De Vivie was born at
Pernes-les-Fontaines, France. His youth was unremarkable except for a love for the classics. The club held its first meeting at 1 rue des Arts, St-Étienne, on 23 October 1881. The address was the home of a member, A. Jourjon, and became the club's address when it was registered as a new organisation at the
préfecture on 11 March 1882. Evidence that de Vivie was a reasonably prosperous man is shown in a club rule that allowed membership only to amateurs, a definition which excluded ordinary working men. Further evidence is the writer Jean-Pierre Baud's calculation that a bicycle cost 200 francs or 56 times the daily wage of an everyday worker. Club membership cost 17 francs the first year and 12 francs in subsequent year. Membership was open not only to those who pedalled but others who preferred machines "furnished by steam, electricity and any other propulsion." A friend challenged de Vivie to ride his new bicycle 100 km in six hours and he set out to the mountain resort of
Chaise-Dieu. The peace, adventure and countryside changed his life - and persuaded him he needed a better bike. A year later he bought a Bayliss tricycle, followed by a tandem tricycle and others. His work in the silk industry required trips to England and it was there, in
Coventry, then the centre of the world cycle industry, that he was inspired by British bicycles and joined the
Cyclists' Touring Club. In 1887, he sold his business, opened the Agence Générale Vélocipédique in
St-Étienne to import bikes from Coventry, and began a magazine,
Le Cycliste Forézien, renamed
Le Cycliste the following year. ==Campaign for multiple gears==