Kokomo Tribune; Kokomo, Indiana

Local News

January 16, 2013

Vintage campers aren’t just a job for Peru-native

PERU — Dan Piper says he has an incurable disease. He calls it “silver fever.”

The main symptom? According to 54-year-old Piper, it’s the obsessive urge to collect shiny, metallic vintage camping trailers.

He first caught the bug in his late 20s, when he purchased a small, beat-up 1960s Shasta trailer for around $200. He patched up the leaky roof, made some other repairs and started camping in it.

After that, Piper said the silver-fever obsession took its full affect.

“At the time, I thought I was the only old-trailer nut out there,” he said. “I thought there was something wrong with me. I was crazy. But once I started looking on the Internet, I realized there’s a lot of us trailer nuts out there.”

That realization led Piper to found Vintage Campers — a 16-year-old business just south of Peru that buys, sells, restores and repairs old campers for vintage aficionados all across the country, and even all over the world.

Piper said his business deals almost exclusively in 1960s-or-older campers, like the iconic Airstream, and the dealership is really the only one of its kind anywhere in the Midwest. You’d have to travel to New York or California to find something similar, he said. They do full restoration work on old campers, sell a slew of original parts, and have shipped vintage trailers to places as far away as France, Germany and Japan.

“It’s a very niche market, and without the Internet we wouldn’t exist,” he said, noting about 90 percent of his business is done online. “But through it, we can reach the world ... It’s amazing. It’s crazy.”

In fact, Vintage Campers is such a rarity that it recently caught the attention of cable station HGTV, who spent a day last year filming his collection for an upcoming TV show on vintage campers and the unique subculture that surrounds them.  

It’s not the first time the business has attracted media attention. Ten years ago, Piper said he sold two trailers to a film company to use in the 2003 movie “Big Fish,” starring actors Danny DeVito and Ewan McGregor. He also rents them out to companies who want to use antique campers in TV commercials.

But you probably wouldn’t guess at Vintage Campers’ national acclaim just by driving by it.

Piper runs his business out of the old Miami County Home, 2574 S. Strawtown Pike, that used to house the county’s poor and destitute. Now the rooms inside the mansion-sized building are packed with old toilets, handles, sinks, doors, windows and piles of small, obscure vintage camper parts.

Outside in a large open field, rows upon rows of metallic trailers glint in the sun. Near the house, an old beat-up Airstream serves as a cozy home for Piper’s dogs. Other trailers are packed with various supplies for the business.

Although Piper said there’s always been a market for antique trailers, he said it’s really picked up in the last few years as retro-themed 1950s stuff has become more mainstream. Just last year, he said he’s noticed vintage trailers in commercials for McDonald’s and Progressive Insurance.

“It’s a growing market, and it’s really growing fast,” he said.

Now, after eight years as a full-time dealership, Piper said they sell about 25 units a year, and ship out around five packages of vintage tailer parts everyday. They’re currently working on fully restoring a 1960s camper a man shipped to them from West Virginia. He said they’ve received so many repair orders that they’re currently about six months behind.

But when it comes to actual customers stopping by in Peru, Piper said during a good week they’ll only see three or four people.

It may be pointless to question why Piper loves vintage trailers so much. After all, who can know the reasons of the heart?

But Piper said he does have his reasons.

“The stuff that they build now, they slap it together pretty quick,” he said. “They’re more concerned about quantity than quality. The stuff I deal in are riveted-constructed trailers. So they’re not just old — they’re the old ones that are built like airplanes. They’re so much more durable.”

Then Piper said there’s the aesthetic appeal.

“They’re just a cool looking rig, whether you’re driving down the highway or pulling into a camp ground,” he said.

Although Piper obviously aims to make a living dealing in vintage campers, he said at his core he’s not a businessman — he’s a collector. In the lot outside the house sit 15 trailers — ranging from a long, slender 1947 Curtis Wright Model 5 to a boxy 1964 Liberty — that make up Piper’s own personal collection. He said these aren’t for sale, just his own personal enjoyment.

