Mike is asking about paralleling the Jeep and trailer batteries, and the concerns with doing that have been addressed (personally, I would connect them for charging, but not draw on the starting-type Jeep battery while camped).
That just leaves the more general question of
building big battery banks, and what voltage of battery to use. I'll take one more shot at this...
pete.wilson wrote:He's right though, that using 4ea 6v batteries connected in a series/parallel fashion does have more capacity and therefore last longer...
More capacity than what? If you compare four 6V industrial-duty deep-cycle batteries (connected series/parallel, as required to make a big 12V bank), to any number of 12V batteries in parallel, if the
total size of the batteries (just add up their weights... seriously) is the same, the total capacity is the same -
not more - so the only reason for a difference in lifespan is balancing of charging. If you compare four 60-lb batteries to two 60 lb batteries then yes, that's more capacity and they should last longer (and be more efficient).
More capacity does mean that any given rate or depth of discharge is a lower fraction of the batteries' capacity, so they last longer. It just doesn't matter how the pile of lead plates is split up...
four GC2 (Trojan T-105) in series/parallel:
225 A-h @ 6V, 62 lb each = 450 A-h @ 12V, 248 lb total
four Group 27 (Trojan 27TMH) in parallel:
115 A-h @ 12V, 59 lb each = 460 A-h @ 12V, 236 lb total
two Trojan L16H in series:
420 A-h @ 6V, 121 lb each = 420 A-h @ 12V, 242 lb total
two Group 8D (Trojan EV8D-2) in parallel:
216 A-h @ 12V, 132 lb each = 432 A-h @ 12V, 264 lb total
It's a real pain to lift the L16H or 8D batteries, so it's nice to break it up into smaller boxes, but the total weight and electrical capacity are the same in each combination. These are all deep-cycle batteries from the same series of the same (very well-known) manufacturer, all rated by their 20-hour discharge capacity. The big batteries have a slight weight disadvantage, because they need very strong cases.
alanm's scheme is a common and perfectly legitimate way to get the total voltage and capacity required, as he explained. It also uses a readily available size of battery (a 6V unit commonly used for golf carts, such as the T-105), which most people can lift into place; that's the size I used for my examples above. These are good things, but it's not the only way to get there, and I'm not sure why a typical teardrop or tiny travel trailer needs so much capacity that it has to be in four boxes of lead, totaling 240 lb and 450 A-h!
So if you can't get enough battery, cheaply and readily available, in one box you can lift into the trailer, then sure... combine some. Series is easier to manage, although if one dies you have nothing (instead of half capacity), but both ways work - there's no magic to any particular battery voltage.