Part III: Hedstrom’s Catalysts
It was to Daytona's hallowed granules of sand that Indian’s Oscar Hedstrom again migrated in 1908 with that age old twinkle in his eye and an assortment of high-strung racing prototypes. This legendary image was taken on that trip, and though most would see four men on four “old-timey” motorcycles, the moment captured in this photo is more exceptional once one knows more detail. Though the idea of board track racing immediately comes to mind when anyone sees machines like these, low-slung, bar-bones, skinny-wheeled monster cycles, the machines you see here actually predate the golden era of the motordrome, in fact one could argue that these are the very machines that gave birth to the craze.
Four unique motorcycles, all the brainchildren of Hedstrom, represent a rapid mechanical evolution and experimental design that the mad scientist of Springfield began in 1903. The first of their kind, each machine utilizes a long wheelbase loop-frame, a design which first appeared on a single-rider, belt-driven bicycle pacing machine in early 1907. The roots of these motorcycles however are apparent in what is quite possibly Hedstrom’s first racing purebred, a retooled-DeDion powered racer that he ran at the first Carnival of Speed in 1903. This loop-frame DNA made its crude debut in that early racer which was constructed using components from the last of the three Henshaw-Hedstrom Typhoon tandem pacers. That same 1903 prototype was again reconfigured for the 1904 run at Ormond Beach, now featuring twin DeDion style engines, not twin cylinder but two complete engines mounted in the frame side by side and connected at the crankpin.
Within 6 months of that 1904 run at Ormond Hedstrom unveiled his own twin cylinder prototype power plant in Newport, RI. It was that twin cylinder design that spawned the creation of Indian's first civilian model twin and laid the groundwork for the racing engines fitted into these later racing models. The first appearance of these loop frames came in 1907 when Hedstrom acquired a more powerful French Puegeot-Simplex twin cylinder engine. He most likely purchased the motor through friend William Wray Jr. who began racing for the French company that same year. It was this stout engine from France, a 14 HP beast that Hedstrom constructed a very odd land speed motorcycle, most commonly known as the Hot Shot. Again, a new loop frame design was utilized, but with a completely unique electrical, fuel, and oil tank configuration which more resembled the style of the factory “monkey on a stick” racer. 1907 also marked the first year that Indian took control of their own engine casting and production, a task that the Aurora Machine and Tool Company had been contracted to perform since 1902.
The next iteration of the loop-frame twin debuted in yet another one-off creation of Hedstrom's, this time specifically built for pioneer racer Jake DeRosier. The machine was however not a racer but rather a pacer, or stayer as they are often referred to. It was in fact the earliest Indian to feature a belt-drive and appeared in New Jersey in July of 1908. The prototype single-rider pacing motorcycle featured a new long wheelbase loop frame, twin cylinder engine, long streamlined tank fit between the upper frame rails which took a distinct turn down to allow the seat to be in the lowest center of gravity. DeRosier piloted the pacing machine at various bicycle races at the newly constructed Clifton Stadium Velodrome in Paterson, NJ in 1908, until Hedstrom developed yet another pure bred racing machine for DeRosier to run on that same experimental track.
In August of 1908, Hedstrom introduced his next prototype, another loop frame twin racer, but this one was built for the track. Likely developed at the same time as the belt-drive pacer, this “Bent Tank” twin shared a similar frame and distinctive fuel tank which had a sharp downturned angle under the seat. It was on that “Bent Tank” racer that DeRosier returned to the slightly larger board track Velodrome at Clifton and smashed several standing records, hitting speeds nearly 70 mph. That machine represents a turning point for everyone involved. Hedstrom had arrived at a refined design that would become the standard, dominating machine of a new professional racing industry. Jake DeRosier soon penned a deal with Indian becoming the first of the professional motorcycle riders and went on to defining what it meant to be a racer. Jack Prince, the man responsible for constructing the wooden bicycle tracks around the country witnessed the potential of racing motorcycles on wooden saucers, he then quickly redesigned the short bicycle tracks specifically for motorcycle competition and gave birth to the motordrome craze. The “Bent Tank” racers were then passed around between a multitude of potential up-and coming speedsters like Robert Stubbs, Morty Graves, and Freddie Huyck, each proving their worth on the experimental machine and signing contracts to ride for the newly forming, and soon to be legendary Indian factory team.
