A century ago, Americans fell in love with speed. While the Wright Brothers flew overhead and Model T’s rolled off Henry Ford’s assembly line, the new sport of motorcycle racing began drawing large crowds bent on celebrating a piston-powered future.
The Hendee Manufacturing Company introduced the 1.75-horsepower,
single-cylinder Indian in 1901. Harley-Davidson followed in 1903.
Inevitably, racing ensued. Early contests were held on horse-racing
ovals and bicycle velodromes, but around 1909 wooden tracks built
specifically for cars and motorcycles began to appear in Los Angeles and
then elsewhere.It was in 1911 that a livery worker named Ashley Franklin Van Order moved from Illinois to Southern California so he could ride his motorcycle year-round. Van Order took a job selling Harley-Davidsons and began riding competitively, but his racing career was cut short soon afterward by an accident, followed by an ultimatum. “His wife, Lilly, told him that if he ever rode again, she was out of there,” says Van Order’s grandson, Jim Bolingmo Sr., a retired professor of science and math. Van Order turned to photography, and the images he amassed from the mid-1910s through the 1920s—his own and possibly others’—constitute the most complete and compelling visual record of early motorcycle racing.
Yet people flocked to the races at board tracks from Denver to
Milwaukee to Long Island. “Photography is great for documenting things
like this, and great photography is better than just snapshots. And Van
Order was much better than just a snapshot photographer,” says Charles
Falco, a professor of optical sciences and physics at the University of
Arizona and the co-curator of “The Art of the Motorcycle,” an exhibition
that broke attendance records at the Guggenheim Museum in New York City
in 1998. Falco says he included a Van Order image in the exhibition to
give audiences a sense of the thrill of board-track racing. The action
photos are remarkable, given that they were shot on relatively
slow-speed glass negatives, and the portraits endure as graceful studies
of youthful ardor. In his work, the sport’s stars—such as Albert
“Shrimp” Burns (who died in a 1921 crash in Toledo, Ohio), Eddie Brinck
(who was killed in a race in Springfield, Massachusetts, in 1927), Ray
Weishaar (a 1924 casualty in a race in Los Angeles) and Ralph Hepburn
(who survived the motordromes but died trying to qualify a car for the
1948 Indianapolis 500)—remain lords of the boards.
By the mid-‘20s, the sport began to lose its appeal. Perhaps the
novelty wore off; certainly the carnage was appalling. Newspapers began
referring to motordromes as “murderdromes,” and local governments closed
some tracks. Race officials and the motorcycle manufacturers that
sponsored racing teams tried to implement measures to slow down the
bikes, but that went nowhere. By the early 1930s, board-track motorcycle
racing had become a footnote in motorsport history, and Van Order’s
career as a photographer was over. He wrote a column about the old days
for Motorcyclist magazine and founded a club called the
Trailblazers, whose sole purpose, says Bolingmo, was to get the
surviving board-track racers together once a year for a dinner. Van
Order continued his column through the early 1950s, when declining
health forced him to stop.His glass-plate negatives remained in a box for most of those years. He made copies of many of the images on modern film shortly before he died in 1954, at age 68, and the material passed to his daughter. In 2000, Van Order’s great-grandson, Jim Bolingmo Jr., had many of the photographs digitally restored with the idea of selling fine-art prints, but that plan was put on hold when he died at age 49 of brain cancer in 2003. Today the original negatives and restored images reside with Jim Bolingmo Jr.’s widow, Sharon Con—the last links to a little-known photographer and a time when people were entranced with the idea of going faster than they had ever gone before.
Credit To: Smithsonian Magazine
Original Story: HERE
Read more: http://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/The-Early-Deadly-Days-of-Motorcycle-Racing.html#ixzz2LvRGtH1l

another interesting story please keep them coming
ReplyDeleteIt would be really neat if someone could publish these period pictures. Perhaps one of the major motorcycle magazines could be persuaded to fund it...
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