I’m the author of a new book: At the Creation: Myth, Reality, and the Origin of the Harley-Davidson Motorcycle, 1901-1909.
This work contains a radical new interpretation of the beginnings of the Harley-Davidson motorcycle. It reveals in step-by-step fashion how the true story got messed up by the antics of early Harley advertising guys. A mess that began in 1908 and puzzled even old gents like William H. Davidson (1905-1992), Motor Company president for almost 30 years! You can read more about the book at:
http://www.atthecreation.com/
The book is being printed now and will be available in August. It’s a limited edition from the bucks-strapped Wisconsin Historical Society and I don’t know if there will be any more.
I’ve written other books about Harley-Davidson, but this one is different. It’s not only the exciting tale of Harley-Davidson’s formative years and upstart rival to Indian, but also a detective story that blows off the doors of what we grew up believing was true about Harley’s beginnings. Stuff that I formerly believed was gospel turned out to be “myth.” What’s amazing is that nobody pulled these threads together before to expose this bogus history. As a result this same false information is still circulating today and widely believed even as Harley-Davidson, Inc. gets ready to celebrate its “100 Year” anniversary in 2003. I guarantee this book will be an eye-opener for them too!
There is also a debt I’d like to acknowledge to several club members who had critical input to this work. Without them this book could not have been written. Combined with my own research, their knowledge and support helped create something that I believe to be unique in motorcycle literature.
One member provided a long lost Motor Company document that blew open the hidden truth about what Harley-Davidson really built in the years 1903 and 1904.
Another club member saw key features that verified in a 1912 photo (Negative 599) the first prototype Harley-Davidson motorcycle. He traveled to get important court records and also discovered a new photo that dates to 29 April 1905 and today is the earliest photograph of a Harley-Davidson motorcycle yet discovered (if you know of an older photo than this, please tell!)
A third member brought to my attention the almost certain connection between Ole Evinrude’s single-cylinder engine of 1903 and Bill Harley’s first 25-ci engine of 1904. He also provided key information concerning model year differences found on early Harley-Davidson motorcycles still in existence today -- critical stuff when you consider some of the extravagant claims being made.
Still other club members allowed me access to their early motorcycle publications and research files, or else dug through them and provided additional information by phone and by mail. They also put me in touch with other club members and sometimes even put me up for the night during my gypsy wanderings to find new information over the past 15 years -- all done by motorcycle. I sincerely thank them all.
I don’t know if it will happen, but it would be great to continue the story from 1910 to around 1918 as the American motorcycle industry heated up to fever pitch with so many wonderful makes battling for survival in the marketplace and on the race-track. Sadly, most of these brands were just brief flashes on the horizon and then they were gone. Yet they all helped lay the foundation that Indian, Harley-Davidson, and Excelsior carried on and that Harley-Davidson still carries on today with the traditional air-cooled 45-degree American V-twin engine. Thankfully there is also the Antique Motorcycle Club of America to help preserve that history and protect the integrity of that great tradition.
I added a link to the AMCA on my book's webpage.
Thanks,
Herbert Wagner
http://www.atthecreation.com/
This work contains a radical new interpretation of the beginnings of the Harley-Davidson motorcycle. It reveals in step-by-step fashion how the true story got messed up by the antics of early Harley advertising guys. A mess that began in 1908 and puzzled even old gents like William H. Davidson (1905-1992), Motor Company president for almost 30 years! You can read more about the book at:
http://www.atthecreation.com/
The book is being printed now and will be available in August. It’s a limited edition from the bucks-strapped Wisconsin Historical Society and I don’t know if there will be any more.
I’ve written other books about Harley-Davidson, but this one is different. It’s not only the exciting tale of Harley-Davidson’s formative years and upstart rival to Indian, but also a detective story that blows off the doors of what we grew up believing was true about Harley’s beginnings. Stuff that I formerly believed was gospel turned out to be “myth.” What’s amazing is that nobody pulled these threads together before to expose this bogus history. As a result this same false information is still circulating today and widely believed even as Harley-Davidson, Inc. gets ready to celebrate its “100 Year” anniversary in 2003. I guarantee this book will be an eye-opener for them too!
There is also a debt I’d like to acknowledge to several club members who had critical input to this work. Without them this book could not have been written. Combined with my own research, their knowledge and support helped create something that I believe to be unique in motorcycle literature.
One member provided a long lost Motor Company document that blew open the hidden truth about what Harley-Davidson really built in the years 1903 and 1904.
Another club member saw key features that verified in a 1912 photo (Negative 599) the first prototype Harley-Davidson motorcycle. He traveled to get important court records and also discovered a new photo that dates to 29 April 1905 and today is the earliest photograph of a Harley-Davidson motorcycle yet discovered (if you know of an older photo than this, please tell!)
A third member brought to my attention the almost certain connection between Ole Evinrude’s single-cylinder engine of 1903 and Bill Harley’s first 25-ci engine of 1904. He also provided key information concerning model year differences found on early Harley-Davidson motorcycles still in existence today -- critical stuff when you consider some of the extravagant claims being made.
Still other club members allowed me access to their early motorcycle publications and research files, or else dug through them and provided additional information by phone and by mail. They also put me in touch with other club members and sometimes even put me up for the night during my gypsy wanderings to find new information over the past 15 years -- all done by motorcycle. I sincerely thank them all.
I don’t know if it will happen, but it would be great to continue the story from 1910 to around 1918 as the American motorcycle industry heated up to fever pitch with so many wonderful makes battling for survival in the marketplace and on the race-track. Sadly, most of these brands were just brief flashes on the horizon and then they were gone. Yet they all helped lay the foundation that Indian, Harley-Davidson, and Excelsior carried on and that Harley-Davidson still carries on today with the traditional air-cooled 45-degree American V-twin engine. Thankfully there is also the Antique Motorcycle Club of America to help preserve that history and protect the integrity of that great tradition.
I added a link to the AMCA on my book's webpage.
Thanks,
Herbert Wagner
http://www.atthecreation.com/
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