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The E-14 B Story
Reprinted from "INSULATORS - Crown Jewels of the Wire", December 1976, page 15
by Alan Rodgers
The E-14 B -- was it a secret government code? No, a most popular
collector's item today. Its full
name, Hemingray CS E-14 B (CD 128), has much significance to the modern day
collector. Its beautiful
colors have fascinated collectors since the first ones were discovered in
the mid 1960's.
The location was the town of Ft. Pierce, on the east coast of Florida. John
Neal of Ft. Pierce, a
long time bottle and treasure collector, became interested in insulators in
the middle 1960's.
John, nearly blind, and his wife were traveling down the highway which
parallels the Florida East
Coast Railway. The FEC, a mainline railroad, has tracks which follow the
east coast of Florida from
Miami to Jacksonville. It is interesting to note that the Hemingray 54 A's
and B's (CD 194/195) were located on
this same line, only further to the north.
Workmen were busy dismantling this toll line when John and his wife stopped
to investigate. What
they found turned out to be, not clear or blue glass, but the unusually
colored "opal glass". The
linemen were happy to have someone haul them away. They were also
instructed to check the railroad
dump in town. When they arrived, there were more of these unusual
"moonstone" insulators waiting to
be picked up. Upon closer investigation of these glass oddities, they had
discovered the unknown
Hemingray E-14 B.
Of the 50 or 60 originally found, only a few turned out to be the best
colored ever located. In the
following years a small number of others were found scattered around the
southern part of the
state. Most were found near Lake Okeechobee, largest lake in southern
United States.
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