As a result, 1909 was a catalyst year in the motorcycle racing industry. By March Jack Prince had designed, constructed, and opened the gates to his first board track Motordrome, the Los Angeles Coliseum, the first track specifically intended for motorcycle races. By mid-summer he would complete America’s first circular wooden motordrome in Springfield. The annual Carnival of Speed held just north of Daytona at Ormond Beach was still a popular event, though attendance was waining from previous years it was still impossible to get a room in the area without sharing it with someone else. The impending completion of the much-buzzed about Indianapolis Speedway was just around the corner, and the Carnival of Speed was seemingly teetering on the edge of obsolescence as a new American industry began to explode. Oscar Hedstrom had boiled down his mechanical recipe for speed to a streamlined factory racer, he also introduced some of the racing technology, like the loop frame design into Indian’s 1909 production lineup. A new factory racer was released and it mirrored many of the features found in its distinctive “Bent Tank” predecessor. A long wheelbase loop frame, 61ci twin cylinder 7HP engine, chain drive, dropped bars, and lengthened torpedo tank painted with block letters all had been passed on from the earlier prototypes. The sharp angled bend in the rear of the tank used in the prototypes was gone however, and the tank now resembled the same design that would be present through Indian’s most lucrative years.
In late March, 1909, Oscar Hedstrom arrived yet again to the World’s birthplace of speed, Ormond Beach with a handful of his most promising factory riders and a train car full of his proven prototype motorcycles. New York’s Walter Goerke, seen here farthest to the left onboard one of Hedstrom’s 1908 “Bent Tank” prototypes set new records for the flying mile, the kilometer, the 5 mile, and smashed the world hour record set at Brooklands. Goerke also lowered the standing record for a mile to 45 1/5 seconds, as set by Glenn Curtiss in Daytona just 2 years before. Birmingham’s Robert Stubbs, seen behind Goerke onboard the new streamlined 1909 Indian factory racer set a new record in the 1 mile time trails, but on the second day at nearly 80 mph Stubbs hit some lose sand which sent him violently tumbling over the bars and demolishing his machine, though he apparently came out of the ordeal unscathed. New York’s A.G. Chapple was a long time friend of Walter Goerke, and was most often his greatest competition. Chapple, seen smiling behind Stubbs also competed on one of Hedstrom 7HP “Bent Tank” twin prototypes, on which he won the 10 mile event in 8 minutes, 57 seconds, as well as hit an average speed of 69mph winning the 20 mile in 17 minutes, 25 1/5 seconds. The veteran of the Speed Carnival, the mad mechanic of Springfield Oscar Hedstrom who was present at the event’s inception stands just beyond the focus in the button-up sweater. He stands proudly with his 14 horsepower Peugeot-Simplex powered Hot Shot, the prototype he developed 3 years prior which paved the way for the purebred machine’s it accompanies. Onboard his beloved Hot Shot Hedstrom went toe to toe with his friend William H. Wray, who had returned to run his 14 HP Simplex, though neither man was able to best Wray’s previous 1 mile time of 44 2/5 seconds.
This photo captures a moment in time perfectly, a moment when the fearless pioneers of a new sport first mounted machines capable of testing their nerve to the absolute limit. Motorcycles had jumped past their humble, cumbersome ancestors and evolved into sleek, modern instruments capable of pure velocity. Within a few short months the sport would change, speed trails had taken the place of endurance and reliability competitions and would soon give way to the death defying mania of the motordrome. An industry had established itself in America, and a new sport was on the rise. Hedstrom and Indian would come to dominate this rapidly approaching golden era, a prophecy that the men and machines in this photograph seem to understand all to well.
