Motorcycle Cannonball

Motorcycle Cannonball

Description

Motorcycle Cannonball

Motorcycle Cannonball 2023 Day 1

Motorcycle Cannonball 2023 Day 1

Motorcycle Cannonball 2023 Day 1, the bikes

Cannonball - The Bikes Day 1

Motorcycle Cannonball 2023 Day 2

Motorcycle Cannonball Day 2


Motorcycle Cannonball 2023 Day 2, the bikes

Motorcycle Cannonball Day 2 Bikes

Motorcycle Cannonball 2023 Day 3

Motorcycle Cannonball Day 3 Sightseeing

Motorcycle Cannonball 2023 Day 3, the bikes

Motorcycle Cannonball Day 3 Bikes









Detailed Information
Detailed Description
March 12 1882 Erwin Baker (known as Cannon Ball) was born. He won his first motorcycle dirt-track race around the year 1904. Baker was also famous for his record-setting point-to-point drives, in which he was paid to promote the products of various motorcycle and automobile manufacturers. In all, he made 143 cross-country motorcycle speed runs totaling about 550,000 miles. After a record-setting transcontinental drive in 1914, he received his nickname "Cannon Ball" from a New York newspaper writer who compared him to the Cannonball Express train of the Illinois Central made famous by Casey Jones. His best-remembered drive was a 1933 New York City to Los Angeles trek in a Graham-Paige model 57 Blue Streak 8, setting a 53.5 hour record that stood for nearly 40 years. In the 1970s, Car and Driver magazine reporter Brock Yates and editor Steve Smith conceived the idea of an unsanctioned, informal race across the country, replicating the 53.5-hour transcontinental drive made by Baker in 1933. The New York to Los Angeles Cannonball Baker Sea-to-Shining-Sea Memorial Trophy Dash, later shortened to the "Cannonball Run", was staged in 1971, 1972, 1975, and 1979. The stunt served as the inspiration for several Hollywood movies, such as Cannonball!, The Gumball Rally, The Cannonball Run, Cannonball Run II, and Cannonball Run III.
Today in Aviation History