1987 >> September >> Up And Down The Spiral Trail  

Up And Down The Spiral Trail
by Robert L. Winkler

Reprinted from "Crown Jewels of the Wire", September 1987, page 21

It was towards the fall of 1971 that I received my first copy of the book Porcelain Insulators and How They Grew by Brent Mills. On page 121 of the chapter covering the history of the Jeffery DeWitt Co., a photo and brief historical account of the development of the "spiral Type" line insulator was first introduced to me. I was immediately interested in finding out more information on this rather revolutionary design and a few months later I acquired a copy of Jack Tod's first edition of Porcelain Insulators Guide Book for Collectors.

Jack's history on the development of the spiral insulator was more detailed than the original Mill's account with more information on the work done by Jeffery DeWitt on the spiral design concept. One statement in particular stuck with me off and on for two years: "A complete double-circuit line near a steel mill was constructed with these units and they were found to be remarkably clean after nine years of service.

Well, I have spent my entire life in the Hammond - Gary - Michigan City area of northwest Indiana, a steel producing center of the U. S. since the turn of the century and a world leading area in that product for many of those years. My grandfather and father were steel men all their lives.

In any event, I always thought that the Hammond - Gary area would be an ideal mill contamination environment for spiral insulators. What if indeed spirals had actually been used on lines right here in Indiana, just miles from where I live!

About two years later in April, 1973, I was at the annual insulator show in Greencastle, Indiana. As luck would have it, Jack Tod, on his way home from one of his great research trips, stopped by to attend the show. What happened next is best told in Jack's article from the October, 1973 issue of Crown Jewels. That article is reprinted here in part:

In 1971 while searching through file cabinets of some obsolete material at the McGraw-Edison Insulator plant (formerly Illinois Elec. Pore.), Macomb, Illinois, I found a copy of a very detailed Jeffery-Dewitt summary report on all their development work on theme types. This included photos of Helicals under wet flashover test and tabulated test data and conclusions reached. Also, it included a very clear photo of the double-circuit line with six of the Spiral insulators per pole - as mentioned in the above book excerpt.

Earlier this year I went to Kenova, West Virginia in an effort to search the old J-D dump for any remnants of Spiral or Helical specimens. However, this search was not possible because the property is now occupied by a large coal tipple owned by the Ohio River Co., and I could not obtain permission to search the old dump area at the local office there.

Robert Winkler of Michigan City, Indiana is a serious student of old pole line construction practices, and I'm sure you have found this out from his excellent drawings in the "Porcelain Corner" for the past two years. He also has an excellent memory for what he has observed over the years.

Well, the line construction with the J-D Spirals looked just a bid odd to me, so on a long shot I showed the J-D photo to Robert while in Indiana last spring. Fantastic Luck! Robert instantly recognized this line as an old one (no longer there) in use by the South Shore R.R. in the 1930's, and also the nearly precise location as east of the Gary Station at Broadway.

At the next opportunity, Robert visited NIPSCO's Gary, Indiana Engineering Dept. The Engineering Supervisor there couldn't recall anything about these insulators but anyway they decided to pull a few "pole cards" from the file to have a look. Again, success!

One card for the "4th Polo East of Broadway" had the following notation:

A card for the "9th Pole East of Broadway" had the following notations (note the 1-over-2, maybe indicating one insulator was later removed);

The penciled-in removal date had been erased when the line was rebuilt in 1954, but under one of the 54's Robert could see what might have been a 39 (1939).

This concrete information led Robert to interview Albert Cook, a member of the South Shore R.R. line crew since 1942. Robert had gotten information from him before and found him to be "remarkably accurate" after checking it out further. The initial question was merely if Mr. Cook knew of any experimental insulators once used on the NIPSCO lines at Gary, Indiana.

Yes, he did. When he came on the line in 1942, these units were still in service and he remembers seeing them himself. He said "They were blood red color; boy they were pretty ... there were some a real light grey color." [I won't believe that "blood red" until I see one, and I presume the others were the proverbial "J-D blue" used by J-D on all their insulators rated 27 Kv and up. Jack]

Mr. Cook explained that they were designed to let the water "spiral" down to wash the insulator clean, but that they periodically sent the fire truck down the line to hose them off as part of the experiment. He estimates there were only approximately 300 or less on the line.

