The Rare American Motorcycle Built To Bury Harleys
A rare American motorcycle has emerged from the effort to challenge Harley-Davidson’s dominance in the 1990s cruiser market. The article explains how Harley’s early-’90s boom created intense demand for Milwaukee-style V-twin cruisers, while competitors such as Honda, Yamaha, Kawasaki and Suzuki offered alternatives in silhouette but not with the same identity appeal. Instead of a generic copy, brothers from Belle Plaine, Minnesota, revived a once-important American motorcycle badge with the Heritage brand and built a modern factory in Minnesota. The company raised about $100 million, constructed a 160,000-square-foot facility, and targeted output that could reach 10,000 motorcycles per year, with the ability to grow further. The piece frames the project as a scale and timing gamble that required engines, frames, approvals, paint capacity, and substantial capital before production could begin.


