Excelsior Motor Manufacturing & Supply Company

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1914 Excelsior
Another 1914 Excelsior

Excelsior Motor Manufacturing & Supply Company was a U.S. motorcycle manufacturer operating in Chicago from 1907 to 1931.[1] It was purchased by Ignaz Schwinn, proprietor of bicycle manufacturer Arnold, Schwinn & Co. in 1912.[2] The Henderson Motorcycle Company became a division of Excelsior when Schwinn purchased Henderson in 1917.[1] By 1928, Excelsior was in third place in the U.S. motorcycle market behind Indian and Harley-Davidson. The Great Depression convinced Schwinn to order Excelsior's operations to cease in September 1931.

[edit] Excelsior Super X

Excelsior released its Super X model in 1925. The Super X was America's first motorcycle with a 45 cu in (737 cc) V-twin engine.[1] It was conceived as a competitor to the smaller Indian Scout.[3] In response to the Super X's popularity, Indian first raised the Scout's capacity to 45 cubic inches (737 cc) and then introduced the new Indian 101 Scout,[4] while Harley-Davidson introduced their 45 cu in (737 cc) motorcycle, the Model D.

[edit] End of production

In 1929, the stock market crash and the resulting Great Depression caused motorcycle sales to plummet. The summer of 1931 saw Schwinn call his department heads together for a meeting at Excelsior. He bluntly told them, with no prior indication, “Gentlemen, today we stop”. Schwinn felt that the Depression could easily continue for eight years, and even worsen. Despite a full order book, he had chosen to pare back his business commitments to the core business of bicycle manufacture. All motorcycle operations at Excelsior ended by September 1931 .[5]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c Wilson, H. The Ultimate Motorcycle Book p. 41 Dorling-Kindersley Limited, 1993 ISBN 0-7513-0043-8
  2. ^ Wilson, H. The Encyclopedia of the Motorcycle p. 58 Dorling-Kindersley Limited, 1995 ISBN 0-7513-0206-6
  3. ^ Pioneers of American Motorcycle Racing by Daniel K. Statnekov, Chapter 22
  4. ^ Wilson, H. The Encyclopedia of the Motorcycle p. 104-105 Dorling-Kindersley Limited, 1995 ISBN 0-7513-0206-6
  5. ^ [1] Henderson History (retrieved 12 April 2010)
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