Maybe there is a different Google in Battery Park than Queens but I googled Curtiss Motorcycles and got a 399,000 hits. Many being good ones.
Glenn Curtiss was a very famous early aviator and contemporary of the wright brothers. They competed against each other for thus very first military aircraft. He was also famed for being a fearless daredevil on his motorcycles!
I'd rather see it wrapped around a tree in a year than parked forever. Some things are meant to be used, and if I had it, I'd use it.
Not the greatest website, but a fantastic museum. It's an hour from my place and I've gone there many times. http://www.glennhcurtissmuseum.org/
If youare a fan of American Pickers on tv about a couple of guys who also happen to be motorcycle enthusiasts, who drive around the country looking for what they call "rusty gold" for their retail stores. Anyway one episode featured a Curtis V twin engine that they had found from the early 1900's. They bought it for around 3 grand and had it appraisedat around 9 grand! And this was a rusty engine that hadn't run in probably 50 years. This past summer I was at Wheels Through Time which has been featured on the show a couple of times. When there I struck up a conversation with Dale the owner, telling him I enjoyed seeing him on the show and asked if he bought that engine. He said, no, those guys got big money for it something like 15 grand, close to twice the appraised value. It is amazing what people will pay for rusty gold. Back to Dr. Frankenstien's ungodly creation. Rick G
Chopped almost 7 feet off the frame just so I could fit this thing in my barn. First thing will be to drop the rear end out and shorten the wheelbase by 67 inches which is one section of drive shaft. Don't want to have another shaft modified if I can help it.
My wife and I run into that. She's in Georgia and I'm in Kansas. We'll do identical searches on either Google or Yahoo and sometimes not match a single first page hit.