Posted 14 years ago
potrero
(156 items)
The cool thing about collector shows is that they're not just an excuse to get together with friends (they are), or to buy and sell (though that's important), but also to show off.
People spend lifetimes curating amazing collections, and they bring them out maybe every few years to display at a show.
This incredible early wood telephone display was put on at the 2007 Telephone Collectors Intl San Jose show by John Dresser (pictured on left) and John Tipo Hui (middle), also an amazing collector of early high quality stuff.
What's unusual about this display, for those of you who don't know antique phones, is that its not just a collection of run of the mill wood telephones from the early 20th century (of which so many were made and for which collector demand is so low that they're known among phone collectors as 'firewood').
What's unusual is that many of the piece are among the earliest phones produced in the 1870s and 1880s, some by Charles Williams, AGBs (telephone inventor Alexander Graham Bell, pictured) first contract manufacturer and in whose lab Bell uttered the words "Watson, come here". The very first phones after Bell's patent were produced in 1877, and many of the phones produced in the subsequent few years for the "American Bell Company," as it was know, are one or a kind - or so few were made that you just never see them, or the parts, unless someone like John Dresser decides to bring them out of hibernation.
Also noteworthy in these photos are the early phone vanity (desk) and the very cool NE Tel porcelain sign with the early wrought iron ornamented hanging frame - John, anytime you get sick of that, you know where to reach me!
I came accross an old hand crank phone and would like to know the 5 w's. It is not complete, it is missing ear piece. hand crank is still intact as well as all the inside workings. Schematic inside door does not give any info as to make or model or manufacturer. Can I send you pictures and get info from you ?
Thank you, please respond to Rick at shadetreecc@aol.com
now this is why i like the internet, you can share your collection without the mental trama of "moving" your entire collection. But, like you said, its also nice to actually talking ( in person) to your fellow enthusiasts.
I have a wooden wall phone with the only visible identification being patented Jan 14, 1919. It was my parents, and I know they had it all my life - 74 years, plus three or four more years before I arrived. Like Rick request above, I wonder if I might send a picture and get info from you. I have donated the phone to an historical underground slave railroad house in West Des Moines, IA and would like to know the value. Thanks you.
Phyltoy@Yahoo.com
Potrero, great collection, ill take them all (lol) well done