Insulators in the Far East
by Garry Nelson
Reprinted from "INSULATORS - Crown Jewels of the Wire", July 1975, page 5
From August 1974, until the end of January 1975, I traveled throughout the
Orient while serving with Patrol Squadron Nine, an anti submarine warfare unit
in the United States Navy. Our squadron's home base was in Japan, but
commitments took us to South Korea, Thailand, Taiwan, the Philippines, and Diego
Garcia in the Indian Ocean. Of course, while exploring these new and mysterious
areas, I kept my eyes peeled for insulators, not knowing just what to expect.
From left to right:
- White porcelain with small Japanese embossing on one
side;
- Green porcelain with no embossing;
- White porcelain embossed
on
one side;
- White porcelain embossed "MADE IN / JAPAN" on one side;
- White porcelain with "ENGLAND" stamped into the porcelain on the
flat top of the insulator.
Basically, every place that I visited utilized porcelain insulators on their
open air lines. My first find happened in Mia Jima, Japan, a small but
mountainous island covered with luxuriant vegetation and an abundance of deer
and monkeys. The island has been and still is a sacred shrine for followers of
the Buddhist and Shintu religions. Also, because of its history and temperate
climate, Mia Jima is a year round tourist mecca for Japanese and foreign
visitors. While enjoying the sights and natural beauty of the island, my wife
and I encountered a small shed, apparently a general purpose maintenance
facility for the island, located beside one of the many mountain trails. The
shed, run down and surrendering to the green vegetation, had a small steel
bracket with three small porcelain insulators. Being unconnected and within
reach, I quickly gathered them in. (See picture for 1st three insulators left to
right.)
Only a small, aged Japanese woman passing by noticed my actions, and
she ignored me, probably never amazed at what silly foreigners do and most
assuredly unaware that anything like an insulator collector exists.
My next find came on Diego Garcia, a small subtropical island located about
1500 miles south of India in the Chagos Islands, still a property of the United
Kingdom. While operating out of Diego, our crew had a chance to explore the
island, a seven mile long horseshoe shaped area only about one half mile wide.
On the opposite side of the horseshoe, we explored the remains of a French
coconut plantation (operated from 1733 until 1970). The ghost town consisted of
a main house, church, hospital, school, workers' houses, copra plant, and
machinery repair building. Small utility poles ran throughout the old
settlement; however, the only insulators were located on the side of the
manager's house. (See picture, 4th and 5th insulator, left to right.)
One of my main ambitions when I return to the Orient in January will be to
search for the elusive insulator again, maybe next time finding a bonanza of old
glass tucked away in some out-of-the-way place with a strange sounding name.
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