One insulator that is rather interesting when it comes to Canadian porcelain
insulators, is the large beehive with the metal cap on top. These don't show up
very often and they come in an unmarked very dark brown glaze and a
"CP" skirt embossed white version. There is also a report of an
unembossed white one, but an example of this can't be located for verification
at this time.
The white insulators were made by the Canadian Porcelain company in Hamilton
Ontario. There have been regular white unembossed beehives found on the site of
the former plant, so it would not have taken much retooling to make this
insulator with a hole through the top of the pinhole.
The other style is more crude in appearance. These insulators are so dark
brown they are nearly black in color. They were made by the Medalta Potteries
Ltd. of Medicine Hat, Alberta. The Medalta company's insulators are factory
made, but their process involved a lot of hands-on labour, resulting in each
insulator having a handmade look to it. I can only imagine the working
conditions that these insulators were made under in the 1920s. These insulators
sold for 7.5 - 10 cents each, yet they had to be handled by so many workers.

There has been a rumor that these insulators were used on lightening rod
applications. This however was not the designed application. There could very
well have been a few enterprising builders who used this style of insulator on a
barn or old house. Back then many used whatever was handy to get the job done.
There were considerably less rules and regulations. I have it second hand from a
retired telegraph lineman out of Swift Currant, Saskatchewan that these
insulators were in fact used to bring a signal down from an upper line through
lower crossarms to the telegraph station, junction or contact point.

These "feed through", or drop down insulators, were used by the
Canadian Pacific Railway in western Canada. Medalta Potteries Ltd. is out of
business now, but they made a wide range of items. Collectors look for their
items and there is such an interest that there is a museum in Medicine Hat that
has preserved many items of the factory's memorabilia. Among the company papers,
there is a series of letters that tell of the development issues Medalta had
making these insulators for the CPR. As with almost any new product, there were
tooling, material and learning problems during the development of this new
insulator. Quality seemed to be the problem, rather than quantity.
Later in the negotiations, CPR decided they wanted white insulators rather
than the darker glazes that Medalta was used to making. Medalta's clay tended to
be more of a natural gray color, so their clear glaze was not exactly what the
customer wanted either. Other problems that Medalta encountered included off
center pinholes/conductor holes, shrinkage problems with the threads, wire
groove flaws and tooling development issues.
One letter from CPR to Medalta indicates that an insulator's wire groove is
perhaps the most important area of an insulator when durability is considered.
L.O. Hutton of the CPR Telegraph in Calgary, states that in cold weather,
insulator failures were frequent. It seems the wire groove area of the
insulators were commonly being cut through by the telegraph wire. Presumably
this was due to the wire contracting in the cold temperatures.
Also in the correspondence is a reference to Medalta making a similar styled
white insulator without the hole in the top of the dome. As far as we know, none
of these insulators have surfaced in collections to date, so where these ended
up is a mystery for now. Medalta suggested these experimental insulators be sent
to other parts of the telegraph system for appraisal. CPR liked these insulators
and made noises about buying 1000's of them if the price was close or better
than the glass insulators coming out of Montreal Quebec for $77.50 - $80.00 per 1000.
There are slightly more of the CP versions in collections etc, so it can
safely be said that the supply contract ended up with Canadian Porcelain, after
months of the Canadian Pacific Railway working with Medalta as a local supplier.
It seems that there were several hundred of the metal-capped beehives made by
the Medalta Potteries Ltd. They were distributed all over the west from Winnipeg
to British Columbia in 1926. It is interesting to know that there were so many
made, yet they are quite uncommon in the collections of today's collectors. I
guess this goes to show how many insulators have been destroyed or lost forever
in undocumented dumps across the country. I would venture to say that the same %
holds true for most styles of insulators. 1000s made, hundreds around, 100s
made, a few dozen currently known etc.
The principal of these insulators was that they insulated two conductors.
Like most insulators, one conductor was wired into the wire groove on the side
of the insulators as we see on the common CD145 style. These special insulators
were mounted on a cast hollow metal pin. The pin is embossed "PTD'D
1921". The 1921 patent date, together with the known correspondence in
1926, shows that the concept of a pin type drop-down insulator was in
development for quite a while. The 16 ga wire that ran down through the middle
of the hollow pin was insulated with relatively thick rubber insulation and then
wrapped in a thin metal, which was probably lead. The metal cover was probably
there to prevent the rubber insulation from wearing and shorting out to the
inside of the metal pin. This wire was fastened to the insulator by a lead cap
that pinched the wire in a hole at the top of the insulator's pinhole and dome.
CPR installed the wire and metal caps when the insulators were being installed
on the lines. Presumably there were a few inches of wire sticking out the top of
the insulator's dome and the bottom of the insulator pin to allow the drop wire
to be crimped on. Most of the known examples of this insulator style have had
the copper wire cut off flush with the lead cap for either salvage or display
reasons.

Photo credits: Daryl Heron, Dave Spencer and the CIC Magazine
I would like to thank Dave Spencer and Daryl Heron for their extra effort in
getting some modern pictures of these insulators and the details of how they
were used. Credit is also due to the CIC Magazine, previously published by Mark
Lauckner and Russ Paton.
This column's header insulator is a cd106 styled porcelain insulator that was
manufactured by the Medalta Potteries Ltd. This style is the most often seen
Medalta insulator and is more common in the orange glaze than the white glaze.
Other News:
Announcing the 2nd Annual Southwestern Ontario Insulator Meet.
Saturday June 4th 2005. The Nicpon farm outside Mount Brydges Ontario will be
the site of this outdoor meet. Contact Tom Iannelli 519-641-0098 or Barrett
Nicpon 519-264-2572 for more information.
It is difficult to write of the passing of a fellow collector. Tom Bond of
Maple Ridge BC passed away Feb 18, 2005. Tom hosted quite a few meets at his
place over the years. Those who knew him, will remember his easy going, low key
manner and ready smile.
Feel free to drop CJOW or myself a note if you have anything you would like to
see covered in the way of Canadian insulator news or information. Good
Collecting.... ... Robin
Robin Plewes, Almonte Ontario. Phone: 613-256-7638
Email: robin.plewes@cmcelectronics.ca