From:Dave Hennessey e-mail:dave-A-toyhouse.org
Subject:RE: RE: Hummer Buddy Seat - Carson Little Date:Mon Sep 16 10:38:52 2013
Response to:18785
Sarah,

Thank you for pointing this out. I have asked the seller to attribute the quotation to me.

When I Googled "J. Carson Little", the only result I got was Carson's page in our Members section. I guess the seller poked around our website until he/she found my recollection (message #17511)

Carson was an interesting guy, and it's too bad there isn't more information about him out there. I can't remember exactly when he died, but I think it was around 1990. Today, everything and everybody that happens gets a million hits, but there's precious little for stuff from before 1994 - when the Internet was declared "commercially self-sustaining".

From you email address "thingsofthedead", and the tone of your message, I'm guessing you're a competitor?

Dave



----- ORIGINAL MESSAGE FOLLOWS -----

I am writing to you because someone has copied your words below to use in their eBay description for their own financial gain.

The auction number is 171127673836. Or you can access it through this link:

http://www.ebay.com/itm/1936-Handwritten-Diary-Harley-Davidson-Motorcycle-Man-Lynchburg-VA-Thomasville-N-/171127673836?pt=Antiquarian_Collectible&hash=item27d80113ec#ht_631wt_1399

Ebay has rules which prohibit this kind of theft. If permission for this was not granted by you, you can file a complaint with ebay.





----- ORIGINAL MESSAGE FOLLOWS -----
----- ORIGINAL MESSAGE FOLLOWS -----
See Carson Little's bike under 1959's in the members pages of this website.


J. Carson Little was the Harley dealer in Lynchburg, Virginia for many, many years. I went to visit him at his home sometime in the 1980's, and we spent an afternoon looking at his incredible collection of Harley literature he had saved throughout the years. His two car garage has a fully finished upstairs room that was a Harley Museum if ever I saw one.

We looked at his museum, then at his bikes, and then we looked at his barn. Inside were many bikes in various stage, but neatest were the two Harley XA's. [ I used to see XAs from time to time, but I haven't seen one in many years. ]

He gave me a flyer that he would be handing out on his next trip to the Rose Bowl. It starts out "Hello. The following is a brief description of why I am in your town..."

In 1938, Carson and a buddy rode Carson's brand new 1938 Harley from Thomasville, North Carolina to the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California, and home again. He sold the bike in 1948, but started looking for it in 1958. It had passed through 13 owners, but on the 20th anniversary of his 1938 trip, he found it again.

Carson and his son rode back to the Rose Bowl in 1963, the 25th anniversary of his original trip. Of course, he rode the same motorcycle as he had done in 1938.

He then decided to keep going back every five years "just to keep in practice". 1968 - 30th anniversary. 1973 - 35th. 1978 - 40th. 1983 - 45th, and once more in 1988 for the 50th Anniversary.

Same man - same motorcycle - same trip

J. Carson Little
"The Motorcycle Man"

[ Note: If you don't think that's totally amazing, just consider that the Rose Bowl is held on NEW YEAR'S DAY ]

Dave