The first H-D dealer

Motorcycle enthusiast Charles H. Lang helped put Harley-Davidson® on the road to success as the company’s first official dealer
Harley-Davidson’s first official dealer was Charles H. Lang, a German immigrant and businessman from Chicago, Illinois, who worked out of a small factory at 35 East Adams Street in downtown Chicago, making his living manufacturing tools for piano tuners. Even then, Lang was a motorcycle rider. In 1904, he learned of the new Harley-Davidson Motor Company and visited
Because of his success, Lang moved from his original location on
In 1913, Lang was elected president of the Harley-Davidson Dealers’ Association of Illinois and
He was a tireless salesman, even writing an article for other dealers in the June 1914 issue of The Harley-Davidson Dealer magazine, filled with selling advice. During a two-day streetcar strike in
Lang was also recognised as an affecting dealer and enthusiast beyond the Harley-Davidson network. In 1916, The Peoples Gas Light and Coke Co. of Chicago purchased a surplus of H-D® motorcycles and side vans from Lang’s dealership, which brought the corporation’s total of actively used Harley-Davidson products to 86. Due to Lang’s professional relationship and sales work with the company, they adopted Harley-Davidson models as standard equipment in several of their departments that possessed transportation needs. In the face of a 1917 legislative attempt to increase motorist licence fees in
C. H. Lang sold Harley-Davidson motorcycles throughout the 1910s and well into the 1920s, and had grown close to the company in his earliest years as a dealer. Alongside the four founders and two other individuals, Lang was voted in as a member of the original Board of Directors in October 1907. At that time he was allotted five shares of stock, and in many board meetings that followed Lang would be instrumental in contributing to major decisions regarding company growth, motorcycle retail prices and other matters of business. Lang retired from sales in 1926 and passed away at the age of 78 in 1944. A
Photographs courtesy of the Harley-Davidson Motor Company Archives. Copyright H-D®.