
America's Camping Vehicles
The earliest traveling Americans covered hundreds of
miles across country with wagons pulled by horses or oxen. The
laying
of rails changed much of this travel, especially in Western America where
distances were great and roads were
few. However, the coming of the
automobile was the beginning of major changes in American life, for work and
business
and for leisure.
![]() |
Cross country roads like the Lincoln Highway and Yellowstone Trail encouraged the population to use their cars to travel long distances looking for better jobs, and to enjoy leisure time exploring America's outdoors. The Ford Model T was a major early means of conveyance that carried its passengers and could be converted for roadside camping. |
![]() |
Vehicle adaptations like the one shown led
to the creation of city parks and waysides devoted to the vagabond travelers
of
the 1920's. It was not long before camping or travel trailers were being
manufactured by companies like Covered
Wagon, Silver Dome, Saginaw, Trotwood,
Safari, Roycraft, Palace Master, and Aladdin. These small trailers varied
in
price from cheap $300 models to the expensive $2500 luxurious models.
The more common well-equipped trailer was
in the range of $700 and many were
used for housing during the depression years of the 1930's, especially while
their
owners stayed on a perpetual vacation as they searched for better jobs.
| The photo on the right is of a 1936 Ford pulling a Silver Dome trailer that had left South Dakota as new equipment the previous summer. It had been to the east coast, traveled to California and was photographed on Palm Sunday in 1937 on Snowqualami pass in Washington. My uncle returned to South Dakota and operating his gas and service station on the Meridian Highway, one of the named highways, now US - 81, that runs from Texas to Winnipeg. Did he get the travel fever from his customers? possibly, but he continued to travel far and wide all his life, a characteristic of many Americans. |
![]() |
Starting in 1936 Pierce-Arrow produced a
line of camper-trailers, the Pierce-Arrow Travelodge, including some that came
equipped with a toilet and shower. If my memory is correct there is (or
was) one in the old prison museum in Deer Lodge.
It was inevitable that
"motor-homes" would be on the horizon, a few had built as early as 1910 and were
often called
"house-cars". They were few and far between prior to the
1950's, but in 1937 apparently the Ford plant in St Paul
Minnesota built
![]() |
a very few on pickup truck chassis. One of these was found in Minnesota in 2001 and restored by a collector named Graeme Thickins, and is pictured below. It has a standard pickup chassis, a Ford V8 engine, a body frame of oak, a metal skin, and a canvas roof with a silver rain proof coating. Note the raised part which allows very limited area to fully stand. |
![]() |
![]() |
The windows all open, it has a bed, a table, and a sink, but there is no evidence of a toilet, cooler, or stove. The cabin was built onto the cowl with it all open to the driver area, but it was well before the seat-belt era. Overall, it was clearly a mobile "sleeping room" with the need for a campground location to have cooking and toilet facilities. |
![]() |
This returns us to the roadside camping
facilities, remnants of which still can be found in many communities although
they
were augmented in many places by cabin camps. The cabin camps were
composed of individual small sleeping cabins
usually with an outdoor picnic area
and bathroom facilities either indoors or elsewhere on the grounds. Almost
all were pre-
war (WWII) and were often converted into early motels by adding
additional rooms between adjacent cabins. The last of the
individual
cabins were removed from Bozeman's East Main in about 2005. There still
remains a motel that was at one time
just separate cabins. Careful
watching will pick out similar structures in most Montana communities on major
highways.