While taking a break from working through 1945 I came across a couple of poems from the Isle of Man and as, at the time of writing, it’s TT race week, the timing could not have been better. I enjoyed them and was pleased to see that motor cycling is still inspiring poets in the 21st century. PS: Forgot to say that you’ll find them at the bottom of the poetry page.
Author: motorcycletimeline
1944: M21s, 16Hs G3Ls (and WLAs) tour the Continent.
All the material to hand for 1944 is now published; extra military motor cycling pics for 1944 have ben added to the World War 2 Gallery. This timeline is not a military history but I feel obliged to mention that I am well aware of the grim reality that lies behind many of these wartime images.

1940: Short and sharp
No TT, no ISDT, no show, no roadtests…there’s not much to report from 1940 apart from the war. The page is complete, until more stories come to hand. There are a few civvy stories and pics with a batch of military motor cycles. There’s also a growing collection of WW2 motor cycling pics in the World War 2 Gallery picture gallery which you’ll find in the main menu. Meanwhile, I’m of to 1941.

1939: Equites ferrei ad bellum eunt
BLOWN BEEMERS FINISHED FIRST and second in the Senior; TT fans were treated to the sight of a Nazi salute from the podium. Velocette and AJS planned to put the Germans in their place with, respectively, supercharged in-line twins and V4s. Italy was developing a taste for ohc tranverse fours. Spring frames were springing up all over; twins were very much flavour of the year: even Panther was in on the act. the Cleckheaton boys also had a go at the Maudes Trophy, alongside BSA and, the eventual winner, Triumph. Germany hosted the ISDT and was nose to nose with the British Trophy team until our lads got word that the curtain was rising on World War two and made a run for the Swiss border (shepherded, let it be said, by the editor of The Motor Cycle). British motor cyclists flocked to the colours, as did the German lads who had been their respected rivals on the track. Motor cycles went to war and the world descended into chaos. The review of this transitional year awaits you.

Warclouds looming
Since my last post I’ve worked through 1938 and, at the time of writing, am half way through 1939. Stories from the Blue ‘Un include a surgeon practising operations in a gasmask, just to get used to it; touring holidays in Spain as the fascists had won the civil war; British squaddies entering trials in uniform on their WD bikes (and doing pretty well) and underground carparks being built to serve as air raid shelters. A major petition against the rising tax burden on motor cycles reminded the government that “in the last war the ranks of motor cyclists provided thousands of pilots for the RFC and RAF; thousands of men for the Motor Machine Gun Corps and later the Tank Corps. There was the call for men with technical knowledge then; there is a very similar call to-day, yet whereas on the Continent nations have done everything in their power to foster motor cycling, realising its value as training and in developing physical fitness, and have even eliminated taxes on motor cycles in their entirety, we in this country find ourselves faced with the prospect of a still greater burden. We are anxious to play our part. Tens of thousands of us are giving proof of this for we are already in the armed forces…” Meanwhile motor cycle sport was flourishing and the pages of The Motor Cycle were packed with ideas for touring holidays. Hay was being made while the sun shone.

Picture posting
The backlog of pics has been reduced a little; about 100 images have been added to both melanges and various pages from 1896 to 1932; there’s a nice batch of pics from the 1920 Junior TT; some moving snaps from the Great War and a few more early American bikes to check out. I plan to add some more before moving on to 1938.

1937: That’s a wrap (for now)
Britain held onto the ISDT Trophy, beating the German team by the narrowest of margins; the Dutch took the Vase, both awards decided in a high-speed blast round Donington. Freddy Frith and his Norton won the Senior TT by 15 seconds from Stanley Woods and his Velo after what was described as the most thrilling TT to date. Norton scored a hat trick in the Junior but the Lightweight went to Omobono Tenni on a Guzzi, and while Ginger Wood was runner-up on an Excelsior, DKWs finished 3rd and 5th. There weren’t many debutantes at the Earls Court Show, but they included the BSA Gold Star and Triumph Speed Twin. George Brough drew crowds with a 990cc transverse V-twin. It was a busy year. I just checked and found that 1937 now runs to 104,770 words and 283 pics including 39 contemporary adverts. I’ll take some time out to work on the huge backlog of excellent pics to be published in the Melange (thanks as always to mon ami Francois) before getting stuck into 1938.

1937: Work in progress
I just counted nigh on 44,000 words in 1937 with lots more to come. You’ll find a good number of roadtests, reports on the Berlin and Milan shows, a monkey riding a motorbike, a steam-driven combo, a two-wheel-drive bike, a big Belgian flat-twin, a tale of a winter ride that made me appreciate my fireside, a four-stroke single running at 11,000rpm, a trio of Triumph Tigers on the Maudes Trophy trail and…you get the picture. There’s also a heartfelt and thought provoking defence of motor cycling which concludes thus: “…Let those who criticise trials and want them banned ponder over things quietly. Let them remember that in motor cycling they have an asset to the country: a clean sport, one that is manly, and which breeds men of observation, skill, judgment, pluck, resource, and with mechanical knowledge—men of a type that has saved the country once and may have to do so again.”

More for the mix, and 1913
More images have been added to the two Melange pages, bringing the total to nearly 1,100. And, as always happened when handling images, they led me into new stories. In this case that meant machine-gun combos in manoeuvres on the Yorkshire coast, a tidy rear-wheel kickstart on the first Triumph vertical twin, an 8hp Yale V-twin on the rainswept streets of Manchester, and details of James V-twin 500, which was aimed at the solo market because so many big-thumper fans were hauling sidecars.

Piling on the pictures
More pictures and adverts have been added up to 1919; several more US motor cycle images (including a rather fine Henderson brochure) and more than 20 more pics from the first world war have been added to the first Melange—there are now more than 250 Great War pics on line including one snap of a DR wearing a plumed tricorn hat. Go figure. I plan to add more pictures over the next couple of days and will then get back to the main timeline; next stop 1937.

