Bea Lines
by H.G. "Bea" Hyve
Reprinted from "Crown Jewels of the Wire", March 1989, page 8
"Bea Lines" is very proud this time to interview Don and Dora
Harned of Chico, California. Since this issue marks the twentieth anniversary of
Crown Jewels magazine, it is the perfect time to "talk" with the
couple who got it all started. Not only are Don and Dora the very nicest of
people, but they are pioneers in this hobby of insulator collecting, and they
have given more time and energy to it than most of us can imagine.
Don is a Chico native, having been born there July 11, 1928, and he has lived
there all of his life. He retired from the Delta-McLean Trucking Company in
1985, after being with them for thirty years. He started out as a driver, and
retired as foreman-dispatcher.
Dora was born in Barre, Vermont, September 24, 1926. Her family left Vermont
when she was seven, and settled in Mariposa, California, where she spent her
school years. She moved to Sam Francisco around 1940 or 1941, then moved to
Paradise, California, around 1943. That same year she met Don in Chico. They
were married in Reno, Nevada, September 5, 1944.
Don and Dora have a daughter, Doreen, and two sons, Tom, and Don, Jr. They
have four grandchildren. Doreen and husband Wes Conrad have one son, Greg. Tom
has one son, Todd, and Don, Jr. has two daughters, Billijo (B. J.) and Kelli.
Don and Dora are also great grandparents, as Greg and his wife Becky, who live
in Italy, have a daughter named Alisha.
The Harneds got interested in insulators around 1967, but the story actually
starts before that. Dora became interested in old bottles around 1961 after
having dug some. But Don couldn't "see" bottles, and couldn't get
interested in them. Dora helped form the Bidwell (Chico) Bottle Club in the
early 1960s, and served a year and a half as vice president. Dora says it
happened this way. "I talked my friend (and my daughter's mother-in-law)
Irma Conrad into going to a bottle club meeting. At the end of the meeting, she
told me that she didn't think she wanted to collect bottles, but she thought she
would collect insulators, since her husband was a lineman. He'd bring them
home, therefore she was more familiar with them. I went home and told Don that
Irma was going to join the club, but that she was going to collect insulators,
and we both laughed about it; like, what was there to collect about insulators?
You'd get a dozen or so and have them all. That's really how we felt about them
at the time, because we were ignorant about them and didn't realize how many
varieties there were, or the different colors and shapes.
Dora (and Dee Dee) and Don at
Chris Buys', Boulder, CO June 1970
"Irma got written up in a womans' magazine on the crazy things people
collect. As soon as it came out, she started getting calls and letters from
people everywhere. Some even shipped insulators to her, mostly from the Midwest. When Don saw the cobalts and ambers, and the
different styles, that's
when he became interested in insulators, and I followed suit. I traded all of my
bottles for insulators. This was about 1967 or 1968.
"We started out as general collectors, figuring that we could get them
all, like many believe at first. I collected porcelain for a while; Don
collected glass. We helped each other get pieces for our collections. After a
few years we realized that we weren't going to get them all. Then around 1972
Don got his first threadless and his interest turned to them at that time. He
still has his general collection, but he specializes in threadless, and has
sixty-seven pieces. His main 'want' is an ERW threadless in any color. He
prefers mint but will take anything.
"I gradually lost interest in the porcelain, and most of it has been
sold by now. We ran out of room because the glass collection got so large. Plus,
I didn't have the time for collecting once I got the magazine started."
Concerning the beginning of Crown Jewels Don says, "Around November of
1968 I was delivering freight, and took a printing press to a shop in Chico. The
guy who was getting the press, Richard Scharffenberg, asked me if I had a
hobby, because he wanted to get into printing hobby journals. When I told him
that I collected insulators and that there was no magazine for them, he asked me
if I wanted to become the editor of an insulator magazine. He said he'd do all
of the research and furnish the reading material, if we'd furnish the contacts.
