Citing recession, Milwaukee Iron founder will close shop

Citing recession, Milwaukee Iron founder will close shop

Jill Nance/The News & Advance

Milwaukee Iron owner Randy Simpson, who made the decision to close last week, welds a motorcycle fender at his shop Wednesday.

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Milwaukee Iron, a Lynchburg machine shop known nationally for its Harley-style custom motorcycles, is ending its 26-year ride on July 31.

Randy Simpson, founder and president of Milwaukee Iron, announced Wednesday that he is closing the shop, which drew attention a few years ago as the subject of a series on the Discovery Channel.

Simpson said he lost business due to the recession and to foreign competition, and it’s hard to keep up with taxes and other costs. He doesn’t foresee things improving anytime soon.

“I’m just tired of chunking money into the business when I don’t think the economy’s going to recover fast enough for me to get it back,” said Simpson, 51.

“I’m ready to step off and watch the merry-go-round, and ride my motorcycle while I still can.”

Simpson began repairing motorcycles in the 1970s, when he restored a 1950 Harley-Davidson Panhead he had bought for $1,000. In 1983, he started his business.

The name Milwaukee Iron was inspired by the nickname for Harley-Davidson motorcycles.

The shop’s work has varied from motorcycle repair and construction to machine work and metal fabrication. “We always tried to do things that other people weren’t doing,” Simpson said.

Milwaukee Iron has employed anywhere from 2 to 14 people at a time, Simpson said. Now, Simpson has two full-time and two part-time employees.

While operating in out-of-the-way shops in Lynchburg, Milwaukee Iron became known by motorcycle lovers around the nation. Most of the custom choppers it built have been featured in national motorcycle magazines, Simpson said.

The company got more attention in 2004 and 2005 when the Discovery Channel aired a 13-episode series about Simpson and his crew. The series was called “Southern Chopper,” but was renamed “Southern Steel.”

While that show was being produced, Simpson learned that E.C. Glass High School, his alma mater, might cut its machining technology program due to low enrollment. Jeff Schleicher, a good friend and a teacher in that program, asked Simpson to help.

Simpson and his crew brought their motorcycles to Glass for an event to build interest in the machine shop classes. “When … they rode up on their bikes, the kids just went crazy,” Schleicher said Wednesday.

Simpson donated parts and materials to the program and challenged the students to build mini-motorcycles. That challenge got more students interested and helped the program survive.

“He was one of the key players in it,” Schleicher said. “I hate to see him go.”

“If people think what you’ve got is worth something to them, I don’t mind giving a little bit of myself and a little bit of the shop’s time,” Simpson said. It was worth it to “be some inspiration to somebody.”

Several years ago the landscape of Milwaukee Iron’s market began to change. More machine shops began producing similar parts for motorcycles. A major customer began using fenders made in Taiwan, Simpson said.

“It’s not like we don’t have any business. I’m still doing over $300,000 a year in fenders, but it’s just not enough to sustain what’s going on,” he said.

“What’s going on” includes government bailouts of big banks and firms like General Motors, Simpson said. “I’m all for getting the economy going, but some of the deals that have been made in the past year are just criminal” because of the tax dollars and debt involved, he said.

He said the government and businesses should realize that sometimes keeping a business going is not worth the money needed for it. For Milwaukee Iron, now is that time, he said.

Simpson decided last week to close. He plans to sell the shop’s building and equipment at auction Aug. 27. He also plans to sell the right to the shop’s name.

A search of records in Lynchburg Circuit Court show no liens against the business or its building on Ramsey Place.

Of all the equipment in Milwaukee Iron’s shop, Simpson plans to keep one: a frame table used to straighten motorcycle frames. Harley-Davidson discontinued the table years ago, and Simpson bought it used in 1984. “I’ve used it every week since,” he said.

Simpson could set up a smaller operation to do repair work and possibly some custom fender work to make some money, maybe enough to support his hobby of motorcycles.

“It’s time for me to just get out there,” he said. “Hopefully I’ll be able to get in several thousand more miles before the year’s over.”

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by rabidsnake on July 14, 2009 at 11:21 am

Imprimis- I get the point that you are making and I agree. Too many people are screaming about what they don’t have rather than being thankful for what the do have.  I have seen real poverty in other countries that don’t have our social welfare system and in the US many people who are “poor” have unessential things like cell phones, cable, cigs and beer while they get foodstamps, utilities assitance (for partially paid for electricity and water) and medicaid,  We have it so easy in the states.  Too many lazy people sit around and complain about how bad things are here in the states or have to blame someone or the “system” because they aren’t living like life is a Walgreens commercial.  They need to read the story on the Lost Boy to find out how good we have it here.

