1987 >> August >> The Frederick H. Withycombe Story  

The Frederick H. Withycombe Story
by W. Eric Halpin

Reprinted from "Crown Jewels of the Wire", August 1987, page 19

As the research began for this article on Mr. Withycombe and his ridged insulators, I very quickly ran into a major stumbling block. To put it quite simply, very little is known about the man other than the following last Montreal telephone business directory listing in 1908:

'  WITHYCOMBE, F.H., 25 JURORS ST. NEAR BLEURY. MECHANICAL ENGINEER AND EXPERT MECHANIC. HIGH CLASS MACHINE WORK, INVENTORS MODELS. MECHANICAL, ELECTRICAL AND SCIENTIFIC APPARATUS DESIGNED, MADE AND REPAIRED.'

Despite placing newspaper advertisements, writing various government and educational agencies and scouring dozens of present day telephone directories, I have been unsuccessful in locating any relative, friends or associates of his. It was initially planned that I could open some new insights into the man who designed a present day, very popular collectable insulator. His insulator, I believe, is more popular today within the hobby than it ever was within the telegraph industry at the turn of the century.

Frederick Henry Withycombe paid $20 and applied for a Canadian patent for 'electric insulators' in July, 1898. This Canadian patent #63026 was issued in May, 1899. Mr. Withycombe also applied for American patents for 'electric insulators' in February, and September, 1899, and patents #633173-#633176, plus design patents #31798-#31799 were issued in September and November, 1899 respectively. Both American and Canadian patent applications ware essentially the same, except that in Canada seven design concepts were covered under one patent issue. The Canadian patent documents went into a little more detail on each design, but overall there was little difference between them. The drawings supplied with the patent applications were clearly modeled after the standard Canadian telegraph insulator of the day, now known as the CD-143. However, in his applications, he fully intended the idea of the surface projections to be covered under patent rights regardless of the insulators "general design or material". That is why his ridges have been found on other insulator styles which will be discussed later on in this article.

Referring to figure #1, of Withycombe's patent drawings, a CD-143 with 11 horizontal ridges above and 8 horizontal ridges below the wire groove is shown. The groove cutting across the insulators ridges was intended, according to patent data, "to provide for the flow of moisture from the insulator". No exact example of this insulator is known to exist. Figure #2 patent drawing is a CD-143 with 24 oblique ridges above and below the wire groove. No example of this insulator is known to exist. Figure #3 patent drawing is a CD-143 with 48 vertical ridges above and below the wire groove. This insulator is known to exist with 50, 52, 53, and 54 ridges (refer to photo #1). The American patent drawings for figures #2 and #3 differed from the Canadian, in that the ridges continued down to and under the base forming wedge shaped drip points (refer to figures #8, #9, and #10). Figure #4 patent drawing is a CD-143 with 11 spiral ridges above and 8 spiral below the wire groove; both with a right hand thread pitch to the ridges. No exact example of this insulator is known to exist, but there are several similar styles (refer to photos' #2, #3, and #4). 

Figures #5 and #6 patent drawings show two CD-143's covered with "protuberances and depressions" respectively, of varying shapes. No examples of these insulators are known to exist. Both of these later two designs are an improbable, if not impossible task to reproduce in a mold. Note that in figure #6, the irregular figures are not cut into the mold body but formed on the inside surface of the mold, thus giving it a more slender appearance. Figure #7 patent drawing shows a CD-143 identical with figure #1 drawing except for the absence of the drainage groove across the ridges. A very similar insulator exists (refer photo #5).

Before proceeding, I should comment on the minor problem of counting ridges. On some styles the dome crown ridges become very weak and some people don't count them. However, I do count this weak ridge area. Depending on what side of the dome you count the ridges on (left or right), can make a difference of one ridge count on patent drawing #4. I count the side with the most ridges. On an insulator with ridges with a right hand thread pitch, I count on the right or dominant side. Further adding to the confusion, is that it is very easy to miscount ridges, especially on the vertical ridge styles. This is why different ridge counts are sometimes reported by collectors.

Now lets take a look at some real live Withycombe insulators. Photo #1 shows a CD-143 vertical ridged insulator with 50 ridges. Other then ridge count, the 52, 53, and 54 ridged varieties are almost identical. The 52 ridged variety seems to have a more flattened crown top. These insulators were obviously modeled after patent drawing figure #3. These insulators are found primarily in aqua, but green and blue color tones exist. They have been found across Canada on C.P.R lines.

Photo #2 shows a CD-143 (MLOD) with 24 ridges (14 circular ridges above and 10 spiral ridges below the wire groove). The spiral ridges have a special feature; that is, they are a double left handed thread pitch. These ridges are actually formed by one thread starting at each mold line and winding down the skirt. Thus the ridges are double threaded in the same concept as the CD-143 with the double threaded pinhole. It seems that this light green insulator was used in western Canada on C.P.R lines.


Photo #1

Photo #2

Photo #3

Photo #4

Photo #3 shows a CD-143 (MLOD) also with 24 ridges (16 circular ridges above and 8 spiral ridges below the wire groove) . The spiral ridges have a single right hand thread pitch. Photo #4 shows a CD-143 (MLOD) with 27 ridges (19 circular ridges above and 8 spiral ridges below the wire groove). The spiral ridges also have a single right hand thread pitch. Both of the later two varieties have been found on C.P.R lines in eastern Canada, and both come in the gray and sca color tones. The last three varieties were apparently modeled after combining patent drawings in figures #4 and #7. 

