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Satyrs Motorcycle Club: 1957 Los Angeles, California, United States Shrewsbury Motocross Club: 1976 Shrewsbury area, West Midlands region of England Triumph Owners Motor Cycle Club: 1949 Worldwide Vintage Motor Cycle Club: 1946 Staffordshire, England Women in the Wind MC: 1979 Toledo, Ohio, United States Women's International Motorcycle ...
Brother Speed Motorcycle Club; Buffalo Soldiers MC; C. Chicago Motorsports Council; Chosen Few Motorcycle Club; Christian Motorcyclists Association;
Larger outlaw motorcycle clubs have been known to form support clubs, also known as "satellite clubs", which operate each with their own distinctive club name but are subservient to the motorcycle club that has established them. They offer support to the principal club in a number of different ways.
Southern California Norton Owner's Club on California State Route 41, near Creston. A motorcycle club is a group of individuals whose primary interest and activities involve motorcycles. A motorcycle group can range as clubbed groups of different bikes or bikers who own same model of vehicle like the Harley Owners Group.
Horseneck or Horse's Neck may refer to: Horseneck, Pleasants County, West Virginia; Horseneck, a former name for the Greenwich Avenue Historic District of Greenwich, Connecticut; Horseneck Beach State Reservation, a public recreation area in Westport, Massachusetts; Horseneck Tract, an area in Essex County, New Jersey; Horse's neck, an American ...
Women in the Wind (motorcycle club) Women's International Motorcycle Association This page was last edited on 25 October 2016, at 13:08 (UTC). Text ...
The Association of Recovering Motorcyclists (ARM) is an independent motorcycle association, founded in 1986 by Jack and Judy Jensen. [1] The association currently have over 100 chapters in the United States, Canada, Australia, Sweden, Denmark, Germany, Guam, England, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Thailand and Netherlands.
After the racist policy was abolished, AMA-sanctioned motorcycle clubs thrived in the era after World War II when motorcycle sales soared and club membership appealed to "better-adjusted" American veterans who enjoyed group participation and operated under strict bylaws that held club meetings and riding events. [3]