And for the epilog, Robert quotes Mr. Cook an saying, "They seemed to be as bad or worse than regular insulators, and they were taken down and thrown away sometime during the war [WW II]. You [collectors] could have had all you wanted of the damn things, but I never knew anyone would want them, and we can't pick up everything. We have enough old junk as it is."

Robert's research isn't over. It shouldn't take a genius to figure out what he's doing now - besides looking in the "original underbrush" along that stretch. He is now trying to find another NIPSCO oldtimer who remembers where they used to throw away their "junk" back "during the war". Good luck, Robert. If you find a specimen, we'll award you the cupie doll - and if it's a "blood red" one, we'll gold plate the cupie doll and stud its eyes with genuine rubies. 

I would like to add the following to Jack's article:

First, the Engineering Supervisor at the Gary NIPSCO was extremely skeptical (to say the least) about my story of these insulators having been used in his district. However, he listened patiently and after we found those 'all-telling" notes on the old pole cards, he had a complete change in attitudes. I dare say I could have told him that the noon is made of green cheese and he would have accepted it as a scientific fact!

Secondly, I did check all other possible leads I could come up with at the time, all resulting in deadends. A search of the underbrush along the pole line was hopeless as the toll road bridgework, installed in 1955-56, was built immediately adjacent to the railroad right-of-way through the entire area in which the spirals were employed. Any that might have been tossed (at 22 lbs. each this toss would be an Olympic Class shot-put) in the weeds would have been bulldozed into history!

Finally, the last good information I received on the use of these insulators came from the late Albert Cook of the South Shore Railroad Line Department and that is covered in the material from Crown Jewels you have just read. Good ole Albert was almost apologetic to me about the fact that he had not thought to save a couple of these insulators for thirty years after they came down to give to me now.

By 1976, the leads and information have come down to "0". If I was ever going to locate one of these insulators I figured it would have to be by the rarest of chance encounters! I could not shake the belief though that somewhere an old retired NIPSCO lineman was sitting in a rocking chair with a very unusual porcelain spittoon by his side! It is a vision that I still have from time to time and, take my word for it, that it is rather interesting, even after all these years!

In the fall of 1983, after quite a bit of correspondence, I finally met Ken Stefan for the first time in person on one of his trips back to Michigan. We were naturally talking about porcelain insulators of all types and the subject got around (as it always does with insulator collectors for some reason which you cannot even find in the Bible) to the topic of our "dream insulator".

Ken's dream insulator was, and still is, a Thomas product of the multi-part "lily-shell" variety with a white glaze from an early EHV line in Canada. (In those days, anything above 10 kV was "extra high voltage"!).

I told Ken that the only insulator that I would pay "real" money for or trade an "eye tooth" or two for was an original style spiral unit as in Mills' book and used on the NIPSCO line in Gary, Indiana years ago.

The next summer Ken went to work as an electrical engineer for Commonwealth Edison Co. in Chicago, Illinois. A letter from Ken on July 28, 1984 contained an attention getting revelation: "Bob, I met an insulator collector at work who has a spiral lime post insulator." That was interesting! It was to get even more interesting a few days later!

After Ken went to see this animal in the flesh, he wrote me back on August 1 that he had more accurate information. This collector did indeed have a spiral insulator and that it was actually a pin type and not a post type!

My first inclination was that it might be the Helical version, but a conversation with Ken a couple weeks later revealed that it was the same style as shown in the photo in Mills' book. Also, this collector was Jim Crandall who I later met as one of the hosts of the 1985 National and he knew of two others!

Jim was kind enough to bring the unit to the London Show in November 1985 and the thirteen years of ups and downs with as many twists and turns as in the insulator, I finally not only had the opportunity to see one of these units, but to actually have one in my hands, a feat that I had long ago figured would probably never come to pass!

