Me And The 143 (#14)
by Grant Salzman, NIA #1785
Reprinted from "INSULATORS - Crown Jewels of the Wire", October 1981, page 33
When I went to British
Columbia in the fall of 1980, I had no idea that I was about to discover a new
CD 143 Withycombe. (I gave some of the details in my seventh article.) On that
trip I visited Aidan Morgan in Cache Creek, who introduced me to friends of his,
Stan and Ina Weir of Ashcroft.
(Drawing is by Clay Salzman)
Stan's father has a cabin on the shores of
Kootenay Lake, a beautiful place in British Columbia. Around the turn of the
century Canadian Pacific completed a rail line between Gerrard and Lardeau at
the northern end of Kootenay Lake. It was decided to install a telegraph line
between Lardeau and Kaslo, and since there was no road, a crew installed the
line by boat. Sideblocks were attached to trees above the high-water mark using
a variety of insulators.
The line was used for many years, but finally was
abandoned and fell into disrepair. Then in the 1960's Stan Weir and his brother
discovered the old line and decided that all those nice insulators would look
really good as decorations in their Dad's cabin! They proceeded to salvage all
the insulators they could, leaving only some that were in almost inaccessible
spots, and then decorated the cabin with all that nice stuff!
About fifteen
years later, along comes an insulator nut (me) who gets all excited when he sees
some of the jewels that Stan had salvaged! One of the pieces was a brand new
style of Withycombe! Stan didn't want to sell it, but he let me take color photos
and promised to get me more information about the location of the line and any
history that might be available.
During my visit with Stan and Ina, I found out
that they collected milk and dairy items. (They call themselves the "Udder
Collectors".) I remembered especially that there was a type of butter churn
that they really wanted to get, so I made a note to keep my eyes open. Well,
after I got back from my trip, I hadn't been home a week when I spotted the very
churn they wanted, at a flea market! I got the card of the antique dealer that
owned it, and called Stan! Subsequently Stan checked his stash of insulators and
found that he had three more of the type that I wanted. So he offered me a trade
that neither of us could refuse! I got one of the Withys, and he got the churn!
- Rail line ran from Lardeau to Gerrard (not shown on the map).
- Telegraph
line ran Kaslo to Lardeau.
- Johnson's Landing is where our summer cabins are
located and my brother and I made many crossings to accumulate our insulators.
-
The lake is, on the average about two miles wide.
- The distance from Kaslo to
Lardeau is approximately 20-22 miles.
Stan also drew me a map, which is
reprinted here, and gave me some more history and other information about the
area where the old telegraph line was. He also showed me all four of the new
Withys, and I got to pick out the one I wanted! (A tough decision, since they
all were nice.)
Armed with Stan's map, I decided to visit Kootenay Lake and see
if I could find any good stuff that had been left. So, last May, John Williams
and I made the trip and spent a few days in the Kaslo-Lardeau area. We crawled
and climbed and hiked and trekked, and slogged through the underbrush and inched
our way up cliffs that a mountain goat would hesitate to tackle! We didn't find
too much glass, but what we got was quite interesting. We picked one Withycombe,
a mold style 7A (light yellow-green, horizontal ridges), and how many people
these days can say that they picked one of those? We also found a new type of
pony! Or at least a type that we have never seen before! It is an MLOD no-name
with a curve-under-base! Up 'til now I had seen this type of base only on one
style of 143, plus on Hamilton glass stuff. But now I know it exists on CD 1020
also!
John Williams also spotted a purple 143, but the tree had grown around it,
and it was hanging over a cliff. Probably it could be reached by a sky diver! By
the way, time marches on, and homes built on the lake have eradicated many of
the traces of the line. Also a dam at the head of the lake now prevents the
water from getting as high as it used to, so you can't scout the line by boat
any more. Even so, it's a gorgeous place to visit, and I hope to go again some
day. Perhaps I'll be able to locate the old rail line that ran between Gerrard
and Lardeau! And maybe I'll even be able to visit Stan's Dad at his cabin and
see all of the remaining items!
Now maybe some of you might like to
acquire one of the new Withycombes! Well, Stan says they are not for sale, and
he does not want to part with any of the three remaining ones, But wait a
second! Stan is a collector, just like us. And what true collector can turn down
a super good deal?! Remember, Stan collects milk and dairy items, especially
those that were made or marketed in Canada! (Now this is strictly hush-hush, but
I understand that Stan is looking for related advertising signs, plus he wants
to locate some old butter molds! These are wooden ones, usually embossed, and
may be square, round, etc.) Anyway, if someone out there is able to locate some
of these old butter molds, and is able to put together a good enough deal, Stan
might, just might be persuaded to part with another Withy! But don't tell him I
said so! Good Luck!
And my special thanks to Stan & Ina Weir, a couple of
very nice people who can be contacted at P.O. Box 198 in Ashcroft, British
Columbia, Canada V0K 1A0.
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