Thursday, July 12, 2012

Springfield's Indian Motorcycles, The First Of Their Kind

 
"THE WIGWAM"
VISIT INDIAN MOTORCYCLE DAY,
Sunday, July 15, 2012  9am-4pm
Springfield Museum Grounds

 Hitting the road in 1901, Indian was not only the first American motorcycle, it was the world's best-selling bike. Indian introduced the first V-twin motorcycle to the world in 1907, the most technologically advanced at the time. Harley-Davidson 1910 models, by contrast, were all singles, producing only five horsepower or less.
  


Indian Co-Founder Oscar Hedstrom ca. 1902
The "Wigwam," as the company liked to call its factory, was in Springfield, Massachusetts, and the Indian "chiefs" were George Hendee, a bicycle racer/builder and Carl Oscar Hedstrom, an engineering genius who designed and hand-built the first running prototype, a 1.75 horsepower single with a then-revolutionary chain drive, in under six months. From 1901 to 1916, three years after a new Hedstrom-designed state-of-the-art, 400,000 square-foot "Wigwam" came online, annual production soared from three to a world-leading 41,000. 

With more than 20 American motorcycle manufacturers scrapping for business prior to the U.S. entry into World War I, Indian's market share was a staggering 40-plus percent.


In addition to building their street bikes to the highest standards attainable at the time, the motorcycle pioneers at Indian were strong believers in the theory that racing improves the breed and supported that belief with the most comprehensive factory competition program in the business. Special racing motorcycles engineered with such advanced features as overhead cams and four-valve-per-cylinder engines were built, and the company sponsored entrants in virtually every major motorcycle event in America and abroad. Impressive results included land speed records, a sweep of the top three positions at the Isle of Man TT, and an unparalleled record of victories in every form of racing from board track to hill climbs. 

 
 Though Indian would pick up the competition baton and race it into countless winner’s circles in the decades following World War I, it would do so without either of its founding fathers, Hendee and Hedstrom both having chosen to leave the company rather than continue ongoing trench warfare with dissident investors. Fortunately for the motorcycle riders of the world, what was arguably the best and brightest team of motorcycle designers and engineers ever assembled in one company remained camped in the Wigwam after Hendee and Hedstrom's departure. Indian's greatest years of technological innovation and performance were yet to come.
1928 Indian Scout 101

Of all the inspired "wrenches" who picked up Indian's engineering reins after Oscar Hedstrom's departure, the two most remarkable were Hedstrom's long-time assistant Charles Gustafson and Charles B. Franklin, an Irish immigrant who had ridden for the "Indian Rules" team that swept the Isle of Man TT in 1911. Under their leadership, Indian celebrated the Wars winding down by firing a broadside that resounded throughout the entire racing world, the introduction of the first dedicated board-track factory racer ever offered for sale directly to the public. Featuring a four-valve-per-cylinder, overhead-valve engine and a lightweight rigid frame without such "non essentials" as brakes, fenders or throttle (the bikes were run with the carbs wide open), the Model H carried a top speed of over 120mph and a sticker-shocking price of about $375, roughly a third more than a fully equipped Chief of the era. Because not many club racers were both wealthy and brave enough to buy and race one, relatively few were built, but those few --particularly when "loaned" to professional riders by the factory -- took home trophies and track records almost everywhere they competed.Equally revolutionary, but a lot more practical and affordable, post-war Chiefs and Scouts were based on Gustafson's side-valve, 42-degree, v-twin Powerplus engine. Arguably the most influential motorcycle engine design in history, the Powerplus forced other v-twin makers, including Harley-Davidson, to abandon their OHV designs and develop side-valve motors to compete with the Indians' power and reliability. 
1946 Indian Chief


The first significant Powerplus-era street bikes were the 1920 Scout, featuring a 37ci motor, and the 1922 61ci Chief. The low-riding, long-wheelbase Scout , with its innovative semi-monocoque construction, three-speed transmission and helical-gear drive, was an immediate hit with street riders and dirt track and endurance racers and became even more popular after the frame was lowered and the engine bumped to 45ci in 1928.During the same period, the Chief and the Big Chief, introduced in 1924 with a 74-cubic-inch Powerplus prime mover, began earning the reputation that would soon make the words "Indian Chief" synonymous with "world's best touring motorcycle."Another Indian milestone of the era was the introduction of the Indian Four in 1927. Featuring an in-line four-cylinder engine derived from a design Indian acquired in a buyout of the Ace Motorcycle Company, the new model was initially marketed as the Indian Ace and re-branded the Indian Four after being given an advanced suspension, high-stability frame and more durable motor in 1928.
1946 Indian Big Chief


While Indian's engineers, assembly line workers, sales reps, factory racers, and customers were soaring through the '20s celebrating race wins and milestones such as becoming the first manufacturer in the world to produce over a quarter-million motorcycles (1923), the front office was equally busy roaring through the company's cash, credit and corporate goodwill.Whereas Oscar Hedstrom's heirs in Indian's engineering and manufacturing departments were motorcycle devotees of ability, vision, and passion, those who succeeded George Hendee in the executive suite were mediocre mercenaries at best and white-collar pirates bent on looting and plundering at the worst.Under their misdirection, the highly profitable Indian motorcycle division was bled white to support money-losing "diversification" into non-motorcycle-related companies, many of which were suspected of being secretly controlled by cronies of the very Indian executives who made the decision to invest in them.
Indian Motorcycle Emblem


In late 1929, shortly before the Stock Market's "Black Tuesday," E. Paul DuPont persuaded his brother Francis to merge the family's luxury car business with Indian and cease production of cars. Though this decision seems bizarre, especially considering that many American motorcycle firms had already been bankrupted by the public infatuation with the automobile, the fact seems to be that E. Paul, scion of one of America's wealthiest families, was simply more interested in bikes than cars. As a kid he had converted his bicycle into a motorbike by mounting a hand built engine of his own design to the frame and he later owned and modified several Indians while still in engineering school.Then, too, he and Francis had been Indian shareholders since 1923 and had both seen enough to convince them that the only way to recoup anything on their original $300,000 investment was to take over the company and spend as many millions as it took to put it right.One of DuPont's first moves after becoming Indian's president was to the pull the plug on all non-motorcycle operations. One of his next and perhaps even more significant moves was to lure two extraordinary men, Briggs Weaver and Loren Hosley into the Springfield Wigwam.Chief Designer Weaver eventually parented what almost every motorcycle fanatic alive considers the classic Indian look, a sweeping, streamlined, timeless style which looks as vibrant and exhilarating today as it did 60 years ago. And Hosley, as production manager, converted Indian into a highly efficient manufacturing company with record-breaking income in less than a decade.Along the way, they with E. Paul DuPont working hands-on in every area from engineering to test riding, introduced dozens of new technological advances, virtually dominated AMA Class C racing and made Indian an integral part of the march toward World War II preparedness. The company was so successful that they continue to manufacture motorcycles today and will always be a part of Springfield's history.

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