Briggs & Stratton Motor Wheel Advertisement, 1920

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Artifact Overview

Around 1920, if a cyclist was tired of pedaling or his bicycle had been relegated to storage, the Briggs & Stratton Company of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, provided another option. The Motor Wheel, a four-stroke, single-cylinder gasoline engine, could attach to a bicycle and propel it down the road. The company produced the Motor Wheel from 1919 to 1924.

Artifact Details

Artifact

Advertisement

Date Made

25 March 1920

Subject Date

25 March 1920

Creator Notes

Made for Briggs & Stratton Company, Motor Wheel Division, of Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

Location

By Request in the Benson Ford Research Center

Object ID

87.14.18.1

Credit

From the Collections of The Henry Ford.

Material

Cardboard
Paper (Fiber product)

Color

Black-and-white (Colors)

Dimensions

Height: 16.375 in
Width: 11.25 in

Inscriptions

Printed across top: March 25, 1920 THE COMPANION FOR ALL THE FAMILY (Page) 183 Paragraphs with descriptions under image reads in part: Low cost, low upkeep and broad utility made the bicycle universally / popular. ... Lack of inclination to pedal ultimate- / ly relegated it to cellars and attics... / Then came the motorcycle... / The Briggs & Stratton Motor / Wheel is a remarkably en- / during piece of mechanism. Printed at bottom: BRIGGS & STRATTON MOTOR WHEEL / BRIGGS & STRATTON COMPANY-- MOTOR WHEEL DIVISION / GENERAL OFFICES AND WORKS-- MILWAUKEE WISCONSIN
Briggs & Stratton Motor Wheel Advertisement, 1920