The Indian Motorcycle
5000 Published
$
5.00
Resale offers
0 copies from second hands
Description
Indian Motorcycle is one of those rare machines where history doesn’t sit still—it revs. Founded in 1901 in Springfield, Massachusetts by George Hendee and Oscar Hedstrom, it became America’s first major motorcycle company and, for a time, the largest in the world. Early Indians were fast, innovative, and a little wild-eyed in spirit, winning races like the 1911 Isle of Man TT and setting speed records that made headlines across the motorcycle world.
Their iconic models—the Scout and Chief—became rolling symbols of American engineering, known for their V-twin engines and flowing, art-deco styling. By the 1940s, Indian motorcycles were as much cultural objects as machines, tied to wartime service and post-war road freedom. But financial troubles caught up, and production collapsed in 1953, leaving the brand as a kind of mechanical ghost story for decades.
What followed was a long, uneven afterlife of revivals and reboots, until Polaris Industries resurrected Indian in 2011 with modern engineering wrapped in vintage-inspired design. Since then, models like the Scout, Chieftain, and Roadmaster have blended heritage aesthetics with contemporary performance, creating bikes that feel like they’ve been time-travelled forward.
Today, Indian Motorcycle stands as both tribute and reinvention: a century-old name still chasing the horizon, engine rumbling like a memory that refuses to fade.