Doodle Bugs were powered by 1½ hp engines from Briggs & Stratton or Clinton.[1][2] The Doodle Bug Standard Model B was the only Doodle Bug series powered by Clinton engines; one thousand or less of these were built, all during the first production run of ten thousand scooters. All other Doodle Bug scooters, including the Standard Model A that was produced alongside the Model B during the first production run, used variants of the Briggs & Stratton NP engine. Four production runs of ten thousand scooters each were built.[1]
An annual reunion of Doodle Bug owners and restorers is held in Webster City.[4][5]
References
^ abcd"Yesterday's Rides Metalworks, Inc. - Original Doodle Bug". Yesterday's Rides Metalworks, Inc. Newberg, Oregon, USA. 7 September 2005. Retrieved 2010-10-24. There were 40,000 Doodle Bugs manufactured from the spring of 1946 through the fall of 1948 by Beam Mfg. of Webster City, Iowa.
^"Briggs NP Antique Scooter Engine". Retrieved 2010-10-24. The Doodle Bug scooters were manufactured by the Beam Manufacturing Company of Webster City, Iowa from 1946-1948 and were sold by Gambles under the name "Hiawatha"
^Dar Danielson; Pat Powers (September 14, 2012). "Webster City celebrates Doodlebugs". Des Moines, Iowa, US: Radio Iowa. Retrieved 2012-10-09. It's the 26th annual convention of people from across the U.S. who fix up and ride the Doodlebug brand of motor scooter.
^Jim Krajewski (September 14, 2012). "Annual Doodle Bug event returns to W.C."Messenger News. Fort Dodge, IA US. Retrieved 2012-10-09. The familiar sputtering of Doodle Bug scooters filled the air at The Executive Inn in Webster City as a caravan of riders pulled in to celebrate the 26th annual Doodle Bug reunion.