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1999 National Show Report
by Carol McDougald

Reprinted from "Crown Jewels of the Wire", August 1999, page 17

As predicted, the weather at the end of June is always HOT, HOT, HOT in Scottsdale, Arizona. Also, as predicted, the insulator hobby was treated to a HOT, HOT, HOT national show. Hosts Steve and Melanie Marks anticipated every aspect of the three day convention. Their superb planning was evident throughout. The show hall was large and very well lighted and did justice to the 130 sales tables and 20 displays which greeted the attendees.


National Show Hosts Melanie and Steve Marks

Scottsdale's DoubleTree Resort was grand, and it became very clear early in the weekend that the Marks had established a working, personal relationship with every staff person so that they would make the convention and those in attendance their top priority. When Melanie or Steve would make a request, it was answered immediately and courteously by the DoubleTree staff. 

Members of the Grand Canyon State Insulator Club were very evident in helping to get the sales tables and displays set up, manning of the admissions tables and just being present to assist in any way they could during the weekend. Everything ran like clockwork. 

Closing the door to Crown Jewels of the Wire operations two weeks prior to the show afforded us a leisurely trip across the heartland of America. We began our journey at the Tama/Toledo, Iowa swap meet on June 12th, visited friends and collectors along the way, and spent several days relaxing in Sedona, Arizona. 

We arrived at the national show site by noon on Thursday, so that John could participate in the NIA Board meeting. I was commissioned to pick up a small insulator collection in Scottsdale, just minutes from the show site. Collector friends from 25 years ago in Ohio had moved their collection with them when they retired in Arizona 10 years ago. Our good fortune was that we didn't have to transport a lot of insulators with us knowing we would be picking up a collection so close to the show site. Imagine, just 20 minutes from the show site, a collection was available the day before the start of the show. That left room for the 18 boxes we transported for other dealers and displayers from the east who were flying to the show.

It has been several years since we attended a professional baseball game, so when the offer of tickets for the Diamondbacks vs. Cardinals game on Thursday evening was extended, John and I gladly accepted. The stadium, complete with air-conditioning and great ballpark hotdogs, was filled to capacity and we had the chance to see the Diamondbacks win as well as St. Louis's Mark MacGuirre hit his 23rd home run accompanied by a barrage of camera flashes. 

Friday morning was an early start for everyone. Displayers and those with sales tables could begin setup at 6:00 a.m. By 9:00 a.m. everything was in readiness for the opening of the show. Buyers were HOT, HOT, HOT....Sales were HOT, HOT, HOT....Displays were HOT, HOT, HOT! The comment was made over and over that those attending were serious collectors (not just "tire-kickers") who wanted to learn as much as they could about the hobby during their stay at the show.

I was personally amazed at the distances people had traveled to attend the show. It had been well publicized the number of sales tables and displays that one could expect, but the unknown of every show is the number of people who just come through the doors. And, Scottsdale is not at the central core for a large number of collectors. But, people DID attend. From Washington, Idaho and Oregon they came. From Alaska, California, Utah, Nevada, Montana, Colorado and New Mexico they came. From Nebraska, Iowa, Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas they came.

I guess I would have expected that the western half of the United States would be most likely to attend the show, but I was DELIGHTED at the number of people who traveled from east of the Mississippi. A large group of members from the Chesapeake Bay Insulator Club (1998 show host club) and the Greater Chicago Insulator Club (1997 show host club) representing Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Indiana, Michigan, Maryland, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Washington, D.C., Delaware. Collectors came from the Carolinas, Georgia, Florida, Mississippi and Alabama as well as members of the newest insulator club, the Oklahoma Signals. And the northeastern states of New York, Massachusetts, Connecticut and New Jersey were also represented. Nearly 400 paid admissions were received during the three day event.


Most color-filled table at the show belonged to Butch and Eloise Haltman of Cathedral City, California. Rows of 7-up green, purple, white milkglass, cobalt, peacock and carnival glass greeted those looking to add a special insulator.

Following the NIA General Meeting after show hours on Friday afternoon, nearly 100 convention-goers traveled north along Scottsdale Boulevard to RAWHIDE-Western Town and Steakhouse. Admission was free and the "fun" expensive for those who dared to outwit or outbid the house card shark while we waited for a table at the steakhouse. John and I tried, but, as usual, the "house won." Thank goodness we played with bogus money! 

Our table included Bennie Helen and Carl Rusk, and we were entertained with some pretty fancy dance moves when this handsome Texan couple took the dance floor. One little six-year-old girl kept cutting in on Bennie Helen to have a chance to dance with "the silver fox with the ten-gallon hat from Robert Lee, Texas."


North Western Region Insulator Club Gang at Rawhide.

Part of the gunsmoke and native American theme attractions are the various melodramas that are played out nightly in the streets of Rawhide. Several collectors were caught up in the fun of the evening. Terry Kornberg (Andover, Minnesota) was jailed as other "gang members", Bob Stahr (St. John, Indiana), Ed Peters (Savage, Minnesota -- "Savage"--now, that's a clever town name for the Rawhide scene) and Rick Soller (Gurnee, Illinois) watched helplessly.


The "Lawless-One" jailed and hung.

National Insulator Association President," Kevin Lawless, was arrested and thrown into the Rawhide Jail for being "lawless" -- and since bail was not produced by his friends, the hangman, Central Region Vice President Bob Stahr, carried out Kevin's punishment.

Later in the evening, "Marshal Dick Bowman", was found roaming the Rawhide streets -- clearly out of his jurisdiction. He also was jailed, but since he is recovering from serious knee surgery the jailor took pity on him. He only had to ride his horse (a palomino on a broomstick) across the main street of town to the watering trough and back to the jailhouse. The "Marshal" got lucky! I wondered if the jailor would do the same thing to lawmen with bad knees as they do with horses that come up lame!?!?

Saturday was a full day of HOT, HOT, HOT wheeling and dealing. Following the close of the show hall at 4:00 p.m., participants were invited to attend an educational seminar led by Mike Guthrie and Dwayne Anthony on altered, repaired and fake insulators. 

Mike Guthrie (Fresno, California), who authored Fake, Altered and Repaired Insulators in 1988 has just completed a revision of the handbook. Topics covered are the repairing of insulators, coatings to insulator surfaces, color alteration, mechanically altered insulators, fabricated insulators and facsimiles, as well as alternations to porcelain insulators. Its content can currently be viewed on the Internet at: http://www.insulators.com/fake/index.htm


Fake, Altered and Repaired Insulators 
A non-competitive, educational display by Mike Guthrie

"The purpose of the display was to expose collectors to the many types of alterations and fabrications which have been achieved. One must take great care not to assume that just because a piece has been in a collection for decades that it is authentic. Many of the practices demonstrated in this display have been traced back to the middle 1960's."


Altered Insulators 
NIA Educational Exhibit presented by the 
NIA Research and Authentication Committee Research
 by Dwayne Anthony

Dwayne Anthony (Highland, California) saw the need to establish some educational materials to help the collector determine alterations in glass insulators. He subjected dozens of insulator samples to both radiation and thermal sources to duplicate many colors that have been suspected as "highly questionable" in the hobby. His on-going trial and error experiments have produced some startling results. The actual altered specimen samples, along with the control sample "halves", have been organized into a definitive display. 

Through the NIA, this display can be shipped to local shows upon request. Additional information on irradiated insulators and heat altered colors may be found on the Internet at: http://www.nia.org/altered/index.htm


Borrowing examples from both of their educational displays, Mike and Dwayne enlightened a large crowd of interested collectors in the Chambers auditorium. An hour wasn't long enough to cover the many questions that arose during their presentation.



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