Feather-light and ultracool, the classic Bowlus trailer is rolling after 80 years, thanks to the drive of a father and daughter
After earning an undergraduate degree in economics at Wharton and a master’s in finance at the International University of Monaco, Geneva Long knew she had the entrepreneur’s itch—she dreamed of updating and relaunching forgotten brands. “I grew up watching my parents passionately build their company,” says the 25-year-old Long. “No matter the pivots or missteps, they made working look like the most fun you could have.”
Her parents, John Long and Helena Mitchell, had pioneered internet banking systems two decades ago. “In 1999 Helena and I sold Quadravision after growing it for seven years to over 400 employees serving financial institutions with internet solutions in the US, Canada and Europe,” explains John Long.
He spent his first years of early retirement restoring a 1935 Bowlus Road Chief travel trailer for road tripping with his vintage 1937 Tatra, which he showed at the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance in 2011. “The positive reactions at the Palm Springs Modernism Show and by attendees at SXSW in 2010 encouraged the decision to rejuvenate the brand,” he says. “Bowlus Road Chief was actually a true zombie trademark,” adds Geneva. “It was never registered nor was it ever held by another party, so securing it was much easier than we anticipated.”
Developed by Hawley Bowlus in the years after he led construction of Charles Lindbergh’s Spirit of St Louis, the Bowlus Road Chief was 80 years ahead of its time. Bowlus, a world leader in the design of sailplanes and gliders who also worked on the early development of the Learjet, brought the engineering and design principles of aircraft and race cars to the travel trailer: A light weight, a low centre of gravity, stable aerodynamics and not a square inch gone to waste. The original Bowlus remains a marvel of efficient packaging and Streamline Moderne design. The iconic Airstream trailer owes its very existence to the Road Chief. (The Airstream company was founded by former Bowlus marketer Wally Byam.) And original Road Chiefs still have tremendous cachet: A 1935 Bowlus went for $187,000 at the Gooding & Co Scottsdale auction in 2011.
Ride and shine: Geneva Long and her father, John, bought the zombie trademark for the iconic Bowlus trailer—a precursor to the Airstream—and breathed new life into the brand
(This story appears in the 15 April, 2016 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)