Outdoor Focus Autumn 2018 | Page 9

Kate Spencer (1939-2018) Stalwart lady veteran of bicycle and leisure publishing Kate Spencer died at the Marie Curie hospice in Elswick, Newcastle upon Tyne on Saturday, July 7. The locality is recognised as base of the 19th century Elswick Bicycle Company absorbed in 1910 into the Barton on Humberside business, later a part of the Tandem Group. Kate had become ill with sepsis in February, then after hospital and home care treatment she was admitted as patient of the Mary Curie hospice charity two weeks ago. Seemingly recovering, alert, and happy there was a sudden relapse and she passed away peacefully in her sleep on Saturday evening. At the end of this month Kate Spencer would have reached her 79th birthday. Forty years ago Kate Spencer and her father James Robinson founded the KSA Partnership business in the north east of England to distribute and publish books and guides for outdoor living, leisure travel, bicycling and hiking. As a young mother, writing about cycling and camping she was to become lynchpin as secretary and officer of the communicators and journalists group she helped found, the UK organisation OWG now known as the Outdoor Writers’ & Photographers’ Guild. Kate Spencer travelled Europe extensively, often based in a touring caravan with her journalist husband Peter Lumley to attend trade Fairs and research topics and companies. She was a regular visitor to both Eurobike and OutDoor in Freidrichshafen, earlier it was the IFMA in Cologne, also attending EICMA in Milan and Munich for the ISPO. She will be recognised as the lead person behind the magazine tradeandindustry, now 38 years into its publication run after opening as the monthly Bicycle Trade Times. Her work for the first dozen or so years was publishing consumer magazines and annuals for cycling and outdoors, including the print magazines Cycling World, Bicycle Times and Footloose. Afflicted with breast cancer over 22 years ago Kate defied that earlier prognosis, she then battled with secondary BC four years ago and after her first spell at Marie Curie she always tells their care saved her life. In 2017 she celebrated her company’s 40th year with a 90-day caravan tour around the British mainland, demonstrating you can effectively operate a business from an office on the move! In February of this year, she was a guest at the 65th year celebrations of the Maldon & District Cycling Club, the Essex cl ub founded in 1953 by her husband where the British team member Alex Dowsett of Katusha Alpecin pro team joined as a thirteen year old. When you met her, Kate Spencer always carried a caring, sharing manner, and was always enthusiastic in the engagement. Kate Spencer, is survived by her daughter, three sons and husband. There are also grandchildren and a great grand daughter. Kate Spencer: Lynchpin of the Guild Roly Smith remembers the vital role Kate played in the OWPG Kate Spencer was the person who persuaded me to join the Outdoor Writers’ Guild, as it was known then. I was attending the annual Camping and Outdoor Leisure (COLA) Show at Harrogate in 1983 with photographer friend Mike Williams and our new book Wildest Britain, hoping to do a bit of what I believe is now known as ‘networking.’ “You should be a member of the Guild,” enthused secretary Kate with that ever-present, warm and friendly smile. “We’re all outdoor people and you’ll make lots of contacts.” Little did I realise then how right she was, and how that meeting would so substantially change my life. Just three years before, Kate had been a founder member of the Guild at that legendary meeting of six like-minded outdoor professionals in the bar of The George Hotel in Harrogate. And at the time I first met her, Kate Spencer was undoubtedly the one who held the Guild together. In so many ways in those days, she was the Outdoor Writers’ Guild. Fellow founder and life member Tom Waghorn told me: “Kate was someone very special. She was a lovely lady and a real pillar of the Guild. It simply would not have existed without her hard work and dedication.” Later, of course, and largely again because of Kate’s persuasive skills, I became chairman for 13 years and was later president for a similar length of time. Kate was always supportive and encouraging in the ways we strived to make the Guild into the respected professional body it is today. Kate’s courage and determination in fighting the breast cancer that struck her an astonishing 22 years ago was nothing short of amazing. Despite several terminal prognoses, she just never gave in. This was despite several set-backs with treatments and operations, and she never, ever complained about her dreadful illness. She just got on with life. Continued > autumn 2018 | Outdoor focus 9