Harley And The Davidsons Page

While the miniseries dramatizes fictional brawls, the real Walter Davidson proved the bike's worth in grueling endurance runs. His 1908 victory in the Catskill Mountains Endurance Run proved that Harleys weren't just fast—they were unbreakable.

The era of Board Track Racing —where riders hit 100 mph on wooden tracks with no brakes—cemented the brand’s "tough" image, though the high fatality rates eventually pushed the company toward safer flat-track racing. 3. Engineering vs. Marketing Harley and the Davidsons

The brand didn't begin in a corporate boardroom but in a 10x15-foot wooden shed in the Davidson family’s backyard. In 1901, a 20-year-old William S. Harley drew up plans for a small 116cc engine designed to fit a standard bicycle frame. While the miniseries dramatizes fictional brawls, the real