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#2264        701.6      "Confederate Egg."      Dark green.

  Lot # 2264
Listing Image
Pole_Top_Discoveries
Details
  • Lot # 2264
  • System ID # 548249
  • End Date
  • Start Date
Description

#2264        701.6      Unmarked.       Dark green.        

Known as the “Confederate egg.”  Discovered at a Richmond, Virginia construction site  in 1990.  The site reportedly was the location of a warehouse during the Civil War.  As a result of the burning of Richmond in April, 1865, most examples located in the area of a crumbled brick building were heavily damaged or destroyed.  Luckily, a sizable number survived and were recovered by eager diggers. 

Historical significance makes these crude relics one of the most desirable insulators in the hobby today.  They survived the large fire which occurred in Richmond on April 3, 1865, as city residents and government officials fled, and Union forces entered.  The bloody war ended shortly afterwards, the Confederate States having lost their capitol city, as well as losing other recent important battles.  Crudely made with an extremely textured and pebbly surface!

A thin glass "fin" on the lower, side skirt area was created when molten glass squeezed between the mold halves during manufacture.  Amazing that it's still intact!

Diagonal, light line from base to mid skirt in first photo is only a surface mark, not a fracture.  Narrow chip on upper wire ridge (at center of second photo).  Internal (hard to see) fracture from mid skirt to dome.  Couple horizontal internal fractures in wire groove and dome.

Super crude dude would look great on your shelf!