Flag Comment Posted by ZIGMITCHELL on July 13, 2009 at 8:39 am

Sorry about the bad news Randy! Good Luck to you in the future!

Flag Comment Posted by Imprimis on July 09, 2009 at 10:16 pm

Don’t get your knickers in a knot - I wasn’t even talking about you.  I’m talking about people who own and pay for “things” that our parents could never have afforded, and yet claim that they are “poor” or that the “economy has ruined them”.

Besides that, I don’t have to open my mouth to type.

Flag Comment Posted by An8ivewahoo on July 09, 2009 at 9:34 pm

I can assure you I play NO WIC card that isn’t me - I have always paid my way but what was the point of having a lAN line Phone with a son who text as it was easier than sitting in a line waiting on minutes that tick away while they are waiting on the other half to receive the message - Know what you are talking about before you open your MOUTH!

Flag Comment Posted by Imprimis on July 09, 2009 at 9:18 pm

an8itvwhatsit -

My son was in the Middle East for two years; I found that a regular wall telephone worked very well for staying in touch.

I don’t have anything against these cell phone/text devices, until I see people in the grocery line paying with a WICS card while they chat on their mobile phone about what’s on the cable tonight; it’s nice to have “things”, but not while we’re screaming Poverty!

If Obama’s “stimulus” sinks the economy it’ll be because “he didn’t have time to fix all the problems he inherited”.  If it just drags it down for a while, he’ll be a hero 10 years from now for “saving us”.  He can’t lose, can he?

Flag Comment Posted by An8ivewahoo on July 09, 2009 at 8:33 pm

In response to Imprimis and Lablover….
Imprisis I have ‘crackberry’ as you call it because that is at times was my only communication with my son who is curently serving our country in middle east…
Lablover - there is very lil that can be done outside of what Bush already signed out our country up for with other countries…
Ironic I think it is that Bush spoke at my son’s BCT graduation!  I was the first one up that morning at 2 am waiting on polls to open!
Yes it is sad the economic state our country is in…however please beleive not everything is in Obama’s power to change at this time.

Flag Comment Posted by lablover on July 08, 2009 at 10:04 pm

There is a quick fix to the economy.  Cut taxes, end regulations and needless laws and encourage business to thrive.  Give incentives for the private sector to fix healthcare and stop giving out benefits to those who can work.  I’m happy for the people who can afford great things in life.  Those purchases employ a lot of people.  It’s also great to talk about being frugal.  Why don’t we demand that of our govt? 

There is also a way to destroy our economy even more.  Obama and Periello are doing that by voting for this insane Cap and Trade Bill.  This is sure to close plants and business down throughout this country while other nations laugh at us and continue to steal our jobs.  I can also remember specifically Periello, Warner and Kaine all promising to bring jobs to Southside, but all I see are them leaving.

Flag Comment Posted by Imprimis on July 08, 2009 at 7:44 pm

I’m doing what I should have been doing all along; being a little more careful with spending, combining trips, and like that.

But MANY people are not, and you can watch them any time, any place, splashing money around like Diamond Jim Brady.

And yet, and yet ... people are hollering that the sky is falling, that the world is coming apart, that we’re fixing to starve, and that we need the government to step in and take over industries, take over the banks, regulate our lives.

Give it a rest, people; you got your man elected by crying poverty and disaster (with most everyone’s mouths full), now enjoy it while you can.

Flag Comment Posted by Dabutcher on July 08, 2009 at 7:24 pm

I agree Imprimis.
Luckily me and my wife have done fine ( knock on wood), so far. But I think everyone is being a lot more conscious of there spending.
Many people have seen what has happened and are having second thoughts on how they handle finances.
I see your point, alot of people are not hurting but being a little wiser on spending.

Flag Comment Posted by Imprimis on July 08, 2009 at 6:48 pm

I wouldn’t say EVERYone is hurting.

The people who are packing out every restaurant in Lynchburg nights and weekends aren’t hurting.

The people who crowd the boat ramps at the lakes with their 400 horsepower bass boats to burn 50 gallons of gas for a day’s fishing aren’t hurting.

The people who fill the hotel rooms in Washington and Baltimore and Charlotte at $300 a night aren’t hurting.

The people who are building houses all up and down the road I live on aren’t hurting.

The people who line out of the door when Wal-Mart announces that some DVD player or iPod thing is going on sale aren’t hurting.

The people with cell phones and crackberries stuck in their ears all day long at $80/month aren’t hurting.

Maybe some people are, but they’re hard to find.  Sorry this guy is going out of business - maybe the people who buy $25,000 custom motorcycles have all they want for right now?

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