Sport: Cycling
Born: September 17, 1925
Died: June 28, 2016
Town: Somerville, New Jersey
Mildred Kugler was born September 17, 1925 in Somerville, NJ to Fred and Edna Kugler. She was the second of their four children. Mildred’s father, known far and wide as “Pop”, owned the local bicycle shop and was a respected race promoter. He was grooming Mildred’s brother, Furman, who was three years older, to be a champion, but never thought of his daughter as a competitive rider.
That changed one day at Johnson Park in Piscataway. During an afternoon of races, Mildred conned a track official into lending her a bike and letting her enter a race. Each time she passed Pop he shook his finger at her. But by the end of the race he had changed his mind and began training her, too.
Mildred began riding competitively at the age of 13. She finished second in the 1939 state championships and fourth in the nationals in Columbus, Ohio. In 1940, her father inaugurated the Tour of Somerville, a 50-mile race run on a 1 ¼ -mile circuit. Furman Kugler won the race and repeated as champion in 1941.
In 1940, Mildred won the state title as well as the national championship, which was held in Detroit. Pop, meanwhile, won the men’s tandem championship. Mildred and her brother both qualified for the Olympic team, but the Summer Games, scheduled for Helsinki after being moved from Tokyo, were called off because of World War II.
In 1941, Mildred repeated as New Jersey champion, while finishing third in the nationals in Pasadena. In 1942, at an event in Montclair, Mildred set speed records at five distances—one, two, three, four and five miles. She also won the state title for the third year in a row.
The Kugler dynasty then appeared to come to an end. Mildred quit racing in 1943 and her brother was killed in action aboard the Wichita off Okinawa in 1945. However, after getting married and producing four children, Mildred returned to the sport in the early 1950s, winning the 1952 state championship and placing third in the nationals.
Mildred won the state title again in 1953 and continued to be one of the nation’s top competitors into her 30s, and was still riding in her late-80s after moving to Tennessee. She returned to Somerville periodically to attend the Tour of Somerville, her family’s legacy. The women’s race, which started in 1976, was named in her honor.
In 2002, Mildred was inducted into the U.S. Cycling Hall of Fame. She followed her late brother, who was inducted seven years earlier. Their father entered the Hall in 1987. Mildred passed away in Tennessee at the age of 90.