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  • #16
    Herb,
    You have a copy of the photo of my Dad in a sidecar rig with a older woman in the sidecar,the woman is Buddy's mom,Her and Her husband in late teens early 20's rode with the "Pair-O-Dice" M/C from Milw.
    My Members card was issued to me by my Dad early 60's
    Ken S., # 6457
    1926- H-D BAF-Peashooter
    1954-H-D Panhead

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    • #17
      Club members

      Hello, my husband's grandpa and grandma were memebers of a local milwaukee club in the 1930s into the early 1940s. I'm trying to find grandpa's old bike. I guess his grandpa actually owned two bikes one that was about a 1936 and the other a 1942. It has been quite a search so far. I don't suppose you know if they were a member of the Pirates? Their names were Tony and Helen Rozman. I guess people called him "100 mile an hour Tony." The two of them enjoyed doing hill climbs up until a young couple they were friends with got killed.

      If you have any other ideas on clubs I could check out. I'm hoping there is a way to check on past memberships. I'd don't have the VIN number or model for either bike so it is making things hard.

      Thanks,
      Kate


      Originally posted by milw.pirates View Post
      Herb,
      I have seen the Beer City Riders Memorabilia,but was not able to add to my collection.not known if they were sponsered by Bill Knuth.
      The Milwaukee Pirates started some time between 1944-1948.
      Buddy and Rollie at one time held the Presidents position in the club.
      currently there are only 3 members that are known alive,Buddy,Lucky Eddie and Me.
      can you e-mail me the blurb on the Pirates and have you ever seen anything on a pre 30'S club called " Pair-O Dice" M/C out of Milw.?

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      • #18
        Kate:

        If you write to the Wisconsin Department of Motor Vehicles with name, DOB and other info... and a timeframe from which you are searching the records, someone may be able to do a manual search of the old records for Tony Rozman and get you a VIN number for the bike. There is probably a paper copy on file somewhere or it was transferred to microfilm or microfiche as was done in many states. We were able to do that in VT with a bike. The paper records are still in a dusty basement somewhere.

        Some states charge fees to do this kind of research, but it's usually fairly nominal. Other times you can get them to do it for nothing, especially if there is a historical or research angle to your quest (ie. make one up!!). With a VIN you can do a national search very easily.

        That would be your best bet unless some family member has an old registration or license plate floating around that would narrow the search. In fact, if you had a photograph showing a registration number and a date, that would make the search even easier.

        If the state destroyed old records or they got burned or flooded out... your will be out of luck. But most of the time, those records are somewhere... Probably in a basement in Madison.

        Cheers and just my 2 percent of a dollar....

        Sirhr

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        • #19
          Kate ,
          Do you have any idea where in Milw. they lived( north side,south side,west allis,south milw. etc.....)there were about 8 to 10 well known clubs.
          Ken S., # 6457
          1926- H-D BAF-Peashooter
          1954-H-D Panhead

          Comment


          • #20
            search

            Thanks so much for the idea! I'll give it a try. I was told once that those years were tracked by license plate number so this might get interesting .

            Originally posted by sirhrmechanic View Post
            Kate:

            If you write to the Wisconsin Department of Motor Vehicles with name, DOB and other info... and a timeframe from which you are searching the records, someone may be able to do a manual search of the old records for Tony Rozman and get you a VIN number for the bike. There is probably a paper copy on file somewhere or it was transferred to microfilm or microfiche as was done in many states. We were able to do that in VT with a bike. The paper records are still in a dusty basement somewhere.

            Some states charge fees to do this kind of research, but it's usually fairly nominal. Other times you can get them to do it for nothing, especially if there is a historical or research angle to your quest (ie. make one up!!). With a VIN you can do a national search very easily.

            That would be your best bet unless some family member has an old registration or license plate floating around that would narrow the search. In fact, if you had a photograph showing a registration number and a date, that would make the search even easier.

            If the state destroyed old records or they got burned or flooded out... your will be out of luck. But most of the time, those records are somewhere... Probably in a basement in Madison.

            Cheers and just my 2 percent of a dollar....

            Sirhr

            Comment


            • #21
              Ken,

              They lived in West Allis.

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