2002 >> December >> Red Hot Color from South of the Border  

Red Hot Color from South of the Border
by Dale Huber

Reprinted from "Crown Jewels of the Wire", December 2002, page 33

I was honored when Carol McDougald asked if I would write the bylines for the photos in this issue of Crown Jewels. (See color insert "Red Hot Color from South of the Border", pages 1-4)

I have collected insulators since 1970, hard to believe, I was ten years old then. Anyway one of my claims to fame have been my many trips to Mexico. The first trip was in the early 70's with my Dad and older brother, Art. We drove from Arizona to Mexico City then back up to Texas. One stop on that trip was to a small glass factory in Texcoco, a suburb of Mexico City. They had a small brick oven there filled with insulators. As memory serves we got about 75, embossed Texcoco CD 155 in emerald greens, over a hundred unembossed CD 155 in dark olive green and about a dozen CD 106.5 as shown on page 1. We went back about 10 years ago and they were all gone, apparently used as cullet to make bottles and other similar items. 

On that trip my dad bought some CD107 PSSA ponies in a hardware store in Mexico City, some of those were in a beautiful citron yellow. For you mud collectors, we also found a small power piece marked New Lexington in substation near Guadalajara.

In more recent trips I have found several of the beautiful Mexican insulators pictured. The emerald green CD 133.5 Tel Fed Mex from a small spur line a few hundred miles south of Texas. The CD155 PSSA in purple is a tough one. I have found two and "a half" in my 15 or so trips. One near Hermosio. It had so much soot on it I couldn't tell it was purple. The find of our trip sat in the back of the truck until I got around to washing it some time Later. As I slowly washed off the soot I couldn't believe my eyes-it was purple! The other one was found hundreds of miles away near Saltio. That was an interesting Line --- miles of junk-Hemi 42's and then a purple PSSA, then more miles of junk and then a purple dome embossed CD133 Brookfield. I guess it was worth the walk.

I went down with Jim Sanders in the mid-eighties. He was the guy that picked some of the green Cal Electric Works down there. We went back to see if he left any. No such luck, but we did find about a half dozen CD162.7 No Embossings in purple . At least those covered our airfare. The CD 155 RYT's came from a railroad line from Nogales to Guymas. They were golden amber (this photo doesn't do it justice; they are a glowing bubbly golden amber), emerald green and cornflower blue.

The CD 214's were found in many parts of Mexico. They are hard to find in decent condition especially those with long drip points. The light yellows are extremely rare. 

Every trip to Mexico starts with high hopes. Insulator hunting in Mexico is interesting. You dream about the trip for months. After two days you wonder why you are there and can't wait to get back to the good old U.S.A. Mexico is different. In the USA it is common to cross an intersection on a yellow light, don't do this in Mexico, yellow means STOP! You have to stop at yellow lights because in Mexico they push the red before it turns green, just Like racecar drivers. I have watched cars block before the red light turns green. little differences like that slowly create a Mexico fatigue for gringo's like me.

I have found very few insulators on the ground. The railroad right-of-way is periodically burned throughout Mexico. Burning kills the grass, brush and trees that might grow along the tracks. It also kills any insulators on the ground. Burning would also burn the telephone poles except for one thing-most of the poles are steel. The most common pole is railroad track; you know what the wheels of the train roll on. They get used track and stick it in the ground and bolt a cross arm to it. The rail varies but is typically the rail is about 4" tall and 4"wide. Common pole spikes are of no help in Mexico. With a lot of brute force it is possible to climb a few poles each day or use a ladder. Insulator hunting in Mexico is not for the faint of heart, I must admit driving down there is more frightening than climbing the poles. These days most of the pole lines are abandoned. They are rapidly salvaging the lines for the steel poles. The insulators left on the ground have a short life. Kids either break them or when the right of way is burned, I still keep going back. The beer is cold, the food is tasty and every once in a while I get lucky. The last trip we found a two-tone bubbly purple/ aqua CD 162.7 Tel Fed Mex- unbelievable.

In the Last few years hunting for insulators in Mexico has changed. The telegraph lines along most of the railroads are abandoned and the poles are being removed. 

It is also common to see goats or horses grazing in the railroad right-of-way. Young children are left to watch the animals. The rocks these kids throw have caused me so much grief. It's amazing how many good insulators they have destroyed.

Editor's Note: Dale is in Mexico, as of this printing, and I wish him a safe journey and the best of luck at returning "north of the border" with additional Mexican glass.

With this kind of color available, you too might decide to add a little bit of Mexico to your collection.

 

103.4 No Embossing
Emerald green

106 R.AYALA.L
Green
106 ERICSSON TELEFONOS
Amber
 
106 Cia Comercial Ericsson 
Cornflower blue
106 SM-1 
Green Blackglass
106.2 P.S.S.A. #9
Gray
    
106.4 No Embossing
Milky aqua
106.5 CRISOLTEXCOCO
Green with seed bubbles
107 P.S.S.A. No 9
Bubbly light yellow green
107.2 No Embossing 
Straw
133 TEL. FED./MEX. 
Emerald Green with milk
133.1 SAMUEL HNOS/ NEW YORK 
Aqua
       
133.5 TEL.FED./MEX 
Emerald Green
154 A A 
Aqua
154.5 DERFLINGER 
Yellow Green

 

155 RYT 
Golden Amber
155 RYT 
Emerald Green
    
155 PSSA 42
Purple
162 SM-2
Olive Amber Blackglass
   
162.7 DERF TELGS NACLS MEXICO 
Dark olive green
Some of the162.7 styles can exhibit a lot of crude molding and color variations like this two-tone aqua and amber.
   
162.7 DERF TELGS NACLS MEXICO 
Amber black glass
162.7 NO EMBOSSING 
Purple
   
214 TELEGRAFOS NACIONALES 
range from yellow to dark red amber.
   
Some Telegrafos units also have incredibly long drip points. 250.2 TELEFONOS ERICSSON-LD-1
Olive green

 


735.5 LINEA DEL SUPO GOBIERNO 
Green aqua
740.8 TELEGRAFO DE JALISCO P 
embossed around the pinhole 
Dark green


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