2004 >> January >> Featured Collector Dave Brown  

Featured Collector: Dave Brown
Reprinted from "Crown Jewels of the Wire", January 2004, page 35

Well, there is a bit more to the Big Sky Swap Meet story (page 31), but Left Coast Lines has to wait for future events to catch up with future plans before we can report on any of it. In order to learn more, Left Coast Lines met with Dave and Shirley brown at their Exeter, California home in late September. We picked up a few more details on the story and we had an opportunity to talk with the Browns about collecting insulators.

Dave told us that he had been collecting insulators in and around Exeter since the early '70s. Let's see, that would make him about seven years old. Golly Batman, that's young! Dave was introduced to insulators at the home of his friend whose father was a lineman. The lineman had accumulated quite a few insulators. Dave said, "I remember that they were displayed on a wooden shelf over the guy's fireplace." Dave also remembered his insulator hunting buddy, Alec Dyatt, who was more involved in the hobby and knew about the NIA. Dave had the opportunity to trade, barter, and deal with Dee Willett, Bill Heitkotter, Sid Marcus, Bill Rohde, Ross Huth, Bruce Tulley, and many more. The picture of a thirteen year old Dave Brown with Dee Willett that appears in this article was taken at the Bakersfield show some twenty years ago.


Young Dave Brown fine tunes his sales table at the Tulare show.

Dee was offering to sell Dave a CD161 California with sharp drip points for $250. Dave recalls, "I made that deal with Dee when I was 13. I bargained to give him $50 up front and I promised to pay him twenty-five bucks a month until I had that thing paid off. Problem is, I never did it. After talkin' it over with Mom and Dad, we decided that I just couldn't afford it!" Dave's story of "The One That Got Away" is just like stories that many of us have. Wouldn't it be nice to be able to roll the clock back? Oh well. 

A couple of the other pictures in this article show Dave managing his sale table at various shows in the early and late 1970s. Dave recalls drifting away from the hobby during the early 1980s. He got back into insulators in the mid '90s when fate dropped two collections into his lap from Exeter and Selma. Suddenly Dave found himself in possession of an amber CD145 HGCo beehive, a teal-aqua EC&M, a sage California helmet, a CD 208 Cal cross top, a couple of cobalt Hemingray signals, a sage California egg, and a yellow CD 161 California signal. Those are the pieces he kept! The rest of the insulators sold like hotcakes and before we knew it, Dave was back!


Dee Willett and Dave at age 13

Today, Dave and Shirley still reside in Exeter with their two young sons Daniel and Andrew. They have a beautifully restored 90 year old home on one of the most picturesque streets in the town. Colorful, sparkling insulators can be found all around their home. There are sunlit display windows and backlit display cases in the living room and family room. Dave displays his colored porcelain insulators on shelves out in his shop and there are full height square poles with cross arms and side pins adorning the back yard. Passersby can clearly see many more insulators displayed in the windows of the old store that sits on the front corner of the Brown's property. Other collectors who come to visit Dave and Shirley for the weekend often sleep in the old store on a big, comfortable bed that they have out there.

Even though Dave's large collection seems to "have it all", he is still looking for the CD 200 California. He says that those have always been the hardest to find in really good shape.

Dave also shared that he has a family relative living in northern Montana who is in contact with a Canadian rancher. This rancher has a multiple circuit, multiple cross arm, open wire telephone line across many acres of his ranch. The line is defunct and many of the poles are either sagging or fallen. All of the insulators are lying where they fell and plans are in the works to get up there and investigate the situation as soon as the weather and Dave's work schedule will permit.


This beautiful backlit display case covers an entire wall in the Brown's living room.

We would like to I extend our sincere appreciation to Dave and Shirley Brown for graciously allowing us into their home and sharing so many of their fond, collecting memories with us. 

---Mike Doyle

 



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