VIDEO: MOTORCYCLES RUMBLE THROUGH ON THE WAY TO D.C. FOR 9/11 RALLY

Sep. 11, 2013 9:20am Jonathon M. Seidl

While the bikers heading to Washington, D.C., for the “2 Million Bikers to D.C.” rally to commemorate 9/11 (and counter the million Muslim march) aren’t expected into the nation’s capital until around 11 a.m., pictures and video are still surfacing of them making their way. We’ve compiled some of that below and will bring you more complete coverage from our reporters on the ground when they roll in:

This video was posted on YouTube of riders rolling down a highway — it’s unclear where it was taken:



WATE-TV in Tennessee has video of bikers from that area departing to join the rally:

Video at the Page Link:

WPMT-TV in Harrisburg, PA, chronicled a local group’s participation:

Video at the Page Link:

And WTOL-TV in Toledo, OH, did the same thing last week:

Video at the Page Link:

This video from Smithfield, NC, shows a group rolling through at night:



The event’s Facebook page posted a schedule:


(Source: 2 Million Bikers to DC Facebook page)

And organizers also posted some pictures of organizers firing up the crowd and showing just some of the numerous motorcycles already lining up at a meeting point in Maryland:


(Source: 2 Million Bikers to DC Facebook page)


Co-organizer Belinda Bee (left) appears with an unidentified speaker addressing the biker crowd.

(Source: 2 Million Bikers to DC Facebook page)


Ohio bikers present co-organizer Belinda Bee with a flag of honor. (Source: 2 Million Biker to DC Facebook page)

One Twitter user posted another picture showing the line outside the local bike show. She says the bikes are four to six wide:


(Source: Twitter.com/ineedaname13)


Another user posted a different angle:


(Source: Twitter.com/founding_ideals)

Belinda Bee, one of the rally’s co-organizers who told TheBlaze on Monday the story of the group being denied a permit by the Park Service, told her story again this morning on “Fox & Friends”:




The local NBC station in D.C. says riders will be first hitting the area around 9 a.m. before reaching their ultimate destination a couple hours later.

You can try and capture the arrival via DC’s extensive traffic camera system.

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