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How it all began
The original suggestion for a motorcycle club for over 50’s was put forward in a letter by Stephen Dearnley published in the August 1983 issue of Bike Australia. This grew two significant responses; one from Rob Hall, a reader at Albion Park NSW who suggested the present name and motto for the club; the other from Peter Thoeming, then the editor of Bike Australia, who sketched the logo and offered support from his magazine if Stephen could get the club off the ground. This was done at an inaugural meeting in Sydney on 6th December, 1983 when the five people present approved a basic constitution and the Ulysses Club was duly formed. From that tenuous beginning it has never looked back and the club now boasts a large and extensive network of members throughout Australia, with sister clubs formed in New Zealand and South Africa. Why ULYSSES Club Inc? The name comes from a poem of the same title by Alfred, Lord Tennyson. It tells how the great Greek hero Ulysses, now middle aged and securely in charge of his kingdom of Ithaca, is getting bored with things around him and longs to go adventuring again with his shipmates of old. It describes very well indeed the sort of person who still has enough spark to go on riding into middle and later years. Too long to quote here, you will find it in any good poetry anthology such as the Albatross Book of Verse. What are its aims: To provide ways in which older motorcyclists can get together for companionship and mutual support. To show by example that motorcycling can be an enjoyable and practical activity for riders of all ages. To draw the attention of public and private institutions to the needs and views of older riders.
At selected rallies the club banner is raised as a focal point
where members and their friends can join in good companionship. |