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RV Capital of the World: A Fun-filled Indiana History
RV Capital of the World: A Fun-filled Indiana History
RV Capital of the World: A Fun-filled Indiana History
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RV Capital of the World: A Fun-filled Indiana History

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Time spent with the family in a Coachmen Leprechaun or a Holiday Rambler is unforgettable. Indiana retains a unique place in the RV industry going back to the 1930s, when pioneering individuals like Milo Miller, Harold Platt and Wilbur Schult created the original RV businesses in the Elkhart-South Bend area, making campers for sale. By the end of World War II, the national media was identifying Elkhart as the "Trailer Capital of the World." That status has been reinforced ever since, and the industry is still thriving in Indiana with the successes of Thor Industries and Forest River. Join author and RV expert Al Hesselbart as he chronicles how the Hoosier State became the RV Capital of the World.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJun 12, 2017
ISBN9781625858054
RV Capital of the World: A Fun-filled Indiana History
Author

Al Hesselbart

Al Hesselbart is a recognized RV expert, RVer himself and was the historian and librarian at the RV Hall of Fame for over two decades. Al is frequently invited to speak at RV rallies and shows and contributed a monthly column on the heritage of the RV industry for RV News. He has appeared or worked as an RV historian in documentaries about RV history on the Home & Garden, Travel, History and Discovery cable channels, among others. Al has been a frequent visitor to RVTV, R&R channel and RVNewsNet.

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    RV Capital of the World - Al Hesselbart

    2010.

    Introduction

    The state of Indiana holds a very important position in the rich history of the recreational vehicle industry and its related travel and camping lifestyle. For over seventy years, since the World War II years of the 1940s, the northern city of Elkhart and the surrounding area near South Bend have been identified as the RV Capital of the World for the high number of trailers and motor homes made there and the great number of manufacturers and component suppliers based there. In the immediate post–World War II days, there were several areas of concentration of trailer builders spread throughout the country. Southern California, especially the area around Los Angeles, hosted many of the dynamic early manufacturers, as did parts of New York, Georgia and Alabama. As the industry evolved, however, none could compare to the growth in northern Indiana. Surely today, over three-fourths of the recreational vehicles built in America are produced in the Greater Elkhart–South Bend area of north-central Indiana and southwest Michigan, continuing that status to a greater degree than ever before.

    The 2014 Jayco Embark. The Embark is one of today’s giant mobile mansions based on stretched highway tractor chassis. Courtesy of Jayco.

    A 1955 FAN Coach. This is one of the smaller trailers built in the early days of FAN. Courtesy of Al Hesselbart.

    Indiana’s place in the early history of the RV, however, was established in the years before World War I, when a few companies around Indianapolis began building and selling camping trailers. These dreamers were the visionaries who wanted to put beds inside of or behind the first rudimentary automobiles to enjoy a weekend retreat and found that their neighbors wanted the same opportunity. While these original camper manufacturers enjoyed only regional distribution, they surely set the stage for Indiana’s place in the RV world.

    CHAPTER 1

    The RV Industry Begins

    As soon as the earliest autos began to appear on American roads, enterprising woodsmen, hunters, campers and other outdoors-oriented families began to create their own camping vehicles to tow behind the new motorized vehicles. At first, these campers were pretty much homemade lightweight rustic mobile tents created one at a time. Around 1910, a few enterprising entrepreneurs began to produce multiple rigs to sell to their friends and neighbors. The popularity of camping as an American pastime was so great that soon commercial production companies began to appear. It must be remembered that these very first builders were true visionaries who had to create their first campers from their dreams. They did not have predecessors to improve upon but had to design and build saleable campers from visions in their minds. Surely, they had the examples of the tents of our pioneers and the military, but the concept of towing a workable shelter behind rudimentary vehicles was beyond most citizens’ wildest imaginations. In fact, for many of the early years, those campers who chose to use trailers for recreation travel were looked upon as ne’er-do-wells and were commonly referred to as gypsies, tramps, thieves or tin can tourists because there was no way to establish where they were living.

