William Sachtleben

American journalist, lecturer and touring cyclist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

William Lewis Sachtleben (March 29, 1866 – December 13, 1953) was a 19th-century American journalist and lecturer who was one of the early globe-circling bicyclists, at one time holding a world record for long-distance bicycling.

BornMarch 29, 1866
DiedDecember 13, 1953(1953-12-13) (aged 87)
Occupationsjournalist, lecturer and cyclist
Quick facts Born, Died ...
William Sachtleben
William Sachtleben at the Tower of the Winds in Athens (1891)
BornMarch 29, 1866
DiedDecember 13, 1953(1953-12-13) (aged 87)
Alma materWashington University in St. Louis
Occupationsjournalist, lecturer and cyclist
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He was a graduate of Washington University in St. Louis. His attempt in 1895 to rescue, recover, and achieve justice for fellow cyclist Frank Lenz, who had disappeared in Turkey (then in the Ottoman Empire) at the time of the Hamidian Massacres,[1] was seen as akin to the earlier search for David Livingstone in Africa. He later went on to explore for fortune and entered the business world.

William Sachtleben was sent to Erzurum to investigate the circumstances of Lenz' disappearance. Sachtleben had completed his own bike journey around the world in 1892, along with his friend Thomas Allen. He sailed to Europe in March 1895, and traveled to Erzurum, having to forge papers to gain entrance to Ottoman Turkey.

In Erzurum, Sachtleben learned that Lenz had somehow insulted a notorious local Kurdish chief when passing through a small village there. The local Kurds then apparently ambushed and killed him, burying his body on the bank of a river in the forest.

The Kurdish bandit believed to have killed Lenz was charged and convicted by the Turkish authorities, but later fled. Some of the Armenian locals who had helped Sachtleben uncover Lenz' fate were also imprisoned, a couple of them dying in prison.

Eventually some eight years after his death, following pressure from the U.S., the Ottoman government agreed to pay a compensation of around $7,500 to Lenz' mother.

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