Caravan racing was a novelty at Silverstone
Many children of the ’60s and ’70s have memories (fond or otherwise) of van holidays
Caravans and camper vans feature only rarely in Autocar these days – but half a century ago they were a regular and prominent topic, reflecting the popularity of such vehicles among the British public.
Before the advent of cheap flights abroad, hauling a very small, very basic hotel room into a field somewhere was how the average family could ‘get away from it all’.
Caravans were nothing new: the UK’s Caravan Club is 118 years old. But the austerity of post-war Britain led to a ‘golden age’ for them in the 1960s and 1970s, as car ownership had become a realistic prospect for the middle and working classes and people were starting to have more money to spare on pleasure.
In the 1950s, around 3000 caravans were being made in the UK annually; by 1972, that figure had soared to a peak of 67,000.
Already by 1959, the caravan industry had outgrown its corner of the London motor show and held its own Earl’s Court expo, with some 46 makers and 86 suppliers, service providers and traders in attendance.
“There is no doubt that, at the moment, the British caravan industry leads the world,” we reported proudly. From Astral through Eccles and Lynton to Sprite, we saw many “caravans of excellent design and construction”.
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By then the British Caravan Road Rally was already well established, featuring tests of hill climbing, fast towing, braking and distance judgement – not to forget a very inelegant concours d’elegance.
Later, track tests and even racing were added. We reported from Silverstone in 1973: “There was a fantastic battle between the Ford Mustang and Cavalier of Brian Charig and Colin Grewer’s potent-sounding Volvo 131 and Bailey Mikado.
Inevitably Charig was able to draw away on the straights, but Grewer repeatedly caught up by taking the corners of the Club circuit under full power and with little or no preliminary braking. The average speed was nearly 60mph.” Mad! But we’re getting ahead of ourselves.
Back to 1965, and the van conversion industry was booming too. Camper vans weren’t bound by the 40mph limit of caravans and were simpler to drive but mostly lacked standing height and had far fewer amenities. “The old ‘penny wise, pound foolish’ theory applies very much. It can be a mistake to buy too simple a model,” we advised.
Popular donor vans included the Volkswagen Type 2, Ford’s Transit, Rootes’ Commer FC, BMC’s Morris J2 and J4 and Vauxhall’s Bedford CA. Camper vans’ heyday ended in 1973, when they and caravans were hit with the new value added tax, raising prices by around 10%.
Other buying guides from Autocar included those for caravan accessories: shock dampers, jacks, brackets, awnings, battery-powered televisions, porta-showers, ‘chemical sanitation’ (not bogs?) and even a periscope.
Not everyone was in on the craze, of course. “For as long as I can remember, I have been against caravans,” wrote our man David Phipps in 1971. “They clutter up the roads, and three weeks in one must surely constitute grounds for divorce.”
But when he acquiesced to his two young children’s pleas to attend that year’s German Grand Prix, a caravan was the only viable option.
He had been offered one by Rolf Stommelen, the driver for German caravan maker Eifelland’s new F1 team. Not a joke! Founder Günther Hennerici had always been a racing enthusiast, and what better way to promote his business? Amazing, considering that even Cadillac is hardly welcome in F1 these days.
Phipps ended up taking his family all the way to Radstadt in Austria, yet “my Ford Cortina Estate needed no attention whatsoever, I am still happily married and I am actually contemplating doing this again”.
Not all caravanners were so lucky. When racer Brian Redman used one for his 1967 European tour, he was awoken one evening by his wife getting the thing sideways.
“There was a tremendous jerk as the body came off the chassis,” he recalled. “I looked out and there was absolute devastation – luggage all over the road and a VW up a tree! It had crashed avoiding our mayhem.
We gathered everything up as best we could and went to the nearest hotel for the night. The only people staying there were the owners of the VW… The local scrap metal dealer gave me £5 for the caravan chassis and charged me £15 for a roof rack to take what we salvaged of our gear!”