Loading our first camper for one of our first camping trips.
(Click on any picture to see an enlarged version.)
This slide was made on an inferior film (probably Ferannia, sold by 3M). It is not very sharp. The colors were faded and washed out, but some work in Photoshop fixed that. Whatever its photographic faults may be, the picture is absolutely precious to us.
The year was 1969. The scene was our home in Miami. We were loading our first camper for one of our first camping trips.
Eight-year-old Rob, or Robbie, as we called him then (he's a very distinguished college professor and author these days) is holding one-year-old Donny (now a successful businessman). Louise is packing things in the trunk of our 1963 Plymouth (a really good car).
Our camper was a Ted Williams model, sold by Sears. We bought ours used for about $400, as best I remember. It was small and light and easy to tow, but the top opened out to a big tent that was plenty roomy for us.
The body of the camper was accessed by two large doors, one on each side. In the compartment on one side I built a set of shelves to hold non-perishable foods and cooking utensils. On the other side, I placed a crib mattress and it became Donny's bed, as you can see below. We also had a chest-of-drawers, with drawers for clothes for each of us. When traveling, we simply slid the chest into the compartment (first removing Donny, of course) and closed the door.
Donny's bed/storage compartment in our Ted Williams camper.
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My uncle Richard owned a '63 Plymouth Belvedere. He drove it well into the 1980s, and gave it up only because the floorpan was rusting out and there was a giant hole in the floor in front of the driver's seat. But that engine and transmission just wouldn't quit.
ReplyDeleteThe Plymouth was a great road car. We used to make the trip from Tallahassee to Miami (490 miles) in six hours.
ReplyDelete