I told him that I was definitely not interested, as I was very busy in the
trucking business. He insisted that he wanted to come to the house and talk to
us about it, so I gave him my name and address and figured that would be the end of it.
Some beauties from Don's threadless collection
Left to right: CD 790 glass teapot, blackglass; CD 736
NYERR, puce; CD 788
slash top, yellow green; sim. CD 740 (much shorter base) Tillotson 16 Broadway
NY, emerald green; CD 735 Chester NY, pale aqua with a big amber swirl and
bubbles
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More beauties from the general collection
Left to right: CD 120 unembossed CEW, purple; CD 123 E. C. & M., cobalt
blue; CD 130.1 Cal Elec Works, cobalt blue; CD 123 E. C. & M., olive amber;
CD 120 embossed CEW, olive green amber
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Part of the general and threadless collection
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In the insulator room
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Don and Dora at one
of the
Chico shows c. 1975
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"But sure enough, three days later he showed up. He talked Dora and Irma
into starting the magazine, but before the first issue came out, Irma decided
that she didn't want any part of it. So Dora got busy and sent out fliers to
every collector whose name and address she had, and also got names from bottle
magazine ads. Back then a lot of people advertised in the Antique Trader, so we
got additional names and addresses that way."
One hundred sixty issues were sent out the first month. From then on, from
word-of-mouth advertising and from answers to the fliers, subscriptions started
coming back in with $4.00, the price of twelve issues when it first began in
March of 1969. Dora continues, "The number of subscriptions continually
grew, the average being between 1,000 and 1,300. We reached a peak of 1,853
(first and second class mail) when I took over the subscriptions from Cross Arms
in August of 1975. From beginning to end, Crown Jewels was self-supporting. We
didn't make a lot of money from it, but we never had to borrow to meet expenses.
It was truly a labor of love."
As for production, ads and articles were sent to Dora, who was the editor,
and she assembled the material in her home. At first she had the help of her
mother Bertha, and Irma Conrad. But Irma passed away in 1972, and her mother in
1979, which put a greater burden on Dora. Don was in charge of the ads, and also
did a second proofreading of each issue after Dora had done the first one. The
Scharffenbergs, Richard and Myrtle, moved to Riverside, California, several
years later, so then Dora had to send the material to them, they'd send it back,
and from her home, Dora would put addresses on and sort the magazines for
mailing. It was a full time job, because even before one issue was out, items
were coming in for the next one. There was very little time for collecting, or
for much of anything else.
In Don's right hand; New Jersey no name, little blackglass threadless hat,
dark reddish amber. Left hand; little blackglass threadless hat, sim. CD 741.2.
Dora is holding a little Pennsylvania glass block in aqua; her favorite
insulator
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Dora's second favorite insulator, a porcelain block and bracket (seen on page
9 of Collectible Porcelain Insulators Supp lement, by Gerald Brown)
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Gradually Dora developed some problems with her health, mostly with her legs,
which made it almost impossible to sit at a desk for hours, as the job required.
So she started thinking about selling the magazine and retiring. It was a very difficult
decision, because Crown Jewels had been "born" right in her home, and was
like a child to her and Don. Selling it did not come easy. But in the spring of
1985 the magazine was sold to John and Carol McDougald, then of Cleveland, Ohio.
Dora published the April-May combined issue and Carol began as editor with the
June issue.
The Harneds published one hundred ninety-four issues of Crown Jewels, and
owned it for sixteen years and two months. It was the very first magazine just
for insulator collectors. In fact, on the cover of every issue were the words,
"Dedicated to Insulator Collectors Everywhere". For a time (February
of 1972 through July of 1975), another fine magazine on insulators called Cross
Arms was printed. But after it was discontinued, Crown Jewels once again became
the only "voice" for insulator collectors and has remained so until
today. From its very inception, Crown Jewels has been the cohesive force in our
hobby, keeping us together worldwide. It's where we meet to trade, sell, buy,
advertise, inform, and tell about our shows and personal experiences.
