Reading through one of Geoffs earlier threads where he found a ticket under the leg of a table for some event reminded me of a very similar experience I had way back in 1987. I had purchased 2 tables from the CYMS Hall in Cobh Co. Cork (formerly Queenstown). One table was an ordinary Orme & Son, and the other a rather robust Cox & Yemen oak framed table with the half circular pocket plates and the rosettes on the cushion bolts. (The rosettes I still have in stock as there was not a full compliment of them when I sold on the table).
I had worked in that Hall previously but never really took any notice of the Cox & Yemen table as my boss would always cover that, and Id do the Orme.
On the day of the dismantle I found under the leg of the Orme Table a Wills Three Castles Cigarette packet with the name A.W.Birch written in pencil and dated 10th April 1912. This must have been the date the table was installed, and if my history is correct it was the day before the Titanic berthed in Queenstown before taking her ill fated journey. A.W.Birch worked for Orme & Sons in Belfast, and quite a lot of his stamps can still be found stamped on the inside of cushions on old tables to this date.
On the Cox & Yemen table I found two things that I had never seen on a Billiards table before. One was a series of brackets which ran around the frame of the table, there was 10 in all, ie: 2 at the spot gable end, 2 at the baulk end, and three on each long side. The spot end ones were very close to the top of the rail, whereas the baulk end ones were about 3" lower. The ones on the long sides varied in depth from 1" to 3" as it came nearer to the baulk end.
The other curiousity I found was on the inside of the body of the cushion, right in the middle of the cushion was a channel cut out 1/4" deep which then fanned out under the block and a wire was embedded but was going nowhere.
The only reasonable explanation I could come up with is that there must have been some kind of electrical or battery operated heating system for the cushion rubbers. The cushions had been reblocked and rubbered doing away with the old layered rubber strips, so it may have been possible that this may have been some for of early heating that C&Y may have used. I found no electrical or battery components on the inside of the frame.
Could you or any of the members shine any light on these for me.
Gerard
I had worked in that Hall previously but never really took any notice of the Cox & Yemen table as my boss would always cover that, and Id do the Orme.
On the day of the dismantle I found under the leg of the Orme Table a Wills Three Castles Cigarette packet with the name A.W.Birch written in pencil and dated 10th April 1912. This must have been the date the table was installed, and if my history is correct it was the day before the Titanic berthed in Queenstown before taking her ill fated journey. A.W.Birch worked for Orme & Sons in Belfast, and quite a lot of his stamps can still be found stamped on the inside of cushions on old tables to this date.
On the Cox & Yemen table I found two things that I had never seen on a Billiards table before. One was a series of brackets which ran around the frame of the table, there was 10 in all, ie: 2 at the spot gable end, 2 at the baulk end, and three on each long side. The spot end ones were very close to the top of the rail, whereas the baulk end ones were about 3" lower. The ones on the long sides varied in depth from 1" to 3" as it came nearer to the baulk end.
The other curiousity I found was on the inside of the body of the cushion, right in the middle of the cushion was a channel cut out 1/4" deep which then fanned out under the block and a wire was embedded but was going nowhere.
The only reasonable explanation I could come up with is that there must have been some kind of electrical or battery operated heating system for the cushion rubbers. The cushions had been reblocked and rubbered doing away with the old layered rubber strips, so it may have been possible that this may have been some for of early heating that C&Y may have used. I found no electrical or battery components on the inside of the frame.
Could you or any of the members shine any light on these for me.
Gerard
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