My Wife Sold My Harley While I Was Deployed in Afghanistan

My Wife Sold My 1948 Harley While I Was Deployed—What Happened Next Shocked Us!
I was in Afghanistan when my wife sold my grandfather’s 1948 Harley Panhead—the same bike my father restored and planned to pass to my son—for a Louis Vuitton bag. I found out through Facebook. That bike wasn’t just metal; it was family history, three generations of Morrisons tied to it.
When I confronted her over video call, she shrugged, saying I chose the Army over her. Heartbroken, I returned home months later to find she’d drained our savings and filed for divorce. Marcus, my 13-year-old son, was devastated—but he had hundreds of photos and videos of the bike.
We tracked it down through veteran and biker networks. A collector confirmed the bike had been sold under false pretenses and returned it, untouched. Forty vintage military motorcycles showed up in a dramatic homecoming—my grandfather’s Panhead leading the pack.
Now, Marcus and I ride every weekend, keeping the legacy alive. The bike—and our family honor—endures.




