

DOM2 BLK
BLACK COMPETITION WEIGHT
More jobs, better incomes, and a sense that, with the war over, a man could be free and independent. At the same time the English road system was dramatically changing from small, narrow, winding roads to racetrack-like arterial roads with transport cafes.
Simultaneously America, seen as a beacon of possibilities, influenced popular culture with films like the 1953 cult classic The Wild One. "What are you rebelling against, Johnny?", and he answers: "Whaddaya got?".
English Rockers were "ton-up boys", because doing the ton was English slang for driving at 100 mph or more. Along the way, Rockers took what was essentially a sport and turned it into a motorcycle lifestyle.
On the other side were the scooter-riding Mods. In 1964 the rivalry between Mods and Rockers boiled over into a number of well-publicized brawls. Beginning with Easter weekend at seaside resort towns along the south coast of England, this rivalry turned violent. Margate, Broadstairs and Brighton all had gangs of Mods and Rockers openly fighting. At Brighton the fighting lasted two days, and moved from the Pier along the coast to Hastings and back, in what the newspapers of the day called the Second Battle of Hastings. An editorial in The Birmingham Post in May 1964 warned that Mods and Rockers would "bring about disintegration of a nation's character".
This was the crucible that created the Dominator, a version of the American "Brando" jacket. From the twin side-buckles to the front wallet-pocket, this jacket is Vanson's interpretation of a classic English Rocker jacket. Close your eyes, and you can see this classic jacket on a BSA Golden Flash, or Super Rocket, or Triumph Bonneville, or...a Norton Dominator.