Part II: The Carnival of Speed
In March of 1903, James F. Hathaway and his Stanley Steamer returned to the endless stretches of sand outside of the Ormond Hotel, the inspiration for his visions of speed the year before. William J. Morgan, the magazine man to whom Hathaway had proclaimed the Ormond’s potential organized the first event in 1903 with help from the managers of the Ormond Hotel, John Anderson and Joseph Price. The group was joined by two pioneer automobile racers, Alexander Winton with his “Bullet #1,” and H.T. Thomas, the Olds Motor Works factory man who was running their machine dubbed “The Pirate.” In addition, the motorists were also accompanied by a young Swedish immigrant, a former bicycle racer who’s knack for tinkering and infatuation with speed was rocketing him to the top of the newly forming motorcycle industry, Indian’s Oscar Hedstrom.
In late March of 1903 the wealthy aficionados dazzled a crowd of around 3,000 with their daring grit and the rawness of their machines. Winton, Thomas, and Hedstrom each successfully lowered the standing records of the day, despite the somewhat windy conditions. With no specific motorcycle events Hedstrom gave everyone a great show as he bested the automobile men with his lightweight 3HP motorcycle, lowering the one-mile record down to just a shade over 1 minute, 3 seconds. The inaugural event was a success, and in the days, weeks, and months that followed the promoters and local citizens united to form the Florida East Coast Automobile Association, and in doing so initiated plans for an annual Carnival of Speed.
1904 proved to be a big year for Daytona, Ormond Beach, and the returning Carnival of Speed. The event was now gaining international appeal and the area’s infrastructure was expanded to accommodate. The addition of a staging area and machine shop was a welcome project completed in 1904 and the Ormond Garage became the gathering point for gear heads the world over. A clubhouse was also built by the ECAA at the Silver Beach access, on the southern end bordering Daytona and from 1904 on it would serve as the starting line for the festivities.
As far as the autos were concerned, William K. Vanderbilt Jr. was the toast of the event, collecting all of the records and trophies available with his 90HP Mercedes, losing only the AAA one-mile event to Barney Oldfield after missing a shift. The great-grandson of the “Commodore" Cornelius Vanderbilt, young Willie K's achievements also included the first world land speed record set in America (though not officially recognized) running a flying mile in 39 seconds, a speed of 92.3 mph. The story goes, that an envious Henry Ford attended as a spectator and was so impressed by Vanderbilt’s performance that he immediately sent for his 999 car, though it did not arrive in time. The success and publicity surrounding Vanderbilt’s performance helped him to create America’s first major trophy race just a few months later, the Vanderbilt Cup.
1904 also saw the return of Indian’s Oscar Hedstrom, who had reconfigured the cutdown “Typhoon" pacing machine he had run the year before and fitted it with two of his retooled DeDion-Buton engines. An odd machine indeed, Hedstrom joined two separate engines together at the crankpin creating a cumbersome 5HP beast, an early experiment which effectively created the power of a twin cylinder machine. Glenn H. Curtiss also showed up to Ormond with a twin cylinder machine, though his was a more traditional design which had two cylinders sharing a a single bottom end. Known as “Hurcules”, Curtiss' 5HP belt-drive twin demolished the one mile world land speed record in a time of 59 1/5 seconds. Curtiss’ Hercules twin also set the 10-mile record with an average speed of 67.3 mph, a record that would remain for nearly half a decade. The runner up, Hedstrom hit the mile at 1 minute 4 seconds, roughly 56 mph. Local Daytona Indian broker W.W. Austin also had a go on the sand, rocketing his stock 1 3/4HP “camelback” Indian single to a mile in 1 minute 9 1/5 seconds. Unhappy with the performance of his machine Hedstrom discovered that the crankpin which joined his two engines had stripped on that first run, and though he did take a run on a stock machine he returned home to Springfield early. By the end of 1904, possibly motivated by his frustrations with his failed experimental twin’s performance at Ormond, Hedstrom unveiled his first true Indian twin prototype.
