Shattered Dreams
by Tom Wisser
Reprinted from "Crown Jewels of the Wire", April 1987, page 36
Did you ever dream about coming across thousands of insulators just thrown in
heaps and mounds and 50 gallon drums? Add to your fantasy piles of cobalts,
purples, olives, greens in all CD's including Castles, E.C.&M.s, Columbias
and threadless of all shapes and sizes.
Well, I did when my father-in-law, Ernie, called me last Summer. He said that
a local auto junk yard near him had contracted to rip up a railroad in New
Jersey, and they carted all that "stuff" you collect back to the yard
and everything is just laying there. Since he knows the owner (Ernie knows
everybody), he wanted to know how much he should offer the guy for the whole
mess. Now, Ernie is the type that buys a car at auction one day, washes it, and
sells it the next day for a $10 profit. I said, "Hold on, Pop, wait until I
can come there and look at what they have." He told me I'd better hurry up
because there might be other strange people that get excited over these things.
He has always questioned the sanity of his daughter for sharing my interest in
the hobby.
The pile of crossarms......
A week later, my son and I drove to the yard and found it to be closed.
Through the fence I could see some crossarms and went looking for someone who
could open the gate. After introducing myself to Ernie's son-in-law, I was
allowed into the yard to look around.
The place was unbelievable: junk cars, transmissions, wheels, chassis of all
types, and piles and piles of insulators. My excitement quickly turned to
chagrin when I saw how they were dumped and piled and broken. I was surrounded
by glass and porcelain and wire and brackets and plastic and rubber and,
and.....WHERE WERE ALL THE GEMS YOU WOULD FIGHT A JUNK YARD DOG FOR?
From what I could see at a glance, all the glass was a common variety. What
is on the bottom of the piles and in the 50 gallon drums is anybody's guess.
There were Armstrong, Whitall Tatum, Brookfield, Kerr, Hemingray in all the
common CD's. There were some nice olive pieces in pieces, and some pretty fair
porcelain. Intermixed was plastic, rubber, wire, and transposition brackets. In
the field were piles of poles and crossarms (Farmers buy them for fencing).
Tom Wisser clawing and cussing on a pile
of miscellaneous insulators.
After about 2 hours of digging and climbing and pulling and cussing, I came
away with 3 olive beehives, some white porcelain and brackets which I paid for.
I suppose all this will eventually end up on the "big crossarm in the
sky" since it will be recycled some day. Perhaps there is that gem in there
somewhere, and if anyone wants to look, please let me know.
Bill Wisser carrying a handful of goodies.
By the way, as I was leaving, the owner mentioned the funny ones he found
that are smooth inside. He would let me see them sometime. When he comes home
from Florida, I'll send Ernie out there to look for them!
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