The Long, Long Trailer, Somewhere, USA, 1958

Size really does matter! It should be called the longest trailer. Certainly it must be. The highway hog is a rather stylish and very deluxe creation with that smart two-tone turquoise and white paint scheme. Those porthole windows on both the front and back door are amazing. I know!
The enormous home away from home on wheels simply dwarfs a creamy white and light lime green 1956 Oldsmobile four-door hardtop. Can you imagine in your wildest dreams being the captain of this accident waiting to happen? On level ground ok. But what about trying to pull this motion mansion up a hill or worse yet have it behind you going downhill. I smell brakes! And what about baking up? I’d be up for the challenge anytime.
Never mind the stress on the driver think about the stress in the poor car. Oldsmobile’s were notorious in their day for being powerful cars but this haul job would be a bit much for any car of any period. And the whole thing perched on those tiny little tires just waiting to blowout.
I’ll never forget the first time I saw the 1954 movie classic, The Long Long Trailer starring Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz. It was during the late seventies when ABC showed movies in the afternoon opposite Dinah and the Mike Douglas Show. I was already a huge fan of Lucy and Ricky and it didn’t take me long to figure out that The Long, Long Trailer is basically a feature length version I Love Lucy in color. And I loved it, of course!
Here’s to the Long, Long Trailer, the longest trailer, the driver and you!






I believe there were actually two or three 32″ New Moon “Challengers” used in filming The Long, Long Trailer. You can tell the true length of the various New Moon models by matching the window configurations with the data found in the original catalogs. 32″ is not really that long by today’s standards. One or two of the New Moons were cut in half at the studio to open them up for filming, lighting & camera purposes. The unaltered trailer we see being towed by the 1953 Mercury in the film was eventually placed pool-side in Lucy and Desi’s backyard where it was used for many years as a cabana, pool house, etc., a fond memento of a wonderful film. A more powerful 1953 Lincoln Capri was substituted in some scenes to pull the heavy New Moon up the mountainside. The car lines looked similar, both being Ford products. True car buff can spot the differences.
I want to resond the long long trailer in 1954 I am the big huge fan to Lucille & Desi and I like to tow it around in west michigan Just outside by Ensley township and the corner of birds meat market keep going East on locust of 104th Street.
thanks!!!!! Brad
My dad worked for New Moon homes in Alma Michigan and helped build the long trailer for Lucy and Desi Arnaz. He told me that he had wrote his name behind a wall but was caught and had to remove it. My uncle also worked for New Moon homes and still lives in Michigan. We moved to Calif in the Sixty’s. We watched the movie The Long Long Trailer when it came out.
Gloria
My dad work for for New Moon homes in Alma Mich and helped built this long trailer. He told me he signed his name behind one of the walls and was caught and had to remove it. My uncle also worked for New Moon homes…he still lives in Michigan, we moved to Calif in the sixty’s.
Gloria
1987-1995 lived in a 1957 10×45′ spartan imperial villa it was the rolls of trailers $9600 in 1957 !! like $135,000 2011 $$s solid ash wood cabints, paneling eye level oven . wish id kept it il own a another spatan some day there are lot of spatans, vagabonds, new moons, shult,trailers just waiting to be restored siting in trailer parks or pack yards
We worked building New Moon homes from 1950 to 1965 and I am very happy to share memories of the Long long trailer for Ricardo and I love Lucy in Alama Mich.
I wish somebody will e-mail a photo of the long long ytailer, for memories
Like David Owens I to Would like to know if the original trailer used in the movie still exists, and who owns it
Thanks Jim Martin
Does anyone know if the original trailer used in the film The long Long trailer still exists and where it is if it does.
Thanks
David
I worked for New Moon home’s in Alma Michigan 1950 to 1965, and I am very proud I worked for Jim Redman.
Rosendo Alaniz
Does anyone know where they actually filmed the trailer going up the steep hills? One source said is was Whitney Portal out of Lone Pines, and another stated it was a road out of Lee Vining? Also, how did they get the trailer up those hills? Was the trailer just a shell? ’53 Lincolns were not designed to pull 6000 lb trailers. Thx
Charle, this really hits home. I lived in one of these at the Shore Acres Trailer Park in Ventura, Ca. It was adjacent to the River levee on the north end of town. It was a Moon with those round portholes and a small bathroom similar in size to airliner facilities. The railroad trestle and hobo jungle were nearby and one day we came home and found a vagabound using our facility. A note on The Long,Long Trailer, The studio did not want to make it because they thought people would not pay to see Lucy and Desi when they could turn on their TVs and see them for free..
I can’t believe that I’ve never signed up for this. So sorry I missed the Roller Rink Extravaganza!
That 56 Olds is a dead ringer for the Pastacio/Cream FO-DO Baby owned by the queen of all Googie, Adriene B. Imagine trying to move that 35′er w/o the assistance of power steering. Hers isn’t so equipped, No wonder she can save buidings in a single bound!