    One of the first commercial camper builders in the country was Edward Habig of Indianapolis, who began building a folding tent camper as early as 1915. During these very early years of horseless carriages, tin lizzies and other motorized conveyances, those citizens who felt America’s great wanderlust quickly joined the automotive society. Since the early vehicles were not capable of towing much weight, the earliest campers were, for the most part, lightweight tent trailers. A few enterprising builders also created motorized housecars on some of the early heavier truck-like vehicles. While most of the early tent campers were basically a standard tent that was erected on a wheeled platform, Habig’s Cozy Camper contribution is recognized as the first folding tent camper to offer a hard, flat roof like today’s campers, as opposed to the peaked canvas tent-like roof shape of the other camping vehicles of the day. The rigid flat roof also allowed Habig to be the first to provide an electric light on the ceiling instead of the open-flame candles and lanterns used in the alternative designs. The Cozy Camper sold for $165 in 1916. While the price seems exceedingly low today, it is important to remember that at that time, many workingmen were compensated at five cents per hour or forty or fifty cents per day.

    A 1910 vintage camper, maker unknown. The earliest campers were simply a platform covered with a light frame over which a canvas cover was draped that stayed light enough to be towed by the early autos. Courtesy of the RV/MH Hall of Fame.

    Another early provider of camping vehicles was the Hercules Buggy Works of Evansville, a large, well-established builder of horse-drawn and motorized vehicles and vehicle accessories, especially canvas convertible tops for early runabouts, which were often sold as open vehicles without tops. Runabouts were the early two-seater autos that were much like motorized versions of the horse-drawn buckboards. Hercules marketed some of its accessories and add-on bodies through the Sears and Roebuck catalogues. In 1916, Hercules introduced a folding tent trailer to its extensive vehicle lineup. It also built an empty body shell that could be, and sometimes was, easily used to create a housecar, as the early motorized campers were identified. Most of these early builders distributed their products in a fairly small two-hundred- or three-hundred-mile radius around their plants, as widespread transportation of large products was very difficult and usually done by railroad, not highway.

    A 1915 Habig Cozy Camper trailer. This was the first production camper in Indiana. Courtesy of Al Hesselbart.

    The Continental Auto Parts Company of Knightstown introduced a full line of four camper models in 1917. The Scout was a simple tent and suspended mattress configuration that could be mounted on a car’s running board to provide some shelter for sleeping. The 49er was a very basic trailer where a small tent rose up above the trailer box and held a standard-sized mattress for a more comfortable night’s sleep. The Wigwam was a more recognizable modern conventional camping trailer design in which two full-sized beds folded out on either side of the trailer box, and the Pathfinder was basically the same design but came equipped with a rudimentary ice chest cooler and a camp stove, as well as some storage compartments.

    In the 1920s, other Indiana trailer builders came into the national picture. In 1925, E.R. Gilkison and Sons in Terre Haute began making a camper that became nationally popular. The Gilkie brand trailers received U.S. patent number 1,696,113 in 1926 and continued to build both folding tent trailers and hard-bodied campers into the early 1950s. In the early 1930s, Gilkie built two models. The De Luxe had an insulated hard roof like Habig’s earlier Cozy Camper and was an early predecessor of the later rigid-sided campers, while the Camp King folded up to a peaked roof. Both offered two fifty-four-inch comfortable beds, and the Camp King included a builtin insulated ice chest and an enclosed pantry space. By the mid-1930s, the Gilkie lineup included the two tent trailers, a conventional travel trailer and one of the very first commercially built horse trailers.

    A patent issued to E.R. Gilkison for the original popular Gilkie folding tent trailer. Courtesy of the U.S. Patent Office.

    A 1932 Gilkie Camp King camper. This is an example of the pioneering campers made in Terre Haute by E.R. Gilkison. Courtesy of the RV/MH Hall of Fame.

    CHAPTER 2

    The Elkhart Story Begins

    While still growing elsewhere around the state, the trailer industry began rapidly to concentrate in the South Bend–Elkhart area in the early 1930s. The north-central Indiana area had long been identified with transportation and vehicles. The Studebaker Company, builder of the early Conestoga wagons, Studebaker autos and World War I–vintage military vehicles, was

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