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Whitall Tatum Co. Insulators

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    Posted 2 years ago

    dav2no1
    (839 items)

    Whitall Tatum Co. Insulators

    The large one is a number 1 -CD 154. This would be a telegraph insulator. The smaller one is a number 3 - CD 115

    The photo is of the New Jersey plant. This photograph is in the Library of Congress.

    The Whitall Tatum Company, or Whitall Tatum, was one of the first glass factories in America. Located in Millville, New Jersey, it was in operation from 1806 through 1938.

    MILLVELLE GLASS WORKS
    Located in New Jersey, because silica-based sand and water was plentiful for glass making.

    JOHN BECOMES A PARTNER
    John M. Whitall became a partner in 1838. He lived in Philadelphia and worked at the company's headquarters.

    JOHN'S BROTHER JOINS
    His brother Israel Franklin Whitall joined him in 1845 and the firm became Whitall, Brother & Company.

    TATUM JOINS IN
    In 1857, Edward Tatum also joins the partnership and the name was again changed to Whitall Tatum & Company and later in 1901 to Whitall Tatum Company.

    THE INSULATORS
    Whitall Tatum entered the insulator manufacturing market in 1922, mass-producing them for use on power and communications lines across the country.

    THE END IS THE BEGINNING
    In 1938, Armstrong Cork Corporation purchased Whitall-Tatum. Insulator production continued under the Armstrong trademark until 1969. Then it was purchased by Kerr Glass Manufacturing Corporation. They produced insulators until about 1976 ish.

    **Although Armstrong had taken over, it took awhile to switch the name over. Some insulators still had the Whitall Tatum name on them up till about 1945.**

    THE END
    "One final run of Kerr DP-1s was manufactured in 1978. These particular units have flat domes, and are rather scarce among insulators found "in the wild"."

    There's much more to the history than my condensed version. So if your interested, look them up. There's lots of great reading online.

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    Comments

    1. Jerseyguy68, 2 years ago
      I found a clear glass Whitall Tatum number 3 insulator at a thrift shop and I was wondering if it's worth anything.
    2. dav2no1 dav2no1, 2 years ago
      Jerseyguy68...all insulators have some value. There are many different variations and some special variations that are worth a lot of money. But the majority are just worth $5 - $20. You need more research to determine the value..
    3. kwqd kwqd, 2 years ago
      https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_North_American_telegraphy

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