Rich Americans keep high-end RV company rolling along
Summary
Most U.S. recreational vehicles - those behemoths of the roadway often resembling box cars that accidentally wandered off the rails - roll out of gritty factories in the gray environs of Elkhart, Indiana, and aim to satisfy the wanderlust of largely middle-income customers.
Rich Americans keep high-end RV company rolling along
By Timothy Aeppel OXNARD, Calif. (Reuters) - Most U.S. recreational vehicles - those behemoths of the roadway often resembling box cars that accidentally wandered off the rails - roll out of gritty factories in the gray environs of Elkhart, Indiana...
Rich Americans keep high-end RV company rolling along
OXNARD, Calif. - Most U.S. recreational vehicles - those behemoths of the roadway often resembling box cars that accidentally wandered off the rails - roll out of gritty factories in the gray environs of Elkhart, Indiana, and aim to satisfy…
Rich Americans keep high-end RV company rolling along
A woman poses next to one of the first Bowlus aluminum trailers, which were built in the 1930s by an aerospace engineer in Los Angeles and one early use of