Foreign Insulators
by Marilyn Albers
Reprinted from "INSULATORS - Crown Jewels of the Wire", July 1979, page 7
Meissen Porcelain!
In the October 1978 issue of Crown Jewels,
Jack Tod called for a volunteer who would be willing to serve as "clearing
house" for information about foreign porcelains. It needed to be someone
who had time and energy to spend on this labor of love, and who, ideally, had
already an established interest in collecting foreign insulators. I held up my
hand, folks, so here we go, you and I, and with this issue we'll begin,
hopefully, a series of monthly articles dealing with foreign insulators.
So many
of you have fallen in love with the odd shapes and weird markings, but are
baffled as to what countries the insulators came from, who manufactured them,
and what all those hieroglyphics mean. Join the crowd! We'll talk about both
porcelain and glass, because it would be unlikely that anyone hung up on foreign
insulators would have only one or the other in his collection. Some countries
produce or use only porcelain, some only glass. And I don't know about you, but
I'm sure not going to turn anything down. I don't remember who that idiot was
who walked off and left three gorgeous white porcelains at the telephone company
in Luxembourg and said, "Only glass, thank you!" (Ahem!)
I certainly
don't know all the facts, and I'm sure you don't, either; but we can learn an
awful lot from each other by pooling what information we do have, collecting and
organizing it in one place, and then adding to it as we learn more. Some facts
we may never learn, because circumstances make the research impossible; but
let's at least begin, and see what we can do to clear up some of the mysteries.
But, please, let's leave room for arguments -- friendly ones -- because we may
think we know something for sure about an insulator and state it to be a
fact,
and then have it all turned around the next month by someone who's been there
and knows better what the real truth is. That's great! That's how we'll learn.
The present aim is to catalogue insulators by country and/or markings, by shape,
where they were manufactured and by whom. I will need lots of help from you; I
can't do it alone, Please send sketches or photos, measurements, color, and,
most important, an accurate reproduction of any markings (identified as to
incuse, embossed, underglaze ink, etc.). At your request I will mail you
directions on how to make shadow drawings and how to lift those markings right
off the insulator so they are accurate and can be reproduced onto a piece of
paper for the record. This is Jack Tod's method, which he has written up in very
simplified form and suggests that I pass it on to you. It is also outlined in
great detail in Crown Jewels, November, 1978.
The shadow drawing or photo is
ideal, but I'll be very grateful for a sketch of the insulator, plus any
markings, and the measurements. If you know the country or have any information
about the manufacturer please include this, too. Any amusing story you can tell
us about how you got the insulator would make reading the article more fun. If
you have questions you want to ask, and I can't answer them, I'll try to find
out what I can for you. This is your column -- the information in it will be built
upon what you'd like to share with other collectors.
There are about 500
foreign insulators in my collection, both porcelain and glass, representing 31
countries, 15 of which I've visited during three different month long summer
trips in the last ten years. I helped chaperone a group of high school students
touring Europe under the leadership of one Father John Brock, who teaches Latin
at St. Joseph's High School in Jackson, Mississippi, where we lived before
moving to Houston. Five of my six children have each had the opportunity to go
on one of the trips as they reached high school age -- the sixth is scheduled to
go with me in 1981, and, very hopefully, this time, my husband, too.
On the trip
in 1975, of the ten countries visited, five were behind the "Iron
Curtain", and under Communist control. Our group (26 students and eleven
adults) was guest of the German Democratic Republic during our ten day stay in
East Germany. We were provided with a chartered bus and a charming young guide
named Harold, who saw us through East Berlin, Dresden, Meissen, Leipzig,
Eisenach, and Potsdam. On the way from Dresden to Leipzig our bus stopped in
Meissen, which is about ten miles out of Dresden. This town is the home of the
famous Meissen porcelain China figurines, dishes, clocks, etc., known the world
over for their beauty, and they are highly sought after. We had hoped to be able
to buy a small piece (it is very expensive), but found none in the town. We were
told it is all exported! While there, we did get to go through Albrechtsburg
Castle, which was originally built about the 15th Century and served as a home
for Meissen's various counts. It was later abandoned, but in 1710 the castle was
converted into Europe's first porcelain manufactory, where it remained for 150
years. The present manufacture of Meissen porcelain is carried on in a very
modern factory (which we also toured). In the meantime the castle has been
restored to its original splendor and is open to tourists. One of the positive
signs of the factory once having been there is that a large Meissen porcelain
stove, originally used for heating purposes, is found in each of the larger
chambers. The stoves are about six feet high and each is more beautiful than the
last. Just imagine!
Harold tried very hard to please -- he took it upon himself to
do one nice thing for each of us and was well aware that my attention was
divided (and not very evenly!) between the points of historical interest and the
telephone poles and power lines. I had tried unsuccessfully to find, buy, beg,
borrow or steal just one insulator to take home. So he promised to find me one
somewhere, somehow before we had to leave Germany.
Immediately after touring the
castle, Harold left us all standing in the town square, and excused himself
briefly to do an errand. In a few minutes he returned holding three grayish white porcelain insulators (complete with
heavy metal pins) high over his head.
"Meissen porcelain" he said, laughing triumphantly, He'd gone to the
factory and bought them -- even had a bill of sale for me so I would not have
trouble going across the German border. I wish now I could have found out more
about that factory, but our bus was waiting. His mission was accomplished, I was
in Seventh Heaven, and Father Brock was muttering something about chaperones
needing to tend to the business at hand.
The insulator is Meissen porcelain only
in the sense that it was manufactured in the town of that name, and bears no
connection to the real stuff. The countryside is dotted with small factories
that make all grades of porcelain everything.
It resembles style #U-780
in Jack Tod's book Porcelain Insulators, and C.D. 184 in Milholland's book
Most
About Glass Insulators, Bicentennial Edition, p. 226. The threaded pin hole
measures a bare 3/4 inch in diameter. The photo does not show the black
underglaze ink marking on the skirt, and it was hard to make an accurate sketch,
because it was rather carelessly applied with probably an ordinary rubber stamp,
then dipped in glaze, and fired. But the figure resembles a pine tree. I don't
know its significance. I do know it is German, and probably the logo of the
manufacturer, however many plants it may have. This same figure appears on three
other insulators I have that were brought to me from Germany. One of these is
marked with the figure, plus Bulgaria, 1973; the other two bear only the
"pine tree", but these are incuse markings. I presume the one found in
Meissen was produced for export to Bulgaria, I have an idea German insulators
found their way to several countries. My brother-in-law spent some time in
Teheran, Iran. He managed to bribe his gardener into plucking a porcelain
insulator from the pole in front of his house. It was German! It makes sense!
Germany is porcelain country!
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