Porcelain insulator specialist Jason Townsend recently came across two marvelous
"go-withs" for his collection.
Townsend met someone who
mentioned he owned two porcelain dogs that had been made at the Locke insulator
factory. The owner said he was an employee at the Locke factory more than fifty
years ago.
Townsend found the dogs irresistible, and purchased them as unique,
although unofficial, products of the Locke Insulator Company. In selling the
dogs to Townsend, the man agreed to sign an affidavit attesting them to be
genuine products made at Locke. That notarized statement is pictured below.
Like most any collector, Townsend was excited to show off his purchase. It's
true the dogs aren't insulators. However, if the clay was gathered from the
floor of the mold room, then these two dogs could easily have been insulators
instead.
LOCKE INSULATOR COMPANY PORCELAIN DOGS



September 14, 2003
Dear Jason Townsend,
I do attest with this letter that I was employed by Locke Insulator of
Baltimore, MD in 1947 as a cost estimator. It was there and at that time that I
had these 2 dogs made by a fellow employee, who was known as Big Charlie. He
also made the ashtray. Big Charlie was the clean up man in the mold room. He had
made an elephant mold and a dog mold. I asked him to make me 2 elephants and 2
dogs, as well as the ashtray. He used the scrap clay that he had gathered from
the floor of the mold room.
I know very little about Big Charlie. I do not know
his full name or where he was from. He was an African American, very artistic
and very kind to me. He was a very likable person.

|