Thursday, September 11, 2025

Difficult thoughts on a doubly difficult day...

 I have a lot of thoughts going, but it's hard to write them down.  On top of everything else, it's the 24th anniversary of 9-11, which I will never forget.

~I remember the threats when I was getting married to a local cop and some local idiot threatened to shoot up the wedding reception.  

~I remember all the people over the years who drove past my house to get to court because I live on the main drag between that city and the court.   There is a lot of "by the grace of God" that those people didn't realize where the house was, or chose not to mess with it.  

~I remember the night my husband almost didn't come home because of a crazy person, who was not right when we were kids.  (So much more to that story.) "By the grace of God..."

~I remember 2020 when my husband was on mobile field force and gone all summer.  Remember?  When school supplies and seeds were illegal to purchase, and don't go camping or to your self-owned cabin ---- but please feel free to go protest all you want because it's your civic duty.  And don't forget to write down and report any of your neighbors to the police who aren't doing what you think they ought.  

Then call the police liars when those who witnessed the pallets of bricks and other events at the protests talk, because the media said otherwise.  One of my local firefighters called my husband a liar to my face over the pallets of bricks.  That firefighter was one of the first to hole up and not leