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The first bus manufacturer to go into formal production of motorhomes was the Flxible Bus Company of Loudonville, Ohio. The Flxible Bus Company got its start in 1912 as the Flxible Sidecar Company, a manufacturer of motorcycle sidecars. The odd spelling of the name Flxible is derived from the fact that the name Flexible couldn’t be trademarked. After World War I, demand for motorcycles dropped because of lower automobile prices and safety issues with motorcycles, so Flxible turned its sights to the commercial automobile (ambulances and funeral cars) and bus business. The first Flxible bus rolled off the line in 1924. Throughout the 1930s and ’40s Flexible continued to build busses and other commercial vehicles, most of which were built on a Buick chassis. Flxible buses, which came in Clipper, VL-100, Hi Level, Flxliner, Starliner, City Bus, and Flxette models, have always ranked high on the list for people who want to turn a bus into a house on wheels. The durability and stylish design of “Flexies” are their chief assets. The most desirable model is the Flxible Clipper, first introduced in the late 1930s, and then widely used by the Greyhound and Trailways bus companies in the 1940s and ’50s. Among the luminaries who owned Flxible buses were Buck Owens, Flatt and Scruggs, and Little Richard. Flxible owners like to point to the movie Key Largo, starring Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall where the first major character was brought into the movie via a Flxible Clipper. The Flxible Company may be no more (in 1996, it filed for bankruptcy and its assets were auctioned), but thanks to a dedicated cadre of Flxible owners it lives on. See the resources section at the end of this book for details on clubs. This 1949 Flxible Clipper was originally owned by a man named Fritz, who bought it as a shell in 1950. He installed beautiful mahogany wood cabinets and accents and used long-lasting marine-grade metal for most of the hardware. The current owners replaced the original Buick Straight Eight engine with a 454 Chevy engine that has an Allison automatic transmission. Joe and Gail Pirri own the Flxible. Photographed at Flywheelers Park, Avon Park, Florida.