What I did not know at the time was that in less than a year I would be holding one again, this time in my own collection. This would be the result of Ken's excellent detective work.

Also, not only would we eventually find more of these insulators, but that we would end up with genuine historical documentation of the use of these same units on a line in Illinois. That line was possibly the first line to be equipped with spirals (the NIPSCO units were installed in May, 1930, the Wilmette, Illinois units about six months earlier) and we would see the last units possibly in service anywhere on the original poles, construction, hardware and wire as installed in 1929. Less than a year later, the line would be entirely converted to underground service!

The location of the spiral line was of great curiosity to those who knew about it. For those not familiar with Wilmette, Illinois, it is an attractive clean little community of very nice homes along tree shaded streets. That was the setting of these insulators when we saw them. In the early years, the line was partly in the woods and it was hard to figure out the use of insulators designed for heavy contamination being used in this environment!

Fortunately, the Commonwealth Edison Co. had kept fairly complete records on file of the history of this line and the letter we found from October 10, 1929 (see copy of the letter attached) answered that question and a few others. The original installation site of Joliet made more sense as it had, and to some degree still has, areas ideal for line tests of contamination insulators.

Some general information on the spiral insulators is in order here. The insulator that Jim Crandall has and another one scrounged up by Ken Stefan, are nearly identical with the one in the photo in Brent Mills' book which is on display at the Lapp Museum. They are chocolate brown made by the casting method and have a 3/4 inch threaded steel pin thimble cemented in then with a lead alloy material (common for J-D insulators of the period) They are unmarked, except Ken's has a blue ink factory code on the firing rest similar to others I have seen on J-D two skirters. Both are of the two spiral design. One of the two spirals starts on either side of the conductor groove with the second spiral starting on the opposite side running down below the first.

The most noticeable difference between the unit in the Lapp Museum and Ken's and Jim's insulators is that, unlike the one at Lapp which has a trimmer blade cut wire groove, theirs has a cast wire groove.

The unit that I have is different from the three mentioned above. First, it has a machined tie wire groove the first I have seen on a J-D cast insulator. This might indicate that it was an early production unit while they were still getting the "bugs" out of this extremely complex design. Secondly, the spirals start out of register compared to the other three insulators. The others have the upper termination of the spirals starting immediately below the conductor groove, where as my unit has the terminations starting about 45 degrees off center of the conductor groove, on the side of the insulator and ending 45 degrees off from the other units.

Thanks to Elton Gish, I was supplied with a copy of the original patent filed by Charles Stroup on March 16, 1929 (patent No. 1,869,397 dated August 2, 1932 -- see attached copy of patent) which helped in the research on these insulators. We now believe due to the timing, location and the original company which used these insulators (Public Service Co. of Northern Illinois which was Charles Stroup's employer) coupled with details of the insulators, that Wilmette units may have been the first production spiral insulators made by J-D and the first line to be equipped with them.

The insulators installed on the line in Gary, Indiana described in the 1939 Stroup report were probably made about the same time as the 1929 units for Joliet and ended up in Wilmette. The units in Gary did not go into service until May, 1930. It should also be noted that both Public Service Co. of Northern Illinois and the Northern Indiana Public Service Co. which owned the spiral line in Gary were both under the same management at that time.

The Stroup report refers to the spirals on the Gary, Indiana line as "the original shape of the first spiral insulators" and though the line may be the second to be equipped with them, it was the first to employ them in a severely contaminated atmosphere, thus receiving all the attention during the testing years. The Wilmette line was gradually forgotten awaiting the arrival of the insulator collector to give the line the historical treatment it deserves! A photo of this line is shown below.

I would like to thank Ken Stefan and Jim Crandall as they are the two people who really made most of this story possible by locating these insulators and providing much of the information gathered since 1980.

It is hoped and believed that the spiral story is not yet over. A few more of these insulators will almost certainly by tracked down by us or others off the old Wilmette line and hopefully a few more will find their way into collections or museums. There is still information to be gathered and questions to be answered on these interesting insulators and I intend to keep one ear to the ground with the hopes of reporting more news and findings on the spiral saga in the future.




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