Over the next eight years the Carnival of Speed held on Ormond Beach drew thousands of people to witness the greatest names in automotive and motorcycle history push their machines and themselves to the limit. Manufacturers, engineers, racers, and daredevils alike thrived in their quest to be the fastest between the dunes and the breaks at Ormond Beach. Before Brooklands, before Bonneville, and before Indianapolis, America had given birth to the world’s first capital of speed on the eastern shores of sunny Florida.
Pictured is Glenn H. Curtiss and his 5HP, belt-drive twin known as Hercules.
Part 1: Ormond Beach
Along with the arrival of personal mechanized locomotion in the final years of the 19th century came a new American lust for speed. The earliest machines, both automobiles and motorcycles alike were cumbersome and demanding, but they were also capable of exhilarating new levels of speed. At as the turn of the century the developing machines were becoming more readily available, but suitable venues in which to stretch them out were not so common.
From coast to coast, American roads had changed little since the country’s founding and were no place for testing any boundaries. Dirt tracks were commonplace, but were built to accommodate animal races and as such were often too small. Around the globe bicycle racing was at the peek of its popularity, but the wooden oval Velodromes on which the cycle races took place were not large enough for even two motorcycles, much less an automobile. But in the right conditions and in the right regions nature provided a solution for man’s latest obsession with speed. Vast tracks of smooth, hard-packed sand stretched out for miles along America’s seaboard, in some places as far as the eye could see, and the velocity-hungry few found a new home.
In America, the birthplace of speed as it is now known today was first established in 1902, when a vacationing auto enthusiast named J.F. Hathaway first publicized the potential that the beach in front of his hotel had for running auto races. The hotel that Hathaway was staying at was named the Ormond Hotel, on the north end of Daytona Beach, Florioda, the location that would soon become host to the fastest men on Earth. It was at the height of the Gilded age, in 1886 that a rail line was completed to the Ormond Beach area, and just two years later in 1888 construction of the luxurious Ormond Hotel was completed. The railway provided easy transportation to the wide stretches of white sands of Ormond, and the Hotel immediately became a favorite among the era’s elite industrial barons, including American auto pioneers like Henry Ford, Harvey Firestone, and J.D. Rockefeller.
It is said that Hathaway ventured down to the shoreline while vacationing in 1902 to watch a bicycle race. Inspired, he then took his automobile down onto the sand and was delighted by the experience. Hathaway then shared his vision for automobile races with the hotel’s management, took a handful of photographs, and wrote the editor of The Automobile magazine. William J. Morgan, the editor of the Automobile magazine and an early racing promoter packed up and immediately headed to the famous resort on Florida’s east coast to see the “track” for himself. Plans were set and on March 26, 1903, as witnessed by the timing representatives of the American Automobile Association the first official races were made on the sands of Ormond. The years following saw the construction of the Ormond Garage as well as a conceptually expanded carnival of speed. Events too grew to include motorcycles, bicycles, and land speed cars. American auto and motorcycle legends flocked to America’s new capital of speed where new kings earned their crown each year, and America’s shoreline became our first cathedral of speed.
