Finding America's Heart by Harley
Wealthy businessman John Gussenhoven pledged his fortunes to assist those who helped him on his journey across America
- By Jamie Katz
- Smithsonian.com, December 18, 2009, Subscribe
Carl Snow speaks in that reassuring country baritone you tend to associate with seasoned airline captains. That’s only fitting, since he has flown jets for some 40 years now and has trained his share of the aspiring pilots who flock to his hometown of Tulsa, Oklahoma, for flight instruction. So when a steady, understated gentleman like Carl Snow tells you that about the best aviation student he ever taught was a middle-aged insurance executive named John Gussenhoven, you take him at his word. “John’s a quick study,” Snow says. “I never had to tell him anything more than once.”
By any reckoning, Gussenhoven, 63, is a most unusual man. Though he’s modest about his accomplishments, it’s clear that when he sets a goal, he generally gets there. A collegiate lacrosse and soccer star and U.S. Army veteran, Gussenhoven not only learned to fly at a comparatively advanced age, he achieved the top level of FAA certification, Airline Transport Pilot, in just three-and-a-half years. He was a high flyer in business, too, rising to partner at Johnson & Higgins, the 150-year-old insurance brokerage and consulting outfit that was bought by Marsh & McLennan in 1997 for $1.8 billion. An expert free climber, sailor and skier, Gussenhoven even took up ballroom dancing three months ago (“I hated it as a kid,” he says). He has already won two competitions. His drive to excel stems from his “stubborn, single-minded, Dutch-inherited personality,” Gussenhoven suggests.
For all that, Gussenhoven felt there was an important check mark missing from his life’s to-do list. Born in Mexico City, the son of a General Motors executive who planted the company flag in several Latin American markets during the 1930s, Gussenhoven didn’t arrive in the U.S. until he was 14. Even five years ago, he says, he knew squat about the so-called flyover country between the East and West coasts. So he set about correcting that deficiency with typical Gussenhovian zeal. He bought a Harley-Davidson Road Master King, learned to ride it proficiently, and then marked his route with a bold “X” across a map of the 48 states. “My purpose,” he says simply, “was to discover my own country, which I had never really seen.”
He carried out the plan in 2005 and 2006, hurtling through 27 states in two-week segments a year apart. The first leg took him from the Seattle area down to Naples, Florida, where he keeps one of his three homes (the others being in Wilmington, North Carolina, and Jackson Hole, Wyoming). The second stroke of the “X” began in San Diego and culminated in Eastport, Maine. Gunning a hog cross-country means navigating mountain passes and deserts and braving unfriendly weather, but Gussenhoven made sure to sleep in clean beds, eat regularly and check in with his wife, Harriette, and son, Jordan. He kept a detailed log, documenting, for instance, that he traveled exactly 8,556.5 miles along the twin vectors, which criss-crossed near Mullinsville, Kansas at precisely 3:34:22 p.m. on May 21, 2006.
Gussenhoven also took some 3,000 photographs and recorded the GPS waypoints for each. He furnished the information to aerial photographer Jim Wark, who retraced the identical routes, snapping some 6,000 photos from his single-engine Aviat Husky, which looks something like Lindbergh’s Spirit of St. Louis. “The way Jim worked was to take that little fabric plane, stick the rudder between his legs, open the window and the door and turn the plane on its side with his knees,” Gussenhoven says. “Then he’d just lean out with his Leica camera and take pictures.”
The result of their exceptional collaboration is Crisscrossing America, a handsome coffee-table book reaffirming that from the highway or the skyway, this is still a land of splendor. Gussenhoven did find some things that disturbed him: the roads and bridges in disrepair; the contrast between downtrodden laborers at the Mexican border and luxurious Palm Springs; the abandonment of Main Street culture in favor of ugly strip malls and highway bypasses. But he was more often inspired by the sense of freedom and possibility he found on the open road. The book’s cover photograph shows his bike parked on the shoulder of a highway that disappears into the vast, tawny plains of northeastern New Mexico. To Gussenhoven, the scene was an epiphany. “I can’t tell you how many times I sang ‘America the Beautiful’ after I took that picture,” he says. “Apart from the truck coming down the road, this was my country. I was solitary, but I felt very much at home, secure and at peace. It had just rained, the air was clean. It was a sweet sort of fragrance, and I couldn’t have been happier. It set off millions of synapses in my brain that said, ‘You know, you should be doing more and more and more of this.’”
