Ask Woody
by N. R. Woodward
Reprinted from "Crown Jewels of the Wire", June 1995, page 23
N. R. "Woody" Woodward is the author of THE GLASS INSULATOR IN
AMERICA, 1988 Report and developed
the Consolidated Design Numbers identification system for glass insulators.
From David Whitten, Clarksville, Indiana
QUESTION: Has there been any further research done regarding the star
embossed insulators? I recently ran across information about the Star Glass
Works (1869) of New Albany, Indiana and its successor DePauw’s Plate Glass
Work (1880).
ANSWER: Unfortunately at this time we have no definite proof of the
manufacturer of the STAR insulators. The reference to the Star Glass Works of
New Albany, using the same data you have supplied, has been around for quite a
few years and has been published as fact in at least one instance. Although the
one notation indicates that they did manufacture insulators, it doesn’t fit
the massive nationwide distribution of the STAR insulators that were marketed by
General Electric Supply Co. in the early part of this century.
Since the name Star Glass Works was used 1869 to 1880, one would expect to
find insulators of the styles in use during that period. Instead, the STAR
insulators that we know fit a later period. For example; the June 17, 1890
patent date on a cable insulator; drip points on some styles; and the double
petticoat, covered by an 1883 patent which would have expired in 1900.
Carrying the thought farther, even assuming that the star logo could have
been used later by DePauw and American Plate Glass, one encounters the unlikely
assumption that a firm making plate or window glass would also make insulators
in the same plant. Insulators are the product of a plant equipped to make
pressed and blown glassware, a totally different operation from the manufacture
of plate glass and I know of no case where the two have been combined.
As a final thought, in my research across the country I have located several
glass works using the name Star. For example I spent considerable time and
effort in West Virginia attempting to establish a link to STAR insulators with a
firm by that name there, but to no avail. Moreover, since the insulators were
marketed by General Electric Supply, It is entirely possible that the firm that
made them did not market them independently; and the firm name may not have
included the word Star. Remember, MAYDWELL insulators were made by Crystalite
Products; and most KNOWLES insulators were made by Novelty Glass Works!
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