Saturday, Sept 17
Yesterday we visited the RV Hall of Fame and Museum in Elkhart, Indiana. The surrounding area is the proclaimed RV Capital of the World. We passed by numerous well known branded RV manufacturers and related industry suppliers. Went right by the Dometic Office. There were numerous parking lots with literally hundreds of large RVs/campers parked. I’m guessing they were part of inventory waiting to be sold by dealers or newly manufactured product waiting for distribution. Either way seemed like an inventory nightmare from a business sense, to me…. Or maybe this is the way it always is and demand is high.
The museum itself was amazing. If you find yourself in the area I’d highly suggest making a visit. It exhibited the history of the travel trailer with many sample trailers from the 50’s, 60’s and 70’s…. Up to recent. On exhibit were Shastas, Scottys, airstreams, pop-ups and the like. Many motor homes and futuristic campers from the 50’s. Some you could go inside and view the interiors, which were really cool. Teardrops were not a main focus although there were 2 on display. One was a 1957 Serro Scotty 12’ Travel Trailer and another was a 1946 KIT Teardrop Trailer. This was a company started by a guy named Dan Pocapalia and it was marketed as a kit assembled by the purchaser. I took many pictures of the exhibits which I’ll post when able.
There was also a library you could go into. There were magazines and trade journals from the 40’s to present, many many books on trailers and trade catalogs from industry suppliers. The organization that oversees the museum seems to be some sort of lobbying support group for the trailer manufacturing industry and related suppliers. One large exhibit was composed of a scale model that showed the different assembly stations in building large travel trailers, assembly line style. Not that different from the procedures and techniques used by us teardrop builders. There was also another section in the museum dedicated to "manufactured housing". Makes sense in that these type of houses are basically very large trailers minus the wheels.
The outdoor culture here is really centered around the big type travel trailers, as you can imagine; with all this manufacturing in everyone’s back yard. Our neighbor in the spot next to us said with the price of gas the way it is a lot of the people in the campground were locals and just loved using their campers. He lived only 20 miles away and loved taking his trailer out to the park when he could. Our tiny trailer was dwarfed by the many huge Jayco type rigs. Made me really appreciated our teardrop
The rest of the day we visited the town of Napponee where the Yearly Apple Festival was in full swing. Many neighbors out with yard sales on their front lawns and huge boxes on street corners filled with apples (50 cents each). There were carnival rides and booth vendors hawking all kinds of stuff. Sadly we missed the Miss Apple Blossom Pageant but we did manage to sample the Largest Apple Pie in the world (7 feet in diameter which takes 17 hours to bake).
Today on to our next stop near Chicago.
John