On June 19, 1921 an unknown 18 year old farm kid from Minnesota departed Madison Wisconsin for the first leg of a 3000 mile, 7 week long motorcycle trip. He was riding a 1920 Excelsior “Series 20 R” motorcycle. He had just completed his first year of college at the University of Wisconsin studying mechanical engineering. That young man was Charles A. Lindbergh, destined to become famous for completing the first nonstop, solo transatlantic flight in 1927.
Lindbergh #36 resized.jpg
In September of 2022, 4 members of the Antique Motorcycle Club of America will be retracing Lindbergh’s historic 1921 motorcycle trip over the course of 21 days. All four riders will be riding 1920-24 Excelsior Series 20 S motorcycles, virtually the same model motorcycle that Lindbergh was riding, the only major difference being that Lindbergh did not have an electric model, so he had no lights or electric horn. These motorcycles have been painstakingly restored to be as period correct as possible. Some modifications have been made for reliability and safety reasons, but our goal is to still maintain as much of the original the look, feel and performance of the original motorcycles.
If you are interested so far, , follow this thread for more details. From time to time will be posting information on the riders, their machines and how the ride came about. In addition we hope to post daily updates of our ride and details of Lindbergh's original trip as they correspond along the way.
I may have to break things up into short snippets, seems the Forum limits me to 10,000 characters per post.....
Lindbergh #36 resized.jpg
In September of 2022, 4 members of the Antique Motorcycle Club of America will be retracing Lindbergh’s historic 1921 motorcycle trip over the course of 21 days. All four riders will be riding 1920-24 Excelsior Series 20 S motorcycles, virtually the same model motorcycle that Lindbergh was riding, the only major difference being that Lindbergh did not have an electric model, so he had no lights or electric horn. These motorcycles have been painstakingly restored to be as period correct as possible. Some modifications have been made for reliability and safety reasons, but our goal is to still maintain as much of the original the look, feel and performance of the original motorcycles.
If you are interested so far, , follow this thread for more details. From time to time will be posting information on the riders, their machines and how the ride came about. In addition we hope to post daily updates of our ride and details of Lindbergh's original trip as they correspond along the way.
I may have to break things up into short snippets, seems the Forum limits me to 10,000 characters per post.....
Comment