Pictured is a young Carl Oscar Hedstrom, former cycle racer, aspiring engineer, and co-founder of the Hendee Manufaturing Company, makers of the legendary Indian motocycle. At the time that this photo was taken at Ormomd Beach in 1903, Hedstrom and the Hendee Manufacturing Company had turned out less than 150 machines in their first 2 years of production. What we see Hedstrom riding is a unique machine and not one of the production models. It is possibly the very first of many one-off, purebred racing prototypes that Hedstrom would busy himself with over the next decade, tirelessly pursuing top speed. The mind behind Indian’s mechanics constructed this one of a kind motorcycle from components off of one of his three Typhoon tandem pacing machine’s. These tandem pacers, or stayer’s as they were known were the two-man operated lightweight motor bicycles Hedstrom built along with his cycling partner C.S. Henshaw a few years prior. The new lightweight prototype that Hedstrom derived from one of the tandems was powered with the same retooled 3 1/4hp DeDion Buton engine, but was setup for a single rider like Hedstrom’s civilian Indian and modified to allow him to tuck in tight and low for the highest speed. There, between the dunes of Ormond Beach and the Atlantic Ocean Hedstrom shot his little prototype, possibly the first Indian factory racing motorcycle to a top speed of 57mph, setting a new land speed record for the American mile in just 1 minute, 3 seconds.
This photo dates back to Daytona’s first decade, when the world’s pioneers of personal propulsion looked to the hard packed sands of Ormond Beach to test their latest creations in hopes of becoming the fastest men on Earth. Here, New York’s William H. Wray Jr. tucks in for a low-tide run at Ormond Beach on March 25, 1909. Wray was in good company at that year’s annual Carnival of Speed as he was joined by fellow New Yorker Eugene Gaestrel on a N.S.U., as well as his friend Oscar Hedstrom, Indian’s head engineer who first visited Ormond to test his machines back in 1903. Hedstrom hadn’t come alone, he loaded up four extremely special prototypes and was joined by three of the Springfield Company’s fastest factory riders, A.G. Chapple, Walter Goerke, and Robert Stubbs, some of the first men to sign professional racing contracts in America. Each of the men in Indian’s talented stable laid down blisteringly fast times on their prototype racing machines, smashing several standing world records in the process. Wray himself had been known to test experimental racing designs dreamt up by his buddy Oscar Hedstrom, but for the 1909 run Wray brought something quite unique.
As usual automobile, bicycle, and motorcycle classes were organized for the 1909 Carnival of Speed, however a new class had to be added to the motorcycle events for the first time. The “Freak Class,” as it came to be known was created for the two French-powered monsters that exceeded the F.A.M.’s engine displacement limit of 61 cubic inches. William Wray rocketed his 14 horsepower, belt driven Puegeot-Simplex racer to a record 80mph, covering a mile in 44 and 2/5 seconds, but being outside of official regulation his achievement was recorded as nothing more than a remarkable mention. Oscar Hedstrom, most likely through Wray’s connection with Peugeot-Simplex which dated back two years prior had also acquired one of the 14 horsepower French twins in 1907. Hedstrom constructed a special frame to house his Puegeot-Simplex motor and unlike the stock machine Wray was running, Hedstrom opted for a chain drive. Painted blue and with full Indian regalia, the finicky one-off racing machine known today as the Hot Shot was the second machine in the 1909 "Freak Class." Hedstrom himself drove the Hot Shot to a top speed of around 72mph, beating out Wray’s time for the kilometer by 2 seconds. Throughout the weekend Hedstrom and Wray bested one another on their big bore toys, but though both Wray’s factory Peugeot-Simplex and Hedstrom’s special construction Hot Shot boasted twice the horsepower of the stock 7hp Indians ridden by Goerke, Stubbs, and Chapple their times were surprisingly similar. Hedstrom’s fleet of nimble factory twins originally constructed the year before proved their worth yet again and many of their features became standard for civilian production over the next years.
Daytona’s 75th Anniversary is nearly here and along with the expansive variety of two-wheeled events beginning next week on Florida's sunny eastern seaboard comes a perfect opportunity to dig a little deeper into the heritage of America’s first capital of speed. I look forward to discovering and sharing more stories from Daytona’s rich motorcycle history over the next couple of weeks, and if you are among the thousands rolling into the area I will be setting up shop for the second year at the Destination Eustis vintage show at the Lake County Fairgrounds in Eustis, FL so come say hey.