Who Gets This? Good as New 1931 Harley Davidson Only $100!

1933 HARLEY DAVIDSON ad

Montgomery County Sentinel, Feb 2, 1933

Lewis Reed, an avid motorcycle enthusiast, also acquired and sold Harley-Davidson Motorcycles at his dealership. Between 1915 and 1950, Reed Brothers Dodge sold more than just cars. In addition to automobiles, the dealership also sold a wide variety of vehicles such as farm tractors, delivery trucks, firetrucks, school buses, and apparently, motorcycles.

Rockville’s Park Avenue Motorcycle Club, 1912

At the turn of the century, before cars were even around, Lewis and Edgar Reed, along with brother-in-law Bernard Hanshew, began their riding adventures with a group of friends from the Park Avenue community in Rockville in the early 1900s.

Rockville’s Park Avenue Motorcycle Club, 1912

First motorcycle club in Rockville, Maryland. One Harley Davidson, one Indian, and Three Excelsior motorcycles on Park Avenue, 1912. Lewis Reed, far left.

Early motorcyclists were often pictured in riding groups. From its beginnings, motorcycling developed very much as a social activity. Gentlemen of the day often used it to spice up their sunny weekends and impress ladies.

Park Avenue Motorcycle Club, 1912

On Park Avenue, ca. 1912. L-R: “Happy” Hicks, Lewis and Edgar Reed, Frank Higgins, and Alvin Luctor.

1912 Park Ave Motorcycle Club

Montgomery County Sentinel. September 29, 1955, Centennial Edition

1915 Harley Davidson

Lewis Reed on his Harley Davidson circa 1915 somewhere outside Frederick, Maryland.

Adventurers, enthusiasts, friends, and family…these are the pioneers of Montgomery County who made riding a social pastime, which has carried on in motorcycle travel today.

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About Reed Brothers

I am a co-owner of the former Reed Brothers Dodge in Rockville, Maryland. Lewis Reed, the founder of Reed Brothers Dodge was my grandfather. We were a family-owned and operated car dealership in Rockville for almost a century. I served in the United States Air Force for 30 years before retiring in the top enlisted grade of Chief Master Sergeant in July 2006. In 2016, I received the Arthur M. Wagman Award for Historic Preservation Communication from Peerless Rockville for documenting the history of Reed Brothers Dodge in both blog and book format. This distinguished honor recognizes outstanding achievement by writers, educators, and historians whose work has heightened public awareness of Rockville’s architectural and cultural heritage, growth and development.

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