NEW KIDS ON THE BLOCK
There have been six new glass insulator finds on the foreign front recently
and this month's article will introduce them to you. All but the first one have
new CD numbers, so let's start with that one.
An Australian Brookfield?
Dave Sztramski loves to dig in the Brookfield dump near the old factory site
in Old Bridge, New Jersey. Who can blame him because he lives in nearby Cranford
and almost always uncovers a few good insulators, or at least pieces of them. As
we all know, the fun is in the anticipation and Dave's anticipation has
certainly paid off. One of his most recent discoveries was a group of seven CD
152's in green aqua. Each had the "BROOKFIELD" embossing on the skirt
and a number "1" on the dome. Four examples were intact but all that
remained of the other three were the crowns. So it's the Brookfield dump and
you'd expect to find these, right? Wrong! Being a thorough person, Dave checked
the pin holes and noticed that they had an unusual number of threads - seven per
inch instead of the usual four he expected to find. Now that was exciting!

He
couldn't wait to call N.R. "Woody" Woodward and report his find. Woody
was even more excited than Dave and was pretty sure those threads were Australian. There is no proof and we may never know what
actually transpired, but he thinks that Brookfield may have made some of these
fine threaded 152's as samples and sent a case or two of them to Australia,
unsolicited, hoping to get an order for more. Brookfield introduced the 152 in
1911 and if all this is true, Woody would place the time frame for that shipment
somewhere between 1912 and 1916. To our knowledge, Australia never used this
style at all so they would probably have turned the offer down flat. The
examples Dave found in the dump may have been left over from the batch of
samples. He agreed to loan me the insulator you see on the previous page. It is
screwed onto an authentic Australian pin and mounted in a cedar block. I'm sure
it feels very much at home. Keep digging Dave, and thanks for sharing.
Two new styles from Italy
Our newly assigned CD 520 is skirt embossed "MIVA // BT 2-P". The
glass color is deep green, almost blackglass. It's a chunky little fellow and
unusually heavy for its size. The glass is very thick through the skirt area,
measuring 1/2" at the base! There is no petticoat. It measure 2-7/8"
across the base and stands 3-1/2" tall. This insulator belongs to Fred
Padgett of Livermore, California. It was brought to him from Italy by his friend
Nathaniel Dorsky, who lives in San Francisco. Fred loves this insulator and he
wanted to make sure that Nathaniel got credit as the source. But Fred deserves
credit too, for loaning me the piece. In pretty quick order, Woody assigned it a
new CD number, I took the photos, and from my measurements and shadow profile,
Elton Gish made a scale drawing to be included in a future update of "Glass
Insulators from Outside North America". This "Texas Team"
appreciates your efforts, Fred.

CD 648 is another newcomer from Italy. At the present time only a small
number of these are in collections this side of the ocean. Known examples have been found in either light blue aqua or straw. All are dome embossed -
some show "MIVA // T-5", and others have only a single number. The
insulator has a base diameter of 2-3/8" and measures about 2-5/8"in
height. This particular style is used on buildings for low voltage electrical
service.

Bernie Warren finds three new
CD's in France
CD 588 is a beautiful double grooved insulator in yellow green It is skirt
embossed "FOLEMBRAY // No 233-2A". The base diameter is 3-1/8"
and the height is 4-3/4". Removing the metal pin from this one was fairly
quick and easy. French cement is almost like Plaster of Paris and soaking
it in water (or even a little muriatic acid) makes it gooshy enough to scoop out
with an ice pick in a relatively short time. That's the good kind.

CD 644 is an undernourished little "gingerbread boy" in dark olive
green. It is similar to CD 643, in that both are the same height and neither has
an inner skirt, but 644 is 1/2" narrower at the base and up through the
skirt. It is definitely different! Only two of these are in captivity at the
present time and they are both scrawny, so we can't blame it on an underpour.
Embossed on the skirt is simply the name ISOREX, nothing else. This particular
variation is super rare and when Bernie allows me to borrow something like this,
it reinforces the sense of trust that I find among insulator collectors.

CD 686.2 was intended for use as a fuse holder. A real beauty in spite
of the fact that it had one corner broken off at the time the photo was
taken. It is embossed "FOLEMBRAY // No 292", and is a very close
relative to the similarly embossed CD 686, which was written up for the October
'96 issue of Crown Jewels. The only difference is that the 686 is
1/2"
taller and shows a "291" rather than a "292". Both
insulators are of the same yellow green glass. Thanks to all of you who help me
keep up to date with new finds!
