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Industry Loses Pioneer, Visionary, & Frame-Builder, Charlie Cunningham

Charlie Cunningham Rest in Peace hero(Photo / Cunningham GoFundMe)
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Today, we are sharing the sad news out of Fairfax, California. Bike industry pioneer Charlie Cunningham has passed away at the age of 78. Eleven years ago, Charlie was riding bikes with his wife, Jaquie Phelan, and was involved in an accident. He suffered life-altering injuries and has been living in a care facility since.

Charlie Cunningham Rest in Peace first pic
(Photo / Charlie Kelly Facebook)

Unfortunately, in my many years in the industry, I never had the opportunity to meet Charlie in person. But, as I ride my mountain bike, I’ve definitely enjoyed his many contributions to the sport. And, in so many different ways.

Charlie Cunningham Rest in Peace the 1988 cunningham racer
1988 Cunningham Racer (Photo / Vintage Mountain Bike Workshop)

Way back in 1982, along with master framebuilder Steve Potts and Mark Slate, Charlie co-founded the brand Wilderness Trail Bikes (WTB). And he and Potts ran it from 1982 to 2002. WTB was one of the pioneers, and arguably one, if not the first, aftermarket brand to start making mountain bike-specific parts during the emerging sport’s infancy.

Charlie Cunningham Rest in Peace smiles
(Photo / Cunningham Bicycles)

A lot of these inventions in bike parts came from Charlie Cunningham’s visionary mind, and they played an instrumental part in steering mountain bikes away from their roots in road biking. Charlie was also one of the very early adopters, proponents, and builders of aluminum frames.

Charlie may be gone and will be missed by many. But he leaves a monster legacy behind that helped make mountain biking the amazing sport it is today. And that legacy will never go away.

Pedal in Peace Charlie.

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5 Comments
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Alan
Alan
26 days ago

As an obsessed bike geek in the 80s and 90s, Charlie was one of those guys that inspired with his fresh ideas. Those of us old enough to have lived to witness the evolution mountain bikes went through during that era should consider ourselves lucky. Pioneers like Charlie are legends.

Greg
Greg
26 days ago
Reply to  Alan

Well said

bob
bob
26 days ago

the 1988 racer looks really pretty for its time. also had no idea it.was wtb, or that this guy lived next door!

Tim
Tim
26 days ago

I really wish the bike industry had done more for Charlie after his accident. He did so much for the sport.

Mike Lysik
Mike Lysik
25 days ago

The last year Interbike was in Anaheim CA i found myself in line behind Charlie, Tom Ritchey, Gary Klein Gary Fisher and and i think Keith Bontrager (Bontrager was re-rolling 700c MA40’s into 36 spoke 26″mtn bike rims). There I was behind the “gods” of mountain biking in a food line and i remember Charlie, and the others, being such normal, engaging people. Was a time i will always remember. Godspeed Charlie….

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