Telegraph Pole Effigies
Reprinted from "INSULATORS - Crown Jewels of the Wire", October 1976, page 27
M. W. Hunter of Dubois, Pennsylvania, sent us the following small excerpt
from Dictionary of American Antiques by Carl W. Drepperd, published by Award
Books, New York:
"Telegraph pole effigies: In 1840's when telegraph poles were first set
up in town and village streets, they were planed, painted, and surmounted with
carved effigies of doves, eagles, horses, Indians, busts of famed people, pigs,
roosters, et cetera. Many such carved wood figures severed from pole tops are
today revered as 'primitive' carvings. Every pole in Portsmouth, Ohio, for
example, in 1848, was so embellished. This is an almost forgotten phase of
street decoration and the camouflaging of what have eventually become eyesores
on our streets."
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