Mac's Believe It Or Not!
by John McDougald (1st article) and Bob Stahr (2nd article)
Reprinted from "Crown Jewels of the Wire", March 1998, page 33
In my October 1997 column, I shared with you the discovery of an interesting
insulator (well, MOST of the insulator) by Darin Cochran of Indianapolis,
Indiana. The cable top looked like a No.3 Cable (CD 254), but the base looked
more like a Hemingray-23 or -24 (CD's 241 and CD 241.2 respectively) or possibly
a CD 232 with drip points. At that writing, the piece was a new style, and I am
pleased to have Bob Stahr of St. John, Indiana share the story of its discovery
and subsequent CD assignment by N.R. Woodward of Houston, Texas.
CD 254 and New CD 271
Read on . . . for the full story. . .
CD 271
by Bob Stahr
It's no secret that Darin Cochran, Roger Lucas, and I have been having great
fun digging at Hemingray's original factory site in Muncie, IN. On a sunny day
in early December 1996, our fun turned into genuine excitement. I chose a spot I
remembered as having good potential, Darin chose another spot and Roger chose
his. As we were digging, I heard Darin yell over to me "Hey Bob, what
insulator is this?" Imagine Darin on one side of a cyclone fence and Roger
and I on another. Roger and I approached Darin as he displayed a broken power
piece.
Darin digs the deepest! (and always finds something interesting)
In this
photo of Darin Cochran, notice the insulators in the foreground.
Included in
this are CD 282 Hemingray No 2 Provo, assorted
misshapen solid pours of
Hemingray 42's ...
and the new CD 271.
Being very familiar with Hemingray, the next words out of my mouth were
"A new CD!" First wanting to jump over the fence and look for more, Roger and I quickly gained our composure and stood there
in amazement at Darin's new discovery. At this time we also discovered how much
Darin liked using a shovel. He found this piece about 4 feet down. After some
discussion, including instructions to Darin to "find the other part of the
embossing", Roger and I went back to our "spots".
After about
five minutes I yelled out "YES!". This time, I brought my piece over
towards Darin, and Roger came towards us. They both said what is it and I
exclaimed "an unembossed CD 100.6!".
Now Roger was in a predicament.
Should I dig near Darin or Bob? Roger later decided to come over by me, and
after watching me pull out a few more pieces of CD 100.6's and a couple whole
ones, he almost gave up digging. Roger was only three feet away from me and
wasn't finding any CD 100.6 E-1's. I convinced Roger to continue digging anyway
and he did end up finding a few CD 128 Hemingray E-1's in an unreported ice blue
color.
In short, dump digging at Hemingray has its pitfalls. Items seem to be
strewn about very sporadically, and are usually broken. It is very unpredictable
to locate a specific spot that contains anything of real rarity. We all felt
extremely lucky that day and we prayed that there might be more days like this
in the future. Upon leaving for the day, we all hoped that the piece Darin dug
would be assigned a new CD. Much to our hopes the new piece has recently been
assigned CD 271. Only Hemingray enthusiasts can guess the rest of the embossing
on this piece. I have a few, what are yours?
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The new CD 271 in Hemi Blue.
Front skirt embossing would have read:
HEMINGRAY
-#.
Rear skirt would have read:
MADE IN U.S.A.
Unfortunately not enough
embossing was found to determine its style number. |
Shadow profile drawing by Bob Stahr.
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