The name of the magazine changed slightly when the McDougalds took over. Now
it is called Crown Jewels of the Wire; Harneds called it Insulators Crown Jewels
of the Wire. But how did it originally get its name? Dora says, "So many people
have asked me how I came up with the name of the magazine. Not long before we
began publishing it, we subscribed to Old Bottle Magazine for the insulator
column that Frances Terrill wrote. She ran a contest and had collectors send in
names for her column. I submitted "Insulators Crown Jewels of the
Wire", which was apparently rejected. So when we started our magazine, I
already had the name."
Crown Jewels
business as usual
December 1972
Don and Dora have contributed much more to the hobby besides Crown Jewels.
They helped found the NIA and are charter members, and Don served on the first
NIA Rules Committee. They have attended countless shows including almost every
national.
They co-hosted the first western regional show in Oroville, California,
August 24-25, 1974, plus several smaller shows there. They've helped put on
other collectables shows in Chico and Reno, and Don was show chairman (host) at
the Chico shows for about four years. Both Don and Dora co-hosted the ninth NIA
national show in Reno, Nevada, in 1978. Don has also served as a judge for
displays at many shows. He was appointed by the NIA board to serve out the term
of a little over a year as western VP of the NIA when Pat Patocka became
president in 1978. What a resumé of dedication and service to our hobby!
Ribbon presented to Dora at
Colorado Springs, CO
July 1971
Although it could never really be possible to show the Harneds how much this
hobby appreciates all that they've done, the NIA has given them the two highest
awards it bestows. Dora comments, "The first honor I ever received in the
hobby happened at the second national in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Jesse
Moreland was the host. Around 2:00 in the afternoon they called me up on stage
to the microphone, and presented me with a ribbon for 'exceptional service to
the field'. Then they wanted me to say a few words, but I was so flabbergasted,
all I could manage was 'thank you', and, 'it is a great honor'; and then I cried.
"But the real high point of my career was receiving the Outstanding
Service Award. I got the award at the seventh NIA national show in 1976 in
Berea, Ohio. I was very honored to get it, but more honored to be chosen as the
first one. We also received lifetime memberships in the NIA at the national in
Cedar Rapids, Iowa, in 1982."
Dora with the Outstanding Service Award,
the first one presented by the NIA
I wish we could go on and on with this interview, for there is so much more
to tell. For instance, I'd like to relate some of the great stories they have told about the
hobby, especially of the early years. The Harneds attended the very first
national show (called a national swap meet for the first two years), and were in
on the ground floor of the formation of this hobby. They are very interesting
people to talk to, and both are wonderful storytellers. But Dora would be the
first to understand about the limited amount of space in a magazine! So I will just
have to conclude by saying that I have truly enjoyed doing this interview. It
was an honor and a privilege to have been given the opportunity to do it for
Crown Jewels. We have known the Harneds since 1972, and we have loved them both
with all of our hearts since then. Better friends than Don and Dora have been to
us would be impossible to find. Dora has had some very serious health problems for a while, and especially recently. We certainly hope that things improve for
you, Dora, and we all wish you a speedy recovery, and a much healthier future!
All of us in this insulator hobby thank you both for everything you have
given to it; your time, your efforts, your resources. You helped us get started, and you kept us together. Thank
you for creating something we all love so much... Crown Jewels.
Dora and Don
Tacoma, WA
July 21, 1984
To all my good friends out there in insulator land,
Just a note to say "THANK YOU" for all your beautiful get well
cards, notes and telephone calls during my recent hospital stay and illness. I
still have a long road to recovery.
Don and I have made so many wonderful and lasting friendships thru this hobby
it has truly enriched our lives and you are very much appreciated and loved.
I sincerely hope to be able to meet all of you at some of our great insulator
shows again soon.
Happy insulator collecting,
DORA HARNED
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