Extremely Cool Photo.
I also remember the days of the afternoon movies on KABC-7 called the 3:30 movie That generally lasted till about 5:30pm.
Lots if Frankie & Annette as well as Elvis,Ann Margaret,Dean Martin, Jerry Lewis & Frank Sinatra.
Brian, my husband of 55 yrs. is 78yrs.old; he has always wanted to ride in the Good Year Blimp. We were born in L.B. CA and have seen it for yrs. I thought that would be a wonderful surprise. I don’t need to go. He was an elem.school principal for 35yrs.& is very generous person w/his time,caring & labor.
That trailor is outragous!I guess it must have typified the excess of a post WWII America where everything bigger was better!How tmes changed!!I too enjoyed the Lucy-Ricky extravaganza about the Long Trailor…I remeber seeing it on a UHF channel one late-nite weekend in the mid-1970s with some equally unique friends!!Good times indeed.
My husband’s grandparents had an old airstream (silver bullet) trailer that they took across the US when they retired and they loved all the attention, but in retrospect his grandmother always is stunned that they survived without air conditioning. Especially since in those days (60′s) people dressed up every day – no ponytails or sloppy shorts. I can’t imagine baking inside while setting your hair…
I live in a beach town trailer park, and my neighbor has a similar trailer that has been here since the 50′s. I can’t imagine anyone pulling that thing around on vacation! PS: I proudly display “Southern California in the 50′s” on my rattan & blonde formica coffee table. It seems so fitting.
Charles – thank you for this memory. I too remember the Long Long Trailer with Lucy and Dezi! FYI – that moview was partially filmed in Laguna Beach. The trailer park that they tried to get the long, long trailer into was Treasure Island Trailer Park on Pacific Coast Highway in South Laguna Beach on the ocean side. Today you will know it as the Montage Resort.
Thanks – as always – for the memories!
Jim Foster
Although as a teen car nut knew the use of a ’53 Merc was insane. It was still the old flat head with about 110 HP. They should have waited for the new engine in ’54 with perhaps 140. I really wanted to flatten Lucy for hiding all the rocks and almost killing them. I would have left here there and then!
I LOVE “The Long Long Trailer”. It has been one of my favorites for a very long time. Spreding the night at The Shady Dell? Sounds like pure heaven to me!!
There is a great destination for those of us who love all things vintage. In Bisbee, Arizona, the Shady Dell lets you stay the night in one of several restored Airstreams. Each has a theme, like “Honeymoon”, and comes complete with vintage chenille bedspreads,Bakelite plates, yearbooks, wedding albums, coffee percolators, TV sets and old movies to play on the (modern) VCR. The park also offers accommodations on their “Tiki Bus” and even a yacht which has a deck built around it. All things awesome!
We have one of these trailers, not exactly the same but similar, in our back yard and it’s rotting all to heck from years of sitting outside. Still, when I saw it I wondered what kind of truck it would take to move this thing. Turns out you can move it with a ’50s Oldsmobile – whoda thunk it?
I guess moving it would be one thing but, as Charles said, getting it to stop moving with drum brakes on your car is another issue altogether.
Part of me will be happy when the trailer leaves our back yard on the bed of a scrap truck, but I guess there is a sad side, too. Incidentally, we “inherited” the trailer when we bought the property.
Wow! I would love to see the inside of the long, long trailer! I bet you it is the beautiful blonde wood that was so popular. What is in the backseat of the car with the touch of red?
Charles, thanks for sharing your treasures!
Donna E.
Re: the trailer. All I can say is, “WO.”
This is truly a bizarre situation. Was the photographer the owner of this apparatus and took the picture as a sense of pride? OR perhaps the photographer saw the insanity of this rig and wanted to document it because nobody would ever believe it.
Trailers this large were never sold as temporary vacation lodges, rather they were always intended to be a complete home. Towing it with a standard car was crazy. Which is why the Lucy trailer movie was immediately recognized as a comic theme.
In the postwar years their was a belief that a certain segment of the population WOULD live like gypsies and move into and out of trailer parks as the weather and their personal desires dictated. This never happend of course and instead the house trailers were rarely moved again after they were first set up in a park.
The advantages of free spirited living and wanderlust could never eclipse the greater advantages of a stable community, long neighborly relationships, stable jobs and most importantly ecconomic apprication of real estate as opposed to the depreication of a trailer. This of course lead to the pejorative description of ‘trailer trash’.
Historyphiles interested in this period would enjoy the book “Diners, Bowling Alleys, and Trailer Parks: Chasing the American Dream in the Postwar Consumer Culture” by Andrew Hurley
Thanks for the great image Charles!
Aaahhhh that’s too funny. I discovered watching that movie in the same ’70s-afternoon time frame. What a great archetype in this slide! Are those six posts whitewashed?