Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles
Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/1542352
ARGHIVES
TheWorld's
FastestVincent
f
you've
seen The World's Fostest lndion, starring
Anthony Hopkins,
you
already know what a
great
movie
it is. The inspiring story of New Zealander Buft
Munro, who
fulfllled
a
lifelon8
wish
of cominS to
America to run his beloved lndian on the Bonneville
Salt Flats, is one of the best motorcycle movies ever made.
(Read
Henny Ray Abrams' review
in issue 45, November
13,
2005)
lf
you
haraen't seen the movie, make a
point
of
going,
or better
yet,
buy the DVD
when it comes out.
One of the main characters in the movie is Marty
Dickerson, the American speed ace famous for setting
speed records aboard
Vincents
during the
1950s.
Dickerson
not
only
helped Munro when the Kiwi came
to the United States,
four
decades
later he
played
an
integral
part
in helping with the movie by supplyinS
Anthony Hopkins with audiotaped interviews of
Munro
that Dickerson recorded
in
the
1960s.
"l
saw Anthony Hopkins during the filminS at
Bonneville and asked him if he'd listened to the tapes,"
Dickerson said.
"He
said he had and thanked me, telling
me it helped him leam a lot about Burt.
lthink he really
captured Bun's essence
in the movie, so lwas happy
that I contributed in some way."
Dickerson said that
he was
oriSinally
supposed to have
a small walk-on
part
in the movie, but a windstorm
destroyed the set on the day he was to be filmed and
he
didn't want to wait around
three days while it was rebuilt.
When asked what he thought about actor
Walton
Goggins'
portrayal
of him, Dickerson laughed and said:
"He
did a really
good
iob,
and they even
made him look
like me. The only thing was, he was a lot taller and skin-
ner than
I
am, and the
actor who
played
Rollie Free was
about a foot taller than Rollie aod had hair, but other than
that, I thought they did a
great
job."
Dickerson's own story
is
the stufl of
Hollywood
movies as
well.
He was raised on a family ranch in
lnglewood, California
-
on land that is now Los Angeles
lnternational Airport. He
got
interested in motorcycles
while in high school and bought a basket-case
1929
Harley-Davidson
JD
from a school buddy for 65 bucks,
primarily
because
it had
Sood
tires - a hot commodity
during
the
he(ht
of World War ll.
After high school, Dickerson worked in an airplane
factory and worked on the experimental Nonhrop B-35
fllrE wing, ln the late 1940s, Dickerson
became
a
rtreet
racer
around
Los Angeles,
riding a Triumph Tiger 100. He had one of
the fastest Triumphs around,
proudly
recall-
ing reaching a blazing 98 mph on his modi-
fied
rig
on the Rosamond drl lakebed
north of L.A.
Rumors began
flying
around Sor.rthern
California in 1948 that a rare British bike called a Vincent
was supposedly the fastest
production
machine on two
wheels. Lured by the
promise
of moving up the street-
racing
pecking
order, Dickerson
found
a dealer
in
Burbank that had the big British
V-Twin
and, after
weeks
of wrangling, he was able to trade in his Tiger as a down
payment
for the Vincent HRD Rapide
The Vincent was
everything
Dickerson had hoped it
would be and then some.
"l
could hardly ride the thing home, it had so much
power,"
he recalled.
"They
had a light switch ofa clutch,
and this was before the days of lnterstates in L,A., so I
rode from Burbank
to
Hawthorne laying
big black
rub-
ber
patches
across intersections at every light until I final-
ly got
the hang of
it.''
Now armed with the highly
potent
Vincent, Dickerson
became a street-mcing IeSend around L.A., besting all
comeri on their
Triumphs, lndians
and
Harleys
by com-
fortable margins. The only
problem
with the
Vincent
was
that it was
extremely expensive,
and Dickerson
began to
have trouble keeping up with the steep monthly install-
ments. He thought he was
going
to have to
give
up the
bike, but the dealer,
who
also happened to be the
West
Coast distributor of Vincent, came up with the idea of
making Dickerson a sales rep and having him tour the
West
on the bike stuffed with brochures trying to
open up new
dealerships.
