Doering and his son Ted, who was in the scout troop with Larry, would later open a motorcycle museum in New York, the Motorcyclepedia. Ted had opened a chopper shop in 1969 out of a shed on the family's property, and the Doerings started selling wholesale parts in the early 70s focusing mainly on older Harley-Davidson models and had collected Indian motorcycles over the decades. See [1] and [2]Archived 2012-10-24 at the Wayback Machine
nytimes.com
Doering and his son Ted, who was in the scout troop with Larry, would later open a motorcycle museum in New York, the Motorcyclepedia. Ted had opened a chopper shop in 1969 out of a shed on the family's property, and the Doerings started selling wholesale parts in the early 70s focusing mainly on older Harley-Davidson models and had collected Indian motorcycles over the decades. See [1] and [2]Archived 2012-10-24 at the Wayback Machine
Doering and his son Ted, who was in the scout troop with Larry, would later open a motorcycle museum in New York, the Motorcyclepedia. Ted had opened a chopper shop in 1969 out of a shed on the family's property, and the Doerings started selling wholesale parts in the early 70s focusing mainly on older Harley-Davidson models and had collected Indian motorcycles over the decades. See [1] and [2]Archived 2012-10-24 at the Wayback Machine