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The picture of that most impressive camper van, seen here recently, told a great tale. It was the success story of a wealthy American businessman who used the vehicle to take his family and some of his staff with him to tour the United States in 1915. The means of transport seen here today seems to be something in the same mould, but the story attached to it supposedly is of a very different kind.
Not only is this particular land yacht a European variant, coming from Austria, but its background is quite the opposite, too—one of impoverishment rather than wealth. The original caption reads: “Photo shows the travelling candy store of Franz von Schlechtleithner, an impoverished Austrian nobleman who has found things unsupportable in his own country and decided to build for himself and his family of three this little house and store, moving on six wheels. He is to tour Europe in the car, selling candy on the way. The store is in the detachable trailer.”
The photograph is said to show von Schlechtleithner standing next to his caravan-cum-candy store and is dated 1922. You’ll notice we’ve not reached a conclusive verdict about the accuracy of the anecdote. The reason is that we haven’t been able to find anything else on the von Schlechtleithners, with or without the "von" or the third "h" in the surname. However, it seems that there is a tale worth telling in this picture. Who knows?
Words: Jeroen Booij
Picture: Underwood & Underwood / Library of Congress
“The world’s only travelling candy store. Austrian Nobleman, Franz von Schlechtleitner of Innsbruck, unable to make a living in his own country, has started on a tour of Europe, under the most remarkable auspices. Being an expert automobilist, with the remnant of his family fortune, he has had a unique motor van built, taking as a model a picturesque Tyrolese cottage. There is a porch on the rear, curtains on the tiny windows and real flowers before them. The interior is divided in a parlor and kitchen, while the bedrooms are upstairs on the second floor. A small trailer attached holds the goods and provisions. By means of a few additional boards, carried on the sides and roof, the van is quickly converted into its real purpose, that of a candy shop, Herr Schlechtleitner and his wife making in the kitchen delicious sweet-meats. In this strange conveyance, accompanied by their three children, they are selling candy in the towns and villages they visit and making an excellent living.”
The story was still of interest in the U.S.A. in May, 1925, by when the Soda Fountain magazine claimed the truck was a Ford. Unlikely, but von Schlechtleitner’s family was reported to be still on the road in the December 3rd, 1927, edition of Deutsch-Amerika, when their candy-wagon was on that shorter chassis with disc wheels, pneumatic tyres and towing a four-wheel trailer. The picture was captioned: “The nobility of labour: Franz von Schlechtleitner, an Austrian nobleman in Innsbruck, who lost all his fortune due to the hardship after the war, had built a mobile confectionery stall and apartment and is now moving with this as a modern nomad from place to place. In this way he feeds himself, his wife, a son and two daughters.”
As to von Schlechtleitner patents, this is from the December 8th, 1931, Commercial Motor magazine of Great Britain: “A Coupling which Increases Road Grip: A coupling for trailers described in patent No. 359,557, by F. von Schlechtleitner, 23, Marktstrasse, Munich, is intended to produce a lifting effect of the front of the tractor, thus increasing the pressure of its rear wheels on the road and giving it greater tractive effect. The rear springs of the tractor are so formed that the stronger the pull on the drawbar, the greater the load on the rear wheels of the tractor. We should imagine that if this principle were carried too far it might result in the tractor rearing up and falling on its driver; cases of the kind have been known, and to avoid it the connection of the drawbar has been carried as low as possible.”