~ Castle-builder William Gillette loved motorcycling, and bikers love his home ~
Joanna Garcia Navedo and her friend Xiomara Montalbo recently escorted a group of other motorcycling pals to explore the scenic, winding lanes leading to one of their favorite places in Connecticut.
“We come every year,” Navedo told us.
She had a quick answer when asked why their annual destination is Gillette Castle State Park and William Gillette's imposing mansion.
“We love Sherlock Holmes,” the Groton resident replied with a grin.
Gillette was the first actor to become internationally famous for his performances as the masterful sleuth. The Hartford native died in 1937 and the state eventually took over ownership of his home and surrounding estate.
Navedo, Montalbo and their friends – all natives of Puerto Rico and longtime Connecticut residents – have taken to New England's roads for 20 years, sometimes riding together twice a week.
On this particular sunny August Sunday, Navedo had brought along her son, Luis Soto, an Army veteran now living with his wife in Colorado.
It was Soto's first visit to the Castle, now a museum perched spectacularly on the “Seventh Sister” hill near the towns of East Haddam and Lyme along the Connecticut River.
“It's so beautiful on the outside,” Soto said. “It's impressive and very rich.”
“It's so peaceful,” his mother agreed. “It's like a dream – enchanting.”
Other bikers arriving at the Castle that day may have had similar notions. After all, they share their riding passion with William Gillette, who loved to hit the local roads on his own motorcycles.
When good riding weather bursts out each spring, a hundred or more motorcyclists visit the park on Saturdays and Sundays throughout the season – a number that can more than double at times, according to Jack Hine, the park's supervisor.
“They come from all over,” Hine said, and riders range widely in age and style.
“I imagine it has to do with the country roads leading up to the Castle,” Hine said. “It's a nice location to take a break, get off the bike, stretch your legs and look at the wonderful view of the river.”
A decade ago, the Castle's designated motorcycle parking area spilled over and the automobile slots were overwhelmed with dozens of motorcycles owned by guests and participants in a biker wedding.
That memory is vivid for Harold “Tyke” and Theodora “Teddie” Niver, who portray William and Helen Gillette to greet and entertain visitors during the summer months. Information about their presentations there and various groups is found at sherlockholmesct.com .
“They all wanted pictures with 'The Gillettes,'” said Teddie Niver. “So, we were sitting on motorcycles and with the bride and groom. It was wonderful.”
It's fitting that so many motorcyclists visit the park and Gillette's medieval-style mansion. The mechanically inclined actor enjoyed the outdoors – attributes that contributed to his multiple hobbies, including bicycling, house-boating and motorcycling.
At times, Gillette's love of speed and motorized gadgets got him into trouble.
In 1918, when Gillette was 65, he and his Triumph motorcycle accidentally plunged off the ferry dock into the Connecticut River, and both required fishing out. In 1925, when Gillette was 72, he accidentally propelled his Ner-A-Car bike into an automobile, was thrown off and knocked out.
Gillette sprang back from both events without lasting effects.
The state park displays one of Gillette's original rides – the small locomotive engine he commanded while giving tours to guests along a railroad line he'd constructed through his 122-acre estate.
For several seasons from 2012 to 2016, however, visitors got to see the type of motorcycle Gillette enjoyed, thanks to the generosity of former Connecticut resident David Perillo, who loaned his 1922 Ner-A-Car to the park for periodic display in the Castle's visitor's center.
“In the early 1900s, there were loads of motorcycle companies that came and went, the two major ones in the United States being Harley-Davidson and Indian,” said Bud Wilkinson, who writes for the website Ride-CT & Ride-New England at ride-ct.com.
“My guess is that, with Gillette having played Sherlock Holmes, he sought a prominent British brand for reasons of image,” Wilkinson offered during a recent email exchange with a member of the Friends of Gillette Castle. A Ner-A-Car may have met those criteria, Wilkinson speculated.
“It’s an unusual-looking motorcycle and I think it’s safe to say Gillette had eccentric tastes,” Wilkinson said. “Or it simply might be a case of dealers being nearby or other availability.” You can read Wilkinson's article about Perillo's Ner-A-Car at ride-ct.com/neracar-shown-at-gillette-castle.
Perillo, a member of the Antique Motorcycle Club of America, rebuilt the Ner-A-Car and believed the Castle was the right place to display it.
“Overall, it was a great experience,” Perillo told us. “The reactions from my friends and other people were great. It added so much to their visit.” The display ended when Perillo moved to another state.
“I was born and raised in New Haven and had been to the Castle a million times. It was always beautiful if you just wanted to hike around,” Perillo said. “The more you visit and look around – well, it's mind-boggling, and such a beautiful thing.”
Also online is a video (found at youtu.be/5wKNy7MCZ5Y) on the subject of motorcycles, by Paul Schiller, the park's seasonal park supervisor of public education and vice president of The Friends of Gillette Castle State Park. The Friends' website is gillettecastlefriends.org.
IN THE PHOTO: On a recent August weekend, this group of friends rode their motorcycles to biker-friendly Gillette Castle and used the parking area designated for such vehicles. The group included Sherlock Holmes enthusiasts Joanna Garcia Navedo of Groton (in red shirt at center) and Xiomara Montalbo of New London (in green shirt at right). (Photo by John C. Sherwood.)