Charlie Cunningham


Charlie Cunningham is a mountain biker from Fairfax, California.
Along with frame builder Steve Potts and his helper Mark Slate, Cunningham co-founded Wilderness Trail Bikes. Cunningham and Potts were forced out of WTB in 2002 for undisclosed reasons, at the urging of WTB's CEO, Patrick Seidler. Cunningham and his wife Jacquie Phelan are charter inductees to Crested Butte's Mountain Bike Hall of Fame.

Early life

Cunningham came from an Air Force family, who lived in Alabama, Virginia, Japan and San Diego during his childhood, ultimately settling in Mill Valley on Mt Tamalpais, Marin County. His father, Bruce Cunningham, was a World War II and Korean War fighter pilot who won the Thompson Trophy in 1949, the only year military jets competed. His mother, Carol, was a book artist whose imprint Sunflower Press is found in several museum collections. In his twenties, Cunningham studied nutrition, water quality, and chemistry, as well as engineering. At 25 he recognized that automobile use in the USA is largely wasteful, polluting, and socially ruinous, and therefore turned to bicycles.

Inventions

In the early 1980s, Cunningham invented a number of features for use on modern mountain bikes:
Cunningham raced competitively in 1984, placing 10th overall at the NORBA championships in Nederland, Colorado. He became National Vet Champion aged 36.
Cunningham built a total of 187 aluminum bicycles between 1979–1992. They were guaranteed for life, and cost about six times as much as custom bikes. He is now a freelance inventor working on environmentally sustainable projects.