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| A c.1910 Thor-engined Minneapolis board track racer |
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| Company founder and chief engineer Joe (Jack) Michaelson c.1910, on a Thor-engined single-speed board track racer with a reduction gear on the crankshaft |
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| A.L. Kirk, secretary of the Minneapolis Motorcycle Co, photographed by the Indianapolis Star newspaper while tooling around the Indy track at the very first race, which a Minneapolis machine won on Aug 15, 1909. Kirks machine is clearly not a racer, but it seems the factory was present to provide support for its riders. |
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| R.S. Porter on another Thor-engined twin-cylinder racer in 1910 |
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| The original Indianapolis Motor Speedway poster from 1909 - note the dates on the poster are different than the actual races - rain stopped play, and they were postponed...the event was roundly considered a disaster with acciden ts and disgruntled riders, who threatened to go on strike due to the rough track surface. No wonder bikers were never invited back... |
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| Winner of the first (and last, for a Century) motorcycle race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, one of four held that day |
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| William Ottoways racing influence is clear with these Thor-engined Minneapolis single- and twin-cylinder racers |
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| The first Michaelson-designed motor, a sidevalve of 600cc, was among the first to use this configuration in the industry. Note the leading-link forks, which were also a Michaelson Bros design |
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| The Minneapolis patented two-speed countershaft gearbox, incorporated in unit with the single-cylinder machines, and as a bolted-on attachment to the Spacke v-twins |
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| A 1913 Minneapolis v-twin with Spacke engine and two-speed gearbox |
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| The Minneapolis was rare among all motorcycle manufacturers to feature the timing side of the engine on the left.   ;Spacke appears to have specially cast its crankcases to suit the reversed Minneapolis engine |
| The 1911 Minneapolis Big 5 single-cylinder |
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| It appears a Minneapolis sidevalve single was used in a round-the-world trip covering 65,000 miles in 1911, by Murry Humphries and his wife. |
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| Anton Michaelson branched out into tri-car manufacture in 1913/4 |
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| A 1911 sidevalve Michaelson single, with separate countershaft gearbox |














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