***
As he traveled, Gussenhoven often received the drooped left-hand bikers’ greeting from fellow riders. This became an emblem of his other great discovery: the openhearted kindness he experienced across the nation. “These friendly people did not treat me differently because of my background, race, education, or appearance,” he writes of a couple that insisted he join them for dinner in Santa Fe. “They did so, I suspect, because they saw someone who perhaps needed companionship and conversation.”
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Comments (9)
I like this story and want to read John's book. I have a Harley it's my first at the age of 55 I was about 15 whin I watch a show (Then Came Bronson) I would wear my hat the same wa he did, well I all ways wanted a Harley it took a few years now I am waiting to 62 to hit the road and tour the U.S.A lot's of my facations has ben doing mission work out of the US a working vacation that cost me money to work free my friends never could understand that. thanks Rick B.
Posted by Richard Banfield on March 18,2011 | 05:12 PM
John, Just saw Roger Beckmen from Cessna and we started talking about you. He told me about your adventure and the book that you wrote. Can't wait to read it.
Thanks for that cup of coffee in Colorado!
Regards,
Joe
KBDR
Posted by Joe Kmoch on April 15,2010 | 10:23 PM
I was having not so good a day with my MS today. But after reading John's story I am inspired; not to give up my dream at 41 I am still not giving in to the MS; because I have a wish to visit St. Judes to give them a painting I did a few years back to raise money for the cancer children; and to see the Northern Lights from a dog sled. I am ever so grateful to keep hearing about people who still do for others weather giving food or friendship; because it is what I have been taught to do by my family and have passed to my children. There is so much need in the world today if we only put the wealth/poor aspect aside and just be us for a day as John did we could all be more loving and helpful to our fellow people. And our world would be a better place to live. Thanks for your inspiration I will sure look forward to your book.
Posted by Teresa Pendergrass, Marble,NC on March 15,2010 | 11:08 AM
An inspiring story. I'll certainly buy the book. I love the thoughtfullness that went into each of his gifts and assistance to those in need. I would love to meet the author and maybe someday ride with him.
Posted by Mary Baker, Haughton, LA on January 7,2010 | 02:17 PM
what a great story......... something I'm gonna dream of to acomplish
hats of John.
Onno
Posted by onno vandelaak on January 7,2010 | 01:48 PM
Thank you for letting readers know about John Gussenhoven.
Giving back to those who have helped us is the best symbol of gratitude. This article reminds me of Greg Mortenson, who was very close to his sister as well, and has dedicated his life to helping build schools in Pakistan and Afghanistan, mainly for girls, is another fine and nobel example of appreciation of family and feeling at home in another culture. Hopefully John and Greg will meet. Blessed are the peacemakers...
Posted by Josephine Thompson on January 7,2010 | 01:38 PM
I have known John Gusenhoven for a number of years in Wilmington, N.C. I have been sailing and flying with him and have observed that with everything he does he does the very best. He is a Reaissance man in everything he focuses on. He is also a good friend to all he meets.
Posted by Carter T. Lambeth on December 27,2009 | 10:23 AM
WOW...What a great artical..I just got my January Smithsonian. John is a friend of my husband and myself in Wilmington, NC. Yes, he is quite a guy!! I will pass your artical on to John's many friends in Wilmington. I look forward to buying the book and putting it on my coffee table!
Smithsonian Magazine introduced me to Ben Patton ( General George S. Pattons grandson) throught his artical about his dad. Ben is a film maker and does documentaries. After talking with him....he is now doing my dads life on DVD. My dad like yours grew up during the depression and the Steel Mills of Pittsburg..what a generation...and my dad is still alive ( 94 ).
Thanks to Smothinson Magazine I have now meet another interesting American,,,with a great story to tell.
Thank you so much for your artical.
Regards
Ellen Wells
Posted by Ellen Wells on December 26,2009 | 03:47 PM
I have known Gus for forty years. He is low key in appearance, but has a will to succeed that most never can achieve. He is goal oriented. Whether it is a sport or cycling across America, Gus will finish what he starts. His compassion and care for others is a trademark. He has helped the schools he attended and most importantly, the people he has met that need positive reinforcement. He is a gentleman and I am happy to say, a true friend.
Posted by Drummond Bell on December 21,2009 | 04:31 PM