This photo comes from the Velodrome Buffalo, a 333 meter track in Paris that hosted some of the most significant bicycle races in the world from 1893 until its destruction during WWI. This shot, dated to 1908, captures four early pacing motorcycles lined up on the Parisian track possibly for an exhibition race.
Monstrous pacing motorcycles, like these four solo-rider models were being used in the late 1800's and early 1900's to pace bicycle races. The pacers, also known as stayers created a slipstream or draft in which the cyclist could efficiently cover the majority of the race distance at a high speed. Team strategy would then coordinate when the pacer would pull into the pit allowing the racer to sprint the final laps. Before the introduction gasoline engine powered cycles, these already popular paced cycle races featured tandem bicycles with upwards of a half dozen riders leading the star cyclist. As the internal combustion engine was developed in Europe, it was introduced as a substitute for the multi-rider tandem bicycles. Predictably, the sight, sound, and smell of these motorized pacing machines quickly captivated the large crowds at cycle races which demanded more exhibitions of the thrilling contraptions, simultaneously giving birth to the motorcycle and the sport of motorcycle racing.
America wouldn't see its first motorized pacing machine until the last days of the 19th century, a few years after they became popularized throughout Europe. When pacing motorcycles did make their debut in the States, like with the Orient tandem pacer for example, they were a good bit lighter than these European behemoths seen in the photo. Machines like these represent an important and early milestone in the development of the modern motorcycle and illustrate how far the beloved machine has come in the century since their firey introduction.
Are you on Instagram? If so make sure to follow the @Archive_Moto page, we just hit 2,000 folks on the app that dig this old motorcycle culture and would love to share it with anyone interested.
To celebrate our 2K follower mark how about we nod to another 2K milestone.
In 1907 the Hendee Manufacturing Company pumped out just over 2000 Indian motorcycles for the first time, 2176 to be specific. 1907 was a big year for the Springfield factory as they began in-house production of their engines for the first time which had been previously subcontracted out to the Aurora Automatic Machinery Co., makers of Thor motorcycles. Among the 2000+ machines to bear the Indian name in 1907 were their first twin cylinder models, a handful of torpedo tank factory racing bikes like the single cylinder model pictured, and engineer Carl Oscar Hedstrom's first loop frame design powered by an imported French Peugeot-Simplex twin, a monster that became known as the HotShot. Dirt horse track racing and endurance competitions were becoming the most popular sporting events in the country, and with the board track motordrome era just over the horizon Hendee, Hedstrom, and the Indian team were poised to be the most popular American motorcycle manufacturer for years to come.
What happens when the electric motor on your coffee mill fails and you have several large orders to fill? Well if you are like Denver's Early Coffee Co. your Excelsior delivery motorcycle could make a fantastic replacement. In the winter of 1909 a boiler explosion at the Denver Gas & Electric Co. left the city without electricity, but the uncaffeinated hoards still demanded their morning cups filled. The single cylinder Excelsior Auto-Cycle, which ran continuously for 4 hour sessions was such a successful substitution that other local companies soon brought in their own delivery bikes to keep up with production.
The Indian Model O, a 265cc lightweight horizontally opposed twin. Manufactured towards the final years of WWI, the Model O was Indian's attempt at capturing a younger customer who may not have the cheddar for the big bikes of the day. Unfortunately the tiny displacement didn't thrill young riders, the war effort made production and sales very difficult, and the explosion of mass produced, reliable, and affordable automobiles marked the end of the Model O by 1919. I doubt he won any races with his tricked out Model O racer, but he was out there, and sometimes thats all that matters.



