How America Killed Its Own Motorcycle Industry

America didn't just build motorcycles. It built some of the greatest machines the world has ever seen... and then let almost every one of them die. From the Indian factory in Springfield to a tiny Los Angeles shop where Albert Crocker hand-built a V-twin faster than anything Harley or Indian could sell, this is a tour through the graveyard of America's forgotten motorcycle brands. Henderson, Excelsior, Crocker, Ace, the Flying Merkel, and a dozen more names that were once painted proudly on fuel tanks and are now barely remembered. They didn't die because they were bad. Most of them were brilliant. They died because of the Model T, the Great Depression, two world wars, and a brutal two-company war that left no room for anyone else. And one of them, the Crocker, is now so rare it sells for $880,000 at auction. This is the story of the American motorcycles that should have survived. 📚 Sources & further reading (add your links): SFO Museum "Early American Motorcycles," Smithsonian National Museum of American History, Mecum Auctions (2025 Las Vegas results), AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame. If you made it to the end, drop a comment: which brand do YOU wish had survived? Subscribe for more stories about incredible things people built and then lost. #motorcyclehistory #vintagemotorcycles #americanhistory