Photo #5 shows an extremely rare CD-143 (MLOD) with 21 circular ridges (11 ridges above and 10 ridges below the wire groove) . I believe this item was a first attempt by a Canadian glass company to reproduce Withycombe's patents and may have been an experimental model not intended for distribution. The ridges are not very prominent above the wire groove and certainly not what Withycombe desired in his ridged insulators. In fact these ridges only extend about two-thirds of the way up the domes side. This aqua insulator was modeled after patent drawing figure #7, and is the only type of CD-143 with circular ridges below the wire groove. Examples of this insulator exist in only three separate insulator collections and all were originally located on a C.P.R spur line in the western Canadian province of British Columbia.

Photo #6 shows a fairly common Withycombe style CD-143 with 69 vertical ridges above and 9 spiral ridges below the wire groove. The spiral ridges have a single left hand thread pitch. These spiral ridges were cut into a former 'CANADIAN PACIFIC RY CO' mold and the remains of this embossing can still be clearly seen. This variety was modeled by combining patent drawings #3 and $4. This insulator is usually found in a bluish-aqua color but a light purple color tone does exist. More of these insulators were made then any other CD-143 style but they were still not a high production item. This variety has been found across Canada on C.P.R lines. I date this insulator from around the 1917 period after all of Withycombe's patent rights had expired in Canada.


Photo #5

Photo #6

Photo #7

Photo #8

Photo #7 shows another Withycombe ridged insulator, the CD-121. This insulator has the American Withycombe patent date embossed on the dome (PAT'D SEPT 19th, 1899). The 44 vertical ridges, forming pleats around the skirt, continue under the base to each form a wedge drip point. Thus it was modeled on design patent shown in figure #8 with base in figure #10. It is found in varying color tones of aqua, blue, and green and only on some eastern and central American phone lines. 

Photo #8 shows the last of the Withycombe ridged style of insulator, the very scarce CD-144 also called the high groove Withy. This 27 ridged insulator (MLOD) has 11 circular ridges above and 16 spiral ridges below the wire groove respectively. The spiral ridges have a quadruple left hand thread pitch. That is, the spiral ridges are actually formed by 4 separate ridges starting below the wire groove (one at each mold line and one at each side of the skirt center). This insulator seems to have been found only in parts of western Canada (British Columbia and Alberta). It comes in a light green color tone and if memory serves me correctly, a light purple tone also.

So there you have it; of Withycombe's nine different ridge patent styles, eleven different insulators have been manufactured and attributed to his patent ideas. But what are the ridges for? Withycombe stated in his patent application "to render insulators of whatever form, less liable to breakage by providing a simple and efficient means to enable them the better to withstand the impact of foreign bodies". "The breaking down of the intercepting parts (ridges), cushions the blow and relieves the main portion or body of the insulator from the full severity of impact". Mr. Withycombe further determined by "tests" that for the ridges to be effective they must "be of greater height than thickness" unfortunately in actual practice, many of the ridge designs did not come out all that high or thin. Thus it is unclear just how effective they actually were.

A sometimes discussed design weakness of the ridged insulators is that they would have a tendency to collect and retain dirt, soot, and moisture to a greater degree than a more uniformed shaped surface. I have never picked any that were particularly dirty, but then again I have never seen these in built-up industrial or urban areas anyway. And that is where they were intended to be used, to thwart the efforts of bad boys with sling shots, etc. I have found these insulators in some very remote and isolated parts of Canada and still they were damaged, especially the types in photo's #2 and #6. 

While Mr. Withycombe clearly understood the need to promote water drainage from the insulators surface, the ridges both horizontal and spiral still retained water droplets. Thus under certain weather conditions of freezing rain or ice/snow thaw and refreeze; I believe many of the ridges were damaged. Not by projectiles, but by the water freezing between the ridges causing the necessary amount of expansion and thus ridge damage. This is especially true on the spiral below wire groove styles. Of all the Withycombe patents, I feel figure #3 with the vertical ridges to be the best design concept. In actual practice, it is this type (photo #1) that true, mint condition insulators can be found.

One of the last questions remaining on the Withycombe insulators is who made them and when. Well several insulator manufacturers likely did. The 00-121 has the American patent date embossed on the dome and apparently has only been found on lines in the states. Thus, a U.S. manufacturer (Brookfield ?) is likely to have made them between 1900 and 1914. The Crystal Glass Company (1907-1908) in British Columbia advertised "....manufacturing all grades of glass from bottles to insulators...... one feature of these insulators is that they have been specially ribbed....". Since so many of the Withycombe insulators were found in western Canada and some like the CD-143 (photo #5) and the CD-144 (photo #8) exclusively in B.C. and/or southern Alberta, it is a fair guess to attribute some if not most of the Withycombes' to this company. Until an organized dig is conducted at the old company site, proof will not be available.

Finally, it would seem reasonable to associate some of the insulators in photo's #1, #3, and #4 to an eastern manufacturer such as the Sydenham Glass Company, but I have no evidence to support this. Years ago on a dig at the Brookfield dump, three-quarters of a vertical grooved Withy (photo #1) was located by another collector. It is possible, but unlikely in my opinion, that the vertical ridged style is of Brookfield origin. 

So there you have it! A small tribute to Mr. Withycombe, by publishing for the first time, all of his patent drawings and including appropriate photos of related ridged insulators, again some for the first time. Many thanks not only to Crown Jewels, but to the many collectors who assisted in some way with this article.

Photo credits to Frank Commisso of Thunder Bay, Ont. for photos #l - #6, and Bill Lovely of Regina, Sask. for photos #7 - #8.

 



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