2005 >> March  

Message to readers about contents for this month....

  

   

Hemingray Mystery

   
   

Here's another submission from Dave Kurns. It's a common CD 154 Hemingray 42. Take note of the big black-looking blotch. It is NOT junk in the glass. NOT amber swirling. NOT a blob of "snot". NOT a potstone. It's not anything in the glass.

What is on the glass?

...                    [more]


   

Porcelain Commemorative Mickey Mouse Insulators

   By Jason Townsend

   

I've been collecting porcelain insulators for the last four years. The first swap meet I attended was at the home of John and Carol McDougald while they were still living in St. Charles, Illinois. After that meet, I was immediately bitten by the collecting bug, and since then I've wondered about how difficult it would ...                    [more]



   

One of a Kind

   
   

Every summer I like to take a week long vacation to see country and hunt insulators at antique stores and along abandoned lines. On one of these trips I was in an antique store looking for anything of interest and seeing the usual Hemingray 42s when there in front of me hanging on the wall was an insulator ...                    [more]



   

Insulator of the Month

   
   

Randy Wesner submitted this gem as his favorite insulator. It's a CD 134 Pennycuick, wide groove, signal with a continuous drip. That's a rounded projection that goes all the way around the base, and can be clearly observed in the photo above. Pennycuick's are known for their well formed threads. But ...                    [more]



   

"Elektroporcelan Louny's"

   
   

This insulator is from the Czech Republic. It might be a new style of foreign porcelain insulators. It is unmarked but I was told it was made by :ELP" which stands for the following meaning, "Elektroporcelan Louny". I was told this by a friend of mine over there (Frantisek Danek).           
...                    [more]



   

American Beehives

   
   

Samuel Oakman, the inventor and glassmaker behind Boston Bottle Works insulators (see June 2004 issue of Crown Jewels) in the 1870's, had moved to New York by the mid-1880's. He still owned a glass factory in Boston, and some collectors believe some base embossed American Insulator Company products, such ...                    [more]



   

Kids Korner

   
   

Since my Dad found a barrel of insulators at a DAV store this past summer we have gone on several "hunts" on the weekends. We haven't found anything out of the ordinary but the search.& discovery is a lot of fun. This is what we found last weekend. The Hemingray No 40 is more green than ...                    [more]



   A Magazine for Collectors

   
   Photos from "Crown Jewels of the Wire," March 2005
   

CJ In Color!

The following photos are from the March 2005 Crown Jewels of the Wire magazine. These have been provided by the publisher for those wishing to see a color rendition of the black and white photos ...                    [more]



   

CD 162 REPRODUCTION

   
   

The National Insulator Association is a non-profit corporation formed for educational purposes, whose Board and Committee Members are unpaid volunteers. It is the NIA's goal to encourage growth and public awareness of the insulator hobby through collecting, dealing and educational endeavors. The NIA strives to ...                    [more]



   

Mt. Washington Ramshorns

   
   

Last month we reported that Ken Bergstrom won first place at a show for his display of ramshorn insulators. We wanted to say a few more words about his exhibit. Many of the specimens in his collection were removed decades ago from a telegraph line that ran up Mt. Washington in New England. Ken was fortunate to ...                    [more]



   

Stamps

   
   

No matter the language, the message is clear. Electricity is dangerous.
Gene Condon sent in some pictures of "stamps" from his collection.
Gene says these labels aren't postage stamps, but foreign stickers similar to Christmas Seals.
...                    [more]



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