrange having failed to cross the Col du Tourmalet in January 1910

Start: Paris, France, on 3 JulyFinish: Paris, France, on 31 July
Total distance: 4737 km (2944 miles)Longest stage: 424 km (264 miles)
Highest point:Col du Tourmalet: 2115 m (6939 ft)Mountain stages: 6
Starters: 110Finishers: 41
Winning time: 63 pointsAverage speed: 28.680 kph (17.822 mph)
1. Octave Lapize (Fra) 63 points2. François Faber (Lux) 67 points3. Gustave Garrigou (Fra) 86 points

Although the overall race distance changed little, with only one extra stage added to make fifteen at the 1910 edition of the Tour, the big change was the addition of Pyrenean climbs to the race.

The Portet d’Aspet, Col du Peyresourde, Col d’Aspin, Col du Tourmalet and Col d’Aubisque all featured for the first time.

It was one of Henri Desgrange’s employees, Alphonse Steines, whose job it had been to map the race since its 1903 beginnings, and it was therefore Steines that Desgrange sent to scout out the Pyrenees in January 1910 in the hope of including some tougher climbs that summer.

Steines almost killed himself trying to cross an impassable, blocked-by-snow Tourmalet but, for reasons only known to himself – perhaps not wishing to upset Desgrange – he sent his boss a telegram to say that the 2115-m (6939-ft) climb was “perfectly passable”.

Come July, the snow had indeed gone, but 18 km of riding and walking up gradients of up to 10 per cent on unmade roads would test even the Tour’s best riders in 1910.

Reaching the top of the Tourmalet without stopping – an easily quantifiable feat of strength in those early days of the Tour’s climbs – earned Gustave Garrigou a 100-franc prize for his no-doubt considerable trouble.

He wasn’t even first over the Tourmalet, though; that honour fell to overall race winner Octave Lapize, who then crested the summit of the stage’s next climb, the 1709-m (5606-ft)-high Col d’Aubisque hollow-eyed and spitting, “You’re all murderers!” in the race organisation’s general direction.

1910 also saw the first appearance of the voiture balai – the broomwagon – so called because it’s the final vehicle in the race convoy, ‘sweeping up’ riders unable to go any further due to exhaustion or injury. With the Pyrenees making their first appearance in the race, there were plenty of riders who needed it.


The inclusion of Pyrenean climbs takes its toll on a shattered Octave Lapize as he reaches the summit of the Col du Tourmalet during stage 10


Mapping Le Tour: The unofficial history of all 100 Tour de France races

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