I discovered this amazing ‘barn find’ machine in France. It has a 1905 ‘plaque fiscale’ showing the name of Emile Imbert, which suggests it has been in France for at least the past 120 years. Starley’s Paris depot was at 52 rue de Dunkerque. The French catalogue described this model as the ‘Rover Legere de Route’ with advice that the rider may remove the brake and mudguards, saving around 1lb in weight, and use the bicycle for road racing.*
The Rover is ‘in its juice’ as they say in France, ie in unrestored original condition. I’ve added new handlebar grips and a superb Christy saddle. Its original specification was a 30″ front wheel.
30″ pneumatic tyres have not been manufactured for a long time, so I’ve had the original 30″ Westwood front wheel fitted with a cushion tyre. It’s possible to stretch these onto a wider rim, while pneumatic tyres will only fit an exact size.
The Rover model range changed in 1895: like other leading manufacturers, in 1895 the company introduced Brooks new patent seat post, which was wider diameter than before. From the catalogue details (in the Rover book), I think this is an 1895 model rather than 1896, because the upward slant of the 1896 model was less pronounced and the 1895 model is specified with a 30″ front wheel. As the frame number of this machine is 9042, and my 1895 Ladies Rover is 15139, I assume that the French Rovers had a different numbering sequence.
View in the Online Bicycle Museum
BICYCLE COLLECTORS CURATED ONLINE AUCTION, CHRISTMAS 2024 – JANUARY 2025
This Timed Auction is live from 20th of December 2024 to 26th of January, 2025. Highest bid wins.
NO BUYERS or SELLERS PREMIUM.
THE RESERVE IS THE START PRICE + BUY-IT-NOW OPTION.
INTERNATIONAL DELIVERY: NO PACKING FEES.
BIDDING INCREMENTS: Up to £1000 = £10. Over £1000 = £50. Over £2000 = £100
IT’S A CURATED AUCTION – Colin is the auctioneer and is available to chat to you personally during the auction (or before) by email, text message, phonecall, Facebook Messenger or Whatsapp.