His rep
job
instead turned into
a
full-on touring
drag-racing show. Every town he went to, he
would end up with lo(al motorcycliss on a deso-
late road,
generally
at
night, with
a
crowd of
peo-
ple
watching
Dickerson
dust off other
riders
with
his exotic Vncent.
"One
time while I was in Texas, a bunch of
people gathered
at a restaurant
to check out
my
bike,'' Dickerson said.
''They
told me to wait
around, and a few of them went and
got
this
guy
who had the fastest Chevy hot rod in town. We
went out and raced, and the driver was so mad
when I beat him
that
he stayed on
the
gas
after
the
finish,
swerved
in front
of me and clipped my
front end, trying to
put
me on the
ground."
By the early 1950s, Dickerson opened his own
Vincent dealership in the south central Los Angeles com-
munity of Hawthorne. After helpin8 Rollie
Free durinS
some of his top-speed attempts, Dickerson caught the bug,
and his Mncent ceased being a streetbike and began is long
career as a speed-trial machine.
ln l95l
,
Dickerson set
an
AMA
Class C
record
of
129
mph on
the
Vincent
at
Bonneville. lt
was a
hotly
contest-
ed class, however, and the next
year
Sam Parriott bet-
tered Dickercon's mark on an Ariel Square Four.
That
got
the dander up on none other than Vincent
IYotorcycle's
owneq Philip
Vincent.
"Suddenly
I
began
getting
special
shipments from England with trick cams and exhaust
pipes
for the bike," Dickerson recalled.
With the factory racing
parts,
Dickerson headed back
to the
Salt
Flats in
'53,
confident that he would regain the
record- Elesides help from the factory, Dickerson had a
few little trick of his own.
"l
studied the
rr.rle
book,
and it
said
the bike had to
have a seat, but ir didn't say the stock
seat.
So
I
took the
standard seat off and
iust
put
a little
pad
on
the
rear
fender. I also turned the handlebars upside down, whkh
put
me in
a
streamlined riding
position."
The officials scratched their heads and
gave
him a
lit-
tle
grief
over his modifications, but they
grudgingly
agreed that he'd followed the rule book.
Dickercon made history that day in Bonneville, oblit-
eratinS the Class C record with a two-way average of
147 mph. He cracked the elusive l50.mph mark in one
direction
while
establishinS the new mark- Vncent was
thrilled. The company advertised Dickercon's monu-
mental achievement in magazine ads and on sales
brochures, and he became a celebriq/ in motorg/cling
circles. The 147-mph mark was so fast that it took 20
years
before
a
Yoshimura Kawasaki Z I broke the record,
going
155 mph in
1973.
"l
brought the old Vincent back
in
'75
to
try
and
beat
the Kawasaki record," Dickerson said.
"But
like
people,
machines
get
old, and the castings
get
brittle and things
like that. We had ignition
problems,
and I wasn't able to
get
the record back."
ln 1995,
when
Dickerson was 70
years
old,
he
brought out the trusty old
Vincent for
one
final
encore
and set a vintage
land-speed mark.
Dickerson will turn 80 this
year.
He lives on a hilltop
in Creston, California, and still loves to ride. Always a
sucker for sweet-running V-twins, the Hall of Famer calls
the Ducati Honster his ride of choice these days,
"l
got
a
group
of buddies, and we ride nearly wery
weekend," Dickerson says.
"The
weather's been so bad
this spring, though, that I haven't
gotten
out much. lt was
the coldest March here since 1923."
Since Ihe Woldt Fostest lndion was released in the
United Staes early this
year,
Dickerson s
phone
has been
ringing
a
lot
more often.
He re

