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Pictured is John Northcott’s auntie, Pat Southall, sitting
astride a 1930’s Harley Davidson. She was visiting her uncle
(Fred Holmwood) in Denmark whose bike it was. Note the valanced
(canvas) guards to keep the dust down. The family were part of
the original group settlers in Kentdale where Pat was a school
teacher. Fred worked in the Denmark Co-op for many years.
In 1967, a plumber doing renovations of an apartment building
outside Chicago tore down a brick wall and found what would
prove to be a baffling mystery to vintage motorcycle enthusiasts
- a one-of-a-kind motorcycle bearing 1917 plates and the name
"Traub". The building’s elderly owner admitted that his son had
stolen the bike before going off to WWI, never to return. But
where the bike came from and who made it remains a unknown to
this day
Currently residing in a Museum in North Carolina, the Traub is
considered by many to not only be the rarest motorcycle in their
collection, but in the world.
The Traub was sold to Torillo Tacchi, a bicycle shop owner in
Chicago after its discovery, who later sold it to Bud Ekins -
famous as Steve McQueen’s stuntman - while Ekins was on set of
the Blues Brothers movie in the late 1970s. The Traub was later
sold to collector and restorer, Richard Morris, who then sold it
to Wheels Through Time Museum curator, Dale Walksler, in 1990.
It has been on permanent display in the museum collection ever
since.
Don’t think this unique motorcycle is merely a museum piece
though. Walksler rides the Traub fairly regularly. When asked
about the engine components, he enthusiastically replied,
“Everything inside the engine is just magnificent. The pistons
are handmade, and have gap-less cast iron rings, the engineering
and machining being simply years ahead of their time.”
“When comparing other top motorcycle makes and models of the
era, the Traub has no equal. Comprised of a sand-cast,
hand-built, 80 cubic-inch “side valve” engine, the machine has
the ability to reach speeds in excess of 85 mph with ease,” says
Walksler.
Aside from its few off-the-shelf components, the Traub has many
unique handmade features. The three-speed transmission is
thought to be one of the first of its kind and the rear brake, a
dual-acting system that employs a single cam that is responsible
for pushing an internal set of shoes, while pulling an external
set, has never been seen on any other American motorcycle.
“For a machine to have such advanced features, unparalleled by
other motorcycles of the same era, is truly outstanding,” said
Walksler. “It’s my opinion that The Traub was an attempt at a
new breed of motorcycle. But how on earth could a machine have
been produced in such great form, with capabilities that far
exceed that of any comparable machine, without the knowledge of
the rest of the motorcycle industry during that time?”
The hunt for the Traub’s elusive origin hasn’t stopped. “While
we may never know why the machine was placed behind that wall,
we do hope to one day find out more about its history and the
genius that created it,” said Walksler