DAYS GONE BY
By Adam Chilcote
Reprinted from "Crown Jewels of the Wire", December 2006, page 23
Hi, I'm an insulator. I held the wire up on telegraph poles. But I'm getting
ahead of myself. I'll start at the beginning. I was made at a factory on October
8, 1907. I heard about a railroad being built. It needed a way for the workers
to communicate. That's what I would do. I would hold the wire on the poles.
I was put up a few days later and I started to see workers leveling the land.
Then they shoveled out gravel. Then they put wooden ties. They held up the rail,
which works laid soon after. Then I head a whistle, and the pole shook a little.
It was the first train. It was a small steam engine carrying important
passengers to celebrate the opening of the railroad.
I started seeing many other freight and passenger trains with bigger and
bigger engines and longer and longer trains. Then one day, a train carrying
poles, wire and more insulators came and a crane started to put them up. Then a
buzzing sound started and shortly a strange engine came. It had a pole that
touched the wire. It used the electricity in the wire to run its motor. The
steam engines still ran, but they didn't use electricity. Both keep getting
larger until a new type of engine came to be tested. It didn't use electricity
or steam. More of the new engines went pas and the steam engines almost stopped.
Bigger and bigger units of the new engines (which I found out were called
diesels) arrived.
One day a train came and started taking down the electric wire and poles. It
took down my wire, too. The workers used radios instead. Then there were only
diesels running.
Soon, the diesels started to get dirty and rusty and dirtier and rustier.
Then one day an engine with new paint went by, but some of the hold engines did
too for a short time. The railroad had lost money and combined with another to
make a bigger railroad. Soon the new engines also got dirty and rust, and then
stopped coming.
After the trains stopped, the tracks were pulled up and I sat in the woods
for many years until one day a man climbed up my pole and took me down. I stayed
at his house with other insulators. Then the man gave us to a place called a
museum, where I now live.
Now people who like trains come to see me and the other insulators. We are
cared for here at the museum. And best of all, I get to see some of the trains
that I saw running when I was on the pole. It is fun being an insulator.
Editor's note: 12-year-old Adam Chilcote was a participant in a Crown Jewels
writing contest for kids last summer.
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