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by Hella Cliques
June 30, 2026

When hundreds of thousands of young American soldiers, sailors, and marines returned home in 1945, they were expected to immediately slot back into quiet, domestic, 1950s picket-fence suburban life. But many of these men had seen atrocities, survived unimaginable horrors, and lived on pure adrenaline for years.

Medical science at the time didn't have a word for it—"PTSD" wouldn't be an official diagnosis until 1980. Society told them to just forget about the war, but they couldn't shut it off. They felt deeply isolated, restless, and alienated from their own families.

To survive the psychological darkness, they sought out the only people who truly understood them: their fellow veterans.

The Military Structure:

They formed clubs that mirrored the military hierarchy they missed—complete with "chapters," officers, and uniform-like vests ("colors"). It gave them back a sense of order and identity.

The Machines:

They bought cheap, surplus military Harley-Davidsons. Stripping them down to make them faster (creating the first "bobbers") and tuning them to be loud provided the intense rush of dopamine and adrenaline they desperately craved to override their mental numbness.

The Brotherhood:

Above all, it was about survival. These men rode together because, when the flashbacks or the "malaise" hit, the guy riding next to them was a brother who had their back in a way civilian society never could.

"They retired to the nearest drinking establishment in an attempt to drown the memories of battle with booze, to heal the scars of armed conflict with laughter, and to try and feel human again."

It’s a beautiful, tragic piece of history because it reframes the loud, scary "biker gang" stereotype into what it originally was: a massive, grassroots peer-support group for broken soldiers trying to keep each other alive.