NATIONAL - Why I Collect Insulators
Reprinted from "Crown Jewels of the Wire", September 2000, (Insert) page 15
Curtis Erickson, Royal Oak, Michigan
NIA Junior Display Award
Best First Time
Displayer by the CFIC
Best Exhibit Using CDs by DJIC
There are four reasons I collect insulators. I like the different
manufacturers and it is a challenge to try and get one example of each company
that made insulators. I also like the variety of insulator shapes and then there
are the colors -- just about every color of the rainbow is available. The last
area of interest are the miscellaneous insulators -- metal bands around the
skirt to protect them from BB guns shots, foreign insulators that are painted
and insulators that have pieces of metal, unmixed colors, milk swirls and steam.
Curtis says: I started collecting when I was 7 years old. I like trains and at a
train show there were some insulators. My dad bought me one and I just kept on going. My
mom and dad both helped me in the beginning. Now, it is fellow collectors like
those I have met through ICON.
Curtis Erickson
There are many insulators in the display that
have interesting stories, but I think the insulator with the root growing
through the insulator is my favorite. My dad found it in the Flint River in the
70's. The display case I purchased recently from Stuart Miller.
My favorite
insulator is the cobalt blue signal. Stuart and Isabel Miller, who found the
cache of twin pin insulators in Michigan, sold me their display stand. I believe
that Mrs. Miller was the artist whose drawings are on the ends of the stand. I
think it would be nice to have a twin pin to put in their display case.
On a family trip to northern Michigan, we happened upon an antique store.
Stuart and Isabella Miller owned this store. They have a very large assortment
of insulators at their store. Mr. Miller is one of the pioneers of the
insulator-collecting hobby. Most insulator collectors recognize Mr. Miller as
the discoverer of the CD 138.9, commonly known as the Miller Twin-Pin. While in
the deep, dark depths of the Miller's basement, I discussed that I was going to
build a display case for the 2000 National Insulator Association show. Mr. Miller then offered me
his display case that he made in 1969. Mrs. Miller had painted the pictures on
the sides of the case. The display case was in major disrepair, but I restored
it and preserved Mrs. Miller's unique paintings. The Miller's said they would be
honored to have their newly restored case on display at the National Insulator
Association show.
A family favorite because of the embossing
on the insulator has a
"familiar name"
-- a CD 250.2 Ericsson.
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