Doris Kopsky Muller

Doris Kopsky Muller (1922–1997) was an American cyclist. She was the first woman to win a national title in cycling.[1]

Doris Kopsky Muller
Personal information
Born1922
Died1997
Team information
DisciplineProfessional cyclist
Major wins
Jersey State Sprint Champion (1937, 1938, 1939)

A 15-year-old resident of Belleville, New Jersey, she won the first national women's cycling championship, which was held in Buffalo, New York in 1937.[2][3] Her father, Joseph Kopsky, had participated in the 1912 Olympic Games in Stockholm and started in the street race and trained his daughter.[4]

Muller started in two races on the track . She won over a mile and finished second in five miles.[4] She was riding a bike her father had built with a big "D" on the stem. From 1937 to 1939 she was the champion of New Jersey. She married a cyclist, Paul Muller, and ended her athletic career.

In 1992, Doris Kopsky Muller was inducted into the United States Bicycling Hall of Fame.[5]

References

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