1939 Tour de France - Stages

Stages

Stage results
Stage Date Route Length Winner
1 10 July Paris – Caen 215 km (134 mi) Amédée Fournier (FRA)
2A 11 July Caen – Vire 64 km (40 mi) Romain Maes (BEL)
2B Vire – Rennes 119 km (74 mi) Éloi Tassin (FRA)
3 12 July Rennes – Brest 244 km (152 mi) Pierre Cloarec (FRA)
4 13 July Brest – Lorient 174 km (108 mi) Raymond Louviot (FRA)
5 14 July Lorient – Nantes 207 km (129 mi) Amédée Fournier (FRA)
6A 15 July Nantes – La Rochelle 144 km (89 mi) Lucien Storme (BEL)
6B La Rochelle – Royan 107 km (66 mi) Edmond Pagès (FRA)
7 17 July Royan – Bordeaux 198 km (123 mi) Raymond Passat (FRA)
8A 18 July Bordeaux – Salies-de-Béarn 210 km (130 mi) Marcel Kint (BEL)
8B Salies-de-Béarn – Pau 69 km (43 mi) Karl Litschi (SUI)
9 19 July Pau – Toulouse 311 km (193 mi) Edward Vissers (BEL)
10A 21 July Toulouse – Narbonne 149 km (93 mi) Pierre Jaminet (FRA)
10B Narbonne – Béziers 27 km (17 mi) Maurice Archambaud (FRA)
10C Béziers – Montpellier 70 km (43 mi) Maurice Archambaud (FRA)
11 22 July Montpellier – Marseille 212 km (132 mi) Fabien Galateau (FRA)
12A 23 July Marseille – Saint-Raphaël 157 km (98 mi) François Neuens (LUX)
12B Saint-Raphaël – Monaco 122 km (76 mi) Maurice Archambaud (FRA)
13 24 July Monaco – Monaco 101 km (63 mi) Pierre Gallien (FRA)
14 25 July Monaco – Digne 175 km (109 mi) Pierre Cloarec (FRA)
15 26 July Digne – Briançon 219 km (136 mi) Sylvère Maes (BEL)
16A 27 July Briançon – Briançon 126 km (78 mi) Pierre Jaminet (FRA)
16B Bonneval – Bourg-Saint-Maurice 64 km (40 mi) Sylvère Maes (BEL)
16C Bourg-Saint-Maurice – Annecy 104 km (65 mi) Antoon van Schendel (NED)
17A 29 July Annecy – Dôle 226 km (140 mi) François Neuens (LUX)
17B Dôle – Dijon 59 km (37 mi) Maurice Archambaud (FRA)
18A 30 July Dijon – Troyes 151 km (94 mi) René Le Grevès (FRA)
18B Troyes – Paris 201 km (125 mi) Marcel Kint (BEL)
Notes

Read more about this topic:  1939 Tour De France

Famous quotes containing the word stages:

    The playing adult steps sideward into another reality; the playing child advances forward to new stages of mastery....Child’s play is the infantile form of the human ability to deal with experience by creating model situations and to master reality by experiment and planning.
    Erik H. Erikson (20th century)

    Phlebas the Phoenician, a fortnight dead,
    Forgot the cry of gulls, and the deep sea swell
    And the profit and loss.
    A current under sea
    Picked his bones in whispers. As he rose and fell
    He passed the stages of his age and youth
    Entering the whirlpool.
    —T.S. (Thomas Stearns)

    The four stages of man are infancy, childhood, adolescence and obsolescence.
    Art Linkletter (20th century)