Some of you might know I love old things! Some of you might know that among the old things I love, I love oil lamps! I have a humble collection of them, and circumstances have led me to now undertake a restoration project with an old oil lamp!
The lamp in question is a Master Lamp, made by United Lamp & Burner Co., sometime in the early years of the 20th century. Here's an ad for said lamp from a 1912 issue of
The Literary Digest:
$5 in 1912 was about $125 now. Mine is... well, not in that good of a shape...
Here's the damage report: This poor lamp was electrified sometime I assume in the 1950's (the parts used were typical of that time), so to do that they ripped out the center draft tube, did away with the complex wick mechanism, flame spreader and wick holder thingie. Basically what I have is a mutilated font, a hollow burner, and.... well that's it really.
These lamps are very rare! From collectors and for sale, I've only seen 4 (this one included), and two of them were electrified and one was gunked beyond usability (though a proper cleaning might have saved it). So when I got the chance to get one even in bad shape, I couldn't pass, because there's a story there too! (incoming story time!)
I saw this lamp first for sale on eBay some 2 years ago for $150, with a Best Offer option. Well, I sent them a $80 offer, and they refused. The auction went through, didn't sell, they re-listed it. I offered $90. Again, they refused! A couple more cycles of unsold auctions, it was for sale again, I offered $100. They countered with $150. ...I really think some people don't get the concept of "
or best offer"!
So I let it go. I wasn't about to dump $150 on a broken lamp that would need loads of work and who knows how much in parts.
About a week ago, browsing eBay to pass time while waiting for my turn to post in the RP, I stumbled upon that same lamp, now on auction, with a $0.99 starting bid! I'm broke, but I figured I could scrunch up some $20 and hope for the best. That was my max bid! If it went above that, I would not bother! I ended up getting it for $9.98! They should have taken my $100 back in the day!
So, this is gonna be a fun restoration project! The wick mechanism is impossible to restore, so I'm gonna have to improvise there. I could make a more standard mechanism for the existing hollowed burner, but I know that a Plume & Atwood Royal burner will fit the threads on the font (don't ask how I know these things!), and they are easy and relatively cheap to come by! I can fix the holes on the font that were there from the original mechanism and the subsequent electrification of the lamp easy enough. ...the center draft tube is going to be a bit of a challenge, but we wouldn't want it to be too easy now would we?
Other parts such as the chimney, shade holder, and shade, those will all have to be sourced.
Today I cleaned it all up from 100+ years old of gunk, and fixed metal fatigue hairline cracks on the little lid that covers the fueling hole on the font. Thankfully that was the only part of the lamp that had cracks and it was easy enough to fix. Tomorrow I'm gonna see if I can find a P&A burner from one of the cheap antique shops around here!
08-27-2015Well, I found a P&A Royal lamp in bad shape but with all the parts I needed intact, so I got it for $5! Then I came home, retreated to the workshop in the backyard, and worked on this damned thing for the next 7 hours!
I had to disassemble pretty much the entire lamp (which meant undoing 100+ years old solder joints), and as I got working on it, I found lots, lots of metal fatigue cracks on the brass. GAAHH! Took me hours to fix them all and then patch the holes left from when the original wick mechanism was ripped off. Then I got to work on the center draft tube! The P&A is a perfect fit on diameter, but was too long, and guess what, had metal fatigue cracks too! So I had to cut it the right length, solder the cracks, center it precisely, and solder it in place.
See that tube in the center? That's what it's supposed to look like! ...then solder the base of the lamp back in place, which I had to remove otherwise I couldn't work on the font. Because this is a restoration, not a preservation work, and this isn't a museum piece, I went for a full "brand new" polish on the lamp. And here it is!
Nevermind the burner is silver colored, not brass! Maybe I'll find a brass one cheap someday! Now when I have money I will need to get a chimney for it, the shade holder, and a shade, and it will be complete!