Vintage” caravans have quite recently begun to attract much wider
attention than they had previously enjoyed. Those that haven’t collapsed
in a forgotten heap long ago are being dragged out of hedges and barns
and restored by enthusiasts to their full period glory – and it is not
hard to see why, for the wonderful variety and in many cases sheer
boldness of their styling, ranging wildly from mock Tudor to teardrop
streamline, makes them extraordinarily attractive to today’s eyes,
accustomed as we are to the bland uniformity of current offerings. In
this book may be found details of manufacturers in Britain who started
up before World War II. About half of them had ceased trading by 1939
and a number of others did not return to production after the War. Where
makers did start up again details have been included and, whilst nearly
all of these have since gone out of business, Carlight and Eccles are
marques which still exist today – albeit under different ownership. All
of them, from ABC to Yorkshire, and their products, are included in
these pages, with the exception of the ones of which there is no
surviving record. Roger Ellesmere’s painstaking research over a number
of years has yielded information on 177 makers from this period, whose
outputs ranged from around 300 caravans per year down to six, but it is
doubtful whether even 20 of these firms were producing the 50 vans a
year needed to qualify for membership of the Caravan Manufacturers’
Association. Accompanying the text are more than 300 illustrations, a
pleasing mixture of archive photographs with reproductions from
manufacturers’ advertising and publicity material, including some
splendid period artwork. This ingredient in particular gives a strong
flavour of the days when these caravans were to be seen out and about on
Britain’s roads, heading for happy holidays. Published in association
with The Caravan Club, this book surely has a place on the bookshelf of
every caravanner interested in how the caravans we know today have
evolved over the 90-odd years since the first trailer caravans were
built for sale. It is hoped that the publishers will soon be able to
bring out Volume Two, in which Roger Ellesmere will deal with the many
hundreds of firms who took up making caravans after 1945.
Roger Ellesmere is a retired quantity surveyor. He remembers being taken
by his parents in the mid-1950s to visit friends holidaying in a caravan
at Ulrome on the East Yorkshire coast. Once inside, he was hooked, and
caravans have been an abiding interest ever since.Later, he decided that
as detailed a record as possible should be made of the mostly small and
largely forgotten firms who have engaged in caravan manufacture in
Britain. He was deterred from making a start due to the time commitment
that would be required, but a spell of unemployment in 1996 provided the
incentive to begin -- initially on a single work but subsequently split
into two parts to enable the publication of this book, Volume One. His
original estimate of the time commitiment was a grow under-estimate!
Roger has been a Caravan Club member for more than 20 years.
Author: Roger Ellesmere
Author Bio: NA
ISBN: 9781906133467
Publisher: Herridge & Sons Ltd.
Binding Type: Hardcover
Illustrations: 300+ color photos
Language: NA
Pages: 192
Printing Status: In Print
Edition: NA
Country Made: NA