“I love to go out and find the trailers,” he said. “That’s the fun part of the business. Restoring and working on them — that feels too much like work to me.”

Carson Gerber is a Kokomo Tribune reporter. He can be reached by phone at 765-854-6739, or by email at carson.gerber@kokomotribune.com.

Text Only | Photo Reprints
Local News
  • NWS - gasoline 02.jpg Hitting the road

    According to a survey released by AAA Travel, 38 percent of travelers indicated high gas prices impacted whether they would travel this weekend or not. This, despite the fact the current national average price for a gallon of gas was about 2 cents lower this time last year and is currently averaging $3.66 a gallon nationwide. Overall travel is down by 0.9 percent from Memorial Day last year.

    May 25, 2013 1 Photo

  • Board weighs flood control options

    Widening Big Cicero Creek to hold more water upstream of Tipton and digging a bypass channel around the city are among the proposals to prevent flooding like that which occurred April 19. There are as many as 20 options ranging in price from $1.7 million to $66 million to choose from, the Big Cicero Creek Drainage Board learned Wednesday.

    May 25, 2013

  • Kokomo Beach will partially open Tuesday

    Kokomo Beach Family Aquatic Center will partially reopen Tuesday, according to the city.

    May 24, 2013

  • BREAKING: 3 more arrested in prostitution probe

    Kokomo police continued putting pressure on local strip clubs by arresting three more dancers on prostitution charges Thursday.

    May 24, 2013

  • Man charged with felony arson

    Kokomo police arrested an 18-year-old man on a felony arson charge Thursday in connection with a trailer fire at a mobile home park at 2700 N. Washington St.

    May 24, 2013

  • Powell looking for Little 500 win

    During the course of his 72 years, Jerry Powell has done a little bit of everything.
    Powell has owned a trucking business, raced sprint cars, has his pilot’s license and is now owner of a racing team. He is also a tool and die maker and produces many parts on the race cars.

    May 24, 2013

  • Layoffs at St. Joseph Hospital possible

    St. Vincent Health announced Thursday it would be laying off employees across its 22-hospital system, which includes St. Joseph Hospital in Kokomo.

    May 24, 2013

  • NHS principal takes job in Lafayette

    Northwestern High School Principal Al Remaly announced he is leaving the district this summer to start a new job at Harrison High School in Lafayette.

    May 24, 2013

  • Helping homeless vets

    As residents reflect on the tireless work of the nation’s military veterans on Memorial Day, a group of Howard County vets is concentrating on veterans without a home.

    May 24, 2013

  • Police arrest 4 dancers on sex charges

    Kokomo police arrest women, employed at Little Daddy's and Big Daddy's strip clubs, on warrants Wednesday accusing them of prostitiution and indecent exposure.

    May 23, 2013

Featured Ads
Only on our website
KT Twitter Updates
Follow me on Twitter

Community Calendar
Loading…
Events by eviesays.com
AP Video
Raw: Trucker Bumps I-5 Bridge Before Collapse Raw: Texas Deputy Shot by Colo. Suspect Honored Major Detours Following Wash. Bridge Collapse American Held in Grisly Czech Murders Raw: Jersey Shore Reopens for Summer UK-bound Pakistan Plane Diverted, 2 Men Arrested Officials: Tsarnaev Friend Linked to Slaying Obama:Sexual Assault Threatens Trust in Military Bridge Collapse Survivor: 'Rough Day' Jersey Shore Open for Business Raw: Memorial Day Flags Placed at Arlington New Wheelchair Lift Promises More Access First Person: Mom Discusses Famous Tornado Photo Raw Video: Washington State Bridge Collapse Boy Scouts Approve Plan to Accept Gay Boys
Parade
Magazine

Click HERE to read all your Parade favorites including Hollywood Wire, Celebrity interviews and photo galleries, Food recipes and cooking tips, Games and lots more.