The Edinburgh Reporter July 2023

(EdinReporter) #1

8 NEWS


Chris Hill

Ross Nixon


Spokes Bike Breakfast offers the chance to chat about cycling


Bikes in the quad


5TH


In 1560, the Treaty of Edinburgh (also
known as the Treaty of Leith) was signed,
the purpose being that French and English
troops would withdraw from Scotland;
and Mary and François were to agree to
give up any claim to the English crown
and recognize Elizabeth as the rightful
Queen. And in 1820, scientist William John
Macquorn Rankine (picture by Thomas
Annan) was born in Edinburgh; Rankine
specialised in thermodynamics and his
detailed knowledge of the workings of
steam engines was sparked by work he
carried out as a teenager during study
breaks, at the Edinburgh and Dalkeith
Railway where his father worked. Also in
1847, the final run of the Edinburgh to
London mail coach took place; henceforth
mail would travel by train.

8TH


In 1823, the death of Sir Henry Raeburn
at his house in St Bernard’s, Stockbridge,
was announced.

12TH
In 1698, a fleet of five ships set sail from
the Port of Leith for the Isthmus of Darien
in Panama; the ships were launching the
Darien Scheme, a project which aimed to
establish a Scottish overseas colony in the
New World to rival those of England and
Spain; the scheme was to prove a disaster
and caused the ruin of dozens of
businessmen and landowners who had
invested in the project; the main
consequence was the subsequent Union
between Scotland and England. And in
1838, the Reverend John Jamieson,
lexicographer, philologist, and antiquary,
died in a house in George Square.

24TH
In 1513, James IV mustered part of his
army South of Edinburgh on Burgh Muir
(today its remains include the Meadows
and Bruntsfield Links) before heading for
the Battle of Flodden.

31ST
In 1871, the Emperor and Empress of
Brazil, Dom Pedro II and Theresa Christina
Maria, visited Edinburgh.

The complete list for the whole month
of July is published online on the website
theedinburghreporter.co.uk
If you wish to join the club then email
[email protected]

By KIRSTY LEWIN

EVERYBODY KNOWS that folk who love to
cycle also love to get together to chat and eat, even
early in the morning. That’s why local authorities,
employers, universities, colleges, and schools
across the world often celebrate cycling by hosting
bike breakfasts. Spokes and The City of
Edinburgh Council invited us all to the first bike
breakfast in the city since 2019. Cyclists came
from as far away as Musselburgh to the City
Chambers’ quadrangle for tea and coffee, fruit,
and breakfast rolls. I was delighted with my egg
roll and chuckled to see comments later on social
media about whether there might be a real meat
option next time! Edinburgh Bike Coop was on
hand, and I saw at least two councillors queuing
up politely to get their bike chains degreased and
oiled. Many organisations were there, from the
large ones such as Sustrans Scotland, Cycling
Scotland, and Cycling UK in Scotland, through to
the small but high-profile groups such as the
InfraSisters, the school bike buses, Spokes Porty
and folk from Critical Mass Edinburgh.
It was too early in the morning for long
speeches. I said a few words on behalf of Spokes


  • mainly to thank everyone for coming,
    particularly the supportive councillors. I did,
    however, comment on how lovely it is now in
    parts of Leith where traffic is being significantly
    reduced as part of the Leith Connections project.
    I’m sure as more people experience how pleasant
    streets can be with limited traffic, they too will
    want that for their own neighbourhoods.
    Cllr Scott Arthur, the “interim” convener of the
    Council’s Transport and Environment Committee
    gave the main speech. He talked about the
    combined challenge of the two 2030 targets: net
    zero and reducing car miles by 30%. He warned
    that that we should not let ourselves be distracted
    by the growing number of climate sceptics and
    conspiracy theorists. He went on to list various


policies and major infrastructure projects that
would contribute to these targets. I’m still not sure
how these targets will be met without demand
management mechanisms that reduce private car
use – both the short trips and the commuting
trips into the city from other local authorities.
My final message to councillors was simple


  • don’t compromise on designs when developing
    these schemes and ensure that everyone who
    wants to will be able to access the new cycling
    infrastructure promised for some parts of the city.
    A segregated cycle route may ‘only be 400 metres
    away’ but if that 400 metres involves cyclists,
    including children, sharing road space with


HGVs then the cycle route is not accessible.
Sarah Boyack was the only MSP to come along.
Spotting her in the crowd, I asked her to say a few
words. She kindly did, and, without the
microphone as it failed at the crucial point, she
celebrated cycle campaigners such as the
InfraSisters and called on The Scottish
Government to continue to fund even more
active travel infrastructure.
And with that, the formal events were over.
When I left to head off to work the quadrangle
was still busy with people chatting, comparing
cycles, and yes of course eyeing up the wonderful
cargo bikes on show.

A fabulously sunny weekend and the supercars taking part in the
charity Gumball 3000 from Edinburgh to Porto Montenegro attracted
Hot wheels at Gumball crowds to George Street where parts were closed to other traffic.

Jerry Ozaniec, Membership Secretary
of the Old Edinburgh Club takes a
look back at some important dates in
the history of Edinburgh.

This month


back when...


Cargo bikes to the fore

William John
Macquorn
Rankine
Free download pdf