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VESPA SCOOTERS IN THE UNITED
STATES
It may seem surprising today,
but Piaggio got its star in the
United States through
Sears-Roebuck department stores
and catalogs, arriving in 1951.
Because Sears was selling the
scooters as their own product,
the bikes were named “Allstate”
instead of “Vespa”. They were
stripped-down, bare-bones 125-cc
models, similar to Italian
U-models, which were green in
color like the All states.
(Rumor was that Piaggio had
commandeered a tremendous stash
of war-surplus green paint, to
gain the range of green shades
used on each scooters). Sears
sold the Vespa-Allstates in the
catalog alongside cheaper
Cushman-All states scooters.
Though U.S. made Cushmans were
popular throuh the late 1940s
and early 1950s, they were
simple, slow and ungainly, both
in appearance and performance,
compared with the elegance and
sophistication of the Vespa
scooters.
Sears marketers could certainly
tell the difference. The
Cushmans were show in small
photos, and were labeled “a fine
American motor scooter,” while
the Vespa-Allstates had larger
photos and were called: “Our
finest motor scooter, the great
All states Cruisaire.” One ad
read alluringly, “ Go
‘Continental’ with this fine
Italian-styled powerhouse.” The
price tag: $325.95. When you
order your Vespa-Allstate
through a Sears catalog, it
arrived at your door in a big
wooden box, and was partially
disassembled. Sears stores
provided service and parts for
the scooters at its region
stores.
In those days, scooters were big
in the United States, with
Cushmans, Simplex, Salisbury,
Autoped, and others enjoying
raging popularity. The
Vespa-Allstates were highly
successful, with thousands sold
by Sears through 1969. With
their three-speed,
clutch-operated gearboxes and
superior handling and
driveability, not to mention
European styling, the
Vespa-Allstates quickly became
the runway favorites, the
“finest” scooter on the road.
All this encouraged Piaggio to
enter the U.S. market on the
Vespa brand’s own merit. Around
1995, Vespa dealerships began
cropping up in urban areas.
Soon, thousands of scooters
labeled “Vespa” were joining the
Allstates.
SCOOTERS AND MORE
Piaggio, meanwhile, had begun
manufacturing other products for
industrial use, based on the
technology developed for the
scooters. They used the Vespa
motors for industrial engines,
snowplows, and small
three-wheeled vehicles that were
used for a wide variety of
purposes and called the Ape
(pronounced ah-pey, which is
Italian foe bee). Ape employed a
scooter front end and, from the
rear seat back, a platform that
could be fitted with a variety
of utility bodies, such as small
dump trucks, delivery vans, and
pickups. These were ubiquitous
on urban streets, and became
familiar to most American in the
background of many Italian movie
scenes.
They also made a Vespa car, but
it was a completely different
vehicle from the scooter or Ape,
not utilizing a single one of
the scooter parts. Manufactured
in France from 1958 through 1961
by a Piaggio division called
ACMA, these little cars competed
with Fiats, giving the Italian
giant a run for its money,
especially among women drivers
because of its style and magical
Piaggio nameplate. But only
about 34,000 Vespa cars were
manufactured.
Feeling threatened by the
upstart automaker, Fiat warned
Piaggio that it could build its
own line of scooters and put
Piaggio out of business. This is
why the Vespa 400 was built in
France and never imported to
Italy, though it was sold in
such nation as Germany, France,
Belgium, and United States. In
1959, with the marriage of a
ruling-family Fiat male to a
ruling-family Piaggio female,
the relationship between the
industrial giants was cemented.
After a few years of close
partnership with Fiat, Piaggio
quit building the little cars
altogether.
In the United States, Vespa car
sales were slow, even though
they were advertised in such
popular publications as Playboy,
joining splashy ads for other
such European offerings as MG
and Alfa Romeo. Other than
sports cars, small cars were not
yet popular in the United
States, where huge Buicks and
Chryslers were crowding the
highways and competing in
horsepower wars. Little cars
were something for clowns to
jump out of at the circus. Soon
Volkswagen would change
American’s view of small cars,
but that would be too late for
the Vespa car.
Piaggio’s real business was
scooters, and the colossal
growth of the two-wheeled Vespa
models mirrored Italy’s return
to economic health, though with
a post-war twist. And it
heralded the birth of modern-day
marketing, From day one, Piaggio
pumped the advertising, and the
advertising pumped the Vespa
brand. The advertising was often
as exciting as the people who
were creating the scooters, the
marketing as brilliant as the
Vespa design, and soon Vespa
motor scooters had a bright and
youthful image around the globe.
In 1956, Piaggio marked an
important milestone, the sale of
its one-millionth scooter
worldwide, a victory over the
early naysayers and cause for
celebration throughout Italy. To
honor the rousing success, the
Italian government declared
Vespa Day in April of that year,
and the impromptu holiday was
celebrated with festivals in 15
different cities. A horde of
2,000 Vespa scooters roared
through Rome, snarling traffic.
By then, Vespa scooters were
being built under license in a
number of countries, including
France, Germany, and England.
THE BRITISH SCOOTERS
Vespa manufacture in England is
a story in itself. The Douglas
company of Bristol built
motorcycles for many years in
England before discovering motor
scooters. Owner Claude McCormack
was inspired while on vacation
in 1948 by the sight of them
buzzing around the streets of
Italy, and he envisioned a
similar transportation
revolution for Great Britain. As
in Italy, Britons had to deal
with scarce, expensive gasoline
and a shortage of automobiles
after World War II. Like the
Italians, their cars were tiny,
so the transition to a small,
two-wheeled “car” like the motor
scooter did not seem like such a
stretch.
McCormack forged an agreement
with Piaggio to build Vespa
models on British soil, and in
early 1951, began producing
scooters. The 125-cc Douglas
scooter was nearly identical to
the Piaggio scooter, right down
to the same metallic-green paint
scheme. But it had an
immediately obvious difference:
instead of having the headlight
mounted on the fender, the
Douglas scooter had the
headlight mounted on the
legshield below the handlebars.
This design was in accordance
with British law governing
headlight heights, but it
created the obvious detriment of
the headlight no longer turning
with the direction of the front
wheel.
PLEASE VISIT SHOWROOM VESPA & SCOOTER
www.vespaitalia.info
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