The first #BlackHistoryMonth / #BlackChopperHistory post this month talked about Cliff Vaughs, the man responsible for the choppers in the film Easy Rider. Digging a little deeper into the making of this film and these bikes, it’s a messy and confusing story, in particular with how the two African-American bike builders were treated and left uncredited for their work for decades. Peter Fonda, who produced and starred in Easy Rider, hired Vaughs to coordinate the motorcycles for the film. Vaughs was talented, but he was still young and needed the expertise of his mentor—so he rode into South Central Los Angeles, to Ben Hardy’s motorcycle shop. For the famous Captain America chopper, Hardy used old Harley-Davidson frames, ca. ’48-’56. The steering head was cut off and repositioned at a 45 degree angle, requiring a 12” extension to the telescopic forks. A set of AEE fork clamps were used, with extended handlebar clamps (dog bones). Hardy also built the Billy chopper in Easy Rider, and the film ended up making $60 million over the years. The Captain America bike (or what is believed to be the bike) sold for $1.3 million back in 2014. Hardy never received the recognition he deserved until recently, mostly thanks to the research of The Vintagent/Paul D’Orleans. Until Hardy’s death in 1994, he continued to work on bikes in his shop, and was respected within the local black biker community. But as the builder of some of the most iconic bikes ever, it’s sad that he never received wider fame.