China Daily (Hong Kong)

Museum honoring daredevil Evel Knievel opens in Kansas

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KANSAS CITY, Missouri — A new Kansas museum is giving enthusiast­s of late motorcycle daredevil Evel Knievel a jump on appreciati­ng his death-defying, bone-breaking exploits.

The $5 million, 1,200 square meter homage to the hard-living man who became a global pop icon in the 1970s with rocket-powered and motorbike stunts has launched in Topeka.

As president of the two-story, nonprofit shrine attached to his Historic Harley-Davidson dealership, Mike Patterson said the Knievel memorabili­a on loan from collectors includes some of the daredevil’s motorcycle­s, leathers and helmets, and the man’s restored 1974 tractortra­iler unit dubbed “Big Red”.

The museum also features a virtual reality motorcycle jump, which shows Knievel’s actual X-rays and the stunts that resulted in those fractures, and an exhibit in which visitors select their own variables in planning a virtual jump, right down to the ramp angle, speed and whether they want to make it over cars, trucks or sharks.

To Patterson, the museum honoring Knievel the Montana native who died of natural causes in 2007 at the age of 69 celebrates “just how popular he was.”

“The museum really overwhelms you with how much press he got, how many jumps he did and the amount of work he put in,” Patterson said.

“If you do your diligence and read everything (in the museum), it’s a three- to fourhour journey,” Patterson added. “Honestly, it’d be virtually impossible to have another place like this because there’s a finite amount of Knievel items, and most of them are here.”

Immortaliz­ed in Washington’s Smithsonia­n Institutio­n as “America’s Legendary Daredevil”, the tall, thin man born Robert Craig Knievel always garbed in patriotic, star-studded red, white and blue was best known for an illfated 1974 attempt to jump the Snake River Canyon in Idaho on a rocket-powered “Skycycle,” and a spectacula­r crash at Caesar’s Palace in Las Vegas. He suffered dozens of broken bones before retiring in 1980.

After that, Knievel made a good living selling autographs and endorsing products. Thousands flocked to his copper-mining hometown of Butte, Montana, every year for “Evel Knievel Days”.

“They started out watching me bust my butt, and I became part of their lives,” Knievel once said. “People wanted to associate with a winner, not a loser. They wanted to associate with someone who kept trying to be a winner.”

Knievel, who began his career in 1965, steadily increased the length of the jumps until, on New Year’s Day 1968, he was nearly killed when he jumped 45 meters across the fountains in front of Caesar’s Palace. He cleared the fountains but the crash landing put him in a coma for a month.

 ?? ORLIN WAGNER / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A member of the museum staff demonstrat­es the Jump Planner at the Evel Knievel Museum in Topeka, Kansas.
ORLIN WAGNER / ASSOCIATED PRESS A member of the museum staff demonstrat­es the Jump Planner at the Evel Knievel Museum in Topeka, Kansas.

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