Seeking hidden but not so buried treasure
"Dealer Wanted", read the subject line of an email I received in
September. The writer explained he had inherited some insulators from his father
and wished to sell them, "I've got some that are embossed HEMINGRAY and
some BROOKFIELD", the email continued.
Not too promising a start, I
thought. After exchanging emails a couple of times, the man sent scanned images
of his father's handwritten notes about the insulators. While the father listed
each insulator, it was obvious he had never heard of CD numbers. He just listed
the name embossed on the insulator and the color.
Generally it was impossible to
be sure what was included in the accumulation. But the notes captured my
attention when I read, "Box containing 20 purple CALIFORNIA'S in the #20
style."
Did he mean CD 133 CALIFORNIA'S in purple? They are listed in the
price guide at $150 each and up. " Twenty of them?", I asked myself.
Suddenly, driving 1,300 miles round trip to view the insulators didn't seem
quite so bad.
HEMINGRAY, MCLAUGHLIN, MAYDWELL and other companies identified
their CD 164 shaped insulators as a #20 style. But the CD 164's CALIFORNIA made
are not embossed, so the man would not have identified them as "No
20's".
The clincher seemed to be when the collector listed a number of
insulators in aqua embossed only "No. 20". "Now those certainly
are CD 133's", I told myself as I began planning for a long weekend drive.
About "oh-dark-thirty" on October 11th, Tim Wood and I left our homes
in Western Oregon for the long drive to the Spokane area of Eastern Washington
State. Although I had scheduled my visit with the owner, I hadn't had contact
with him for several days. And seven hours into our drive I still wasn't able to
reach him by phone. But we traveled on, finally making phone contact just a few
miles outside his home town.
In preparation for us, the owner had set out some
twenty tattered, old boxes stuffed full of insulators on table tops. The dirty,
mouse infested, boxes had been 28 years in storage, based on the fact the
insulators were wrapped in newspapers dated 1975.
The first insulator I
unwrapped was a CALIFORNIA CD 161 in aqua. The second was also a CALIFORNIA, but
one rarely seen. It was the insulator shown at the top of page 40 (below). CD 134
CALIFORNIA'S closely resemble CD 161 's, except they have no inner skirt. They
have been recognized as a tough insulator to obtain for more than three decades.
In 1970, I acquired one for resale. I ended up accepting $120 worth of
insulators in trade, plus $60 in cash. By comparison, I sold a near mint CD 123
EC&M CO SF in cobalt blue that same spring for $180.
CALIFORNIA CD 134
Overlooked and Rare

The CD 134 has no inner skirt, like a CD 133 shown on the right. However,
with the broader shaped dome, the134 is often mistaken for a CD 161.
After a twenty year absence from the hobby, I began collecting again in 1997.
I wasn't well versed on current prices, and didn't even own a price guide, when
I started attending shows again. I remember seeing a CALIFORNIA CD 134 on a
sales table priced at $25 and thought to myself, "Hmm... a bunch of these
must have been found since I last collected". Just a few months later, at
another show, I saw another CD 134 CALIFORNIA on a sales table for $30. After
that, for a year or two, I was quite convinced a number of them had surfaced.
Then, contributors to Insulator Collectors on the Net (ICON) conducted a census
of the various tough CALIFORNIA CD's. The result, as I recall, was that only 42
CD 134's could be accounted for.
I then realized the two I had seen on sales
tables had been priced low because their owners had not recognized what they
were. If collectors noticed the lack of an inner skirt, they might have thought
they were CD 133's. Or, if they didn't notice the lack of an inner skirt, the
insulators were apt to have been considered CD 161's. Today, CALIFORNIA CD 134's
are valued in the Price Guide at $200-$250.
Now, back to Washington State, You
can imagine my excitement to find a CALIFORNIA 134 as the second insulator out
of a box. "Wow, if only the purple CD 133's are among the hundreds of dirty
insulators in all these boxes", I thought. But, they weren't. The 20 purple
CALIFORNIA's turned out to be smokey colored CALIFORNIA CD 162's.
However, we
did make another good find in those boxes. While Tim was unwrapping insulators
he came across a half dozen amber HG CO CD 162 signals. Two of them are
"glowers". The bright orange amber specimens "scream" for
attention. Needless to say, I bought the collection. Tim and I ate a late
afternoon lunch, and headed for home. The long, long road to Spokane will be
full of memories for years to come.

Tim Wood cleans one of the treasures from the "California
hunt"