This is me
Characters from across the decades are highlighted in the latest H-D Museum exhibition
Words: David Kreidler, Exhibits Curator, Harley-Davidson Museum
With around 500 motorcycles and thousands of other artefacts and photographs housed in the building I work in, you might imagine it would be easy as a curator to plan and execute an exhibit about motorcycles. Surely, youâd think, a person could just pick their favourites and â voila! â done.
However, itâs never that simple, and thatâs because youâre unique. Youâve got your own interests. Your own hobbies. Your bike is your bike. Maybe youâve added accessories to match your vision for what it should look and sound like. Maybe youâve left it stock, because youâre more focused on the ride. Maybe itâs a little of both.
Even your gear is unique to you. Do you wear a cut or a leather jacket? Does it just have a back patch? Do you get a new H.O.G.⢠patch every year? Maybe youâre like Jim Wagen…
When Jim joined the Harley Owners Group® in 1984, he sewed the 1984 H.O.G. patch just below his back patch. Then 1985 went under the 1984 patch, and so on. For years, he placed one below the other until he ran out of room in 1988.
Now, Jim could have simply found another spot on the vest â maybe off to the side, perhaps on the front. Jim didnât do that, he just kept going: the patches for 1989 through to 2000 formed a tail that hung down to his knees.
Or maybe youâre like Gail Anderson? Gail wasnât interested in what everyone else was wearing â or riding. She had a sense of style. She already had a custom 1986 Softail® motorcycle built and pinstriped with the name sheâd given it â âThe Harley Foxâ â and wanted her gear to match. Like most vests, hers is leather. Unlike most vests, her custom piece sports a collar made from a whole fox fur, paws, tail and all.

Maybe youâre like Arlen Strehlow: Arlen had a pretty typical H.O.G. vest, with patches on the front and back in all the usual places. His bike wasnât custom, but he made it his own in little ways. All in all, a pretty standard rider… if you ignore the helmet. Arlen wore a helmet with two Texas Longhorn horns attached to the sides. More people knew him as âThe Guy with the Hornsâ than by his actual name.
The Harley-Davidson Museum tells stories about motorcycles, but those stories are nothing without the people who ride them. Everything in the Harley-Davidson® collection has something to say about someone. One exhibit â in fact, the whole museum â canât put them all out at one time.
We do try, however, to celebrate the depth of passion riders have for Harley-Davidson and how they make the brand and the bikes their own. This is Me: Bikes, Gear, and the Stories They Tell opened at the Harley-Davidson Museum in May 2025. It tells the stories of riders whose personalities are reflected in everything from the motorcycles they chose to the gear they wear.
Plan a visit and experience the stories we tell â H.O.G. members get in for free! If you canât find an echo of yourself here somewhere, maybe weâll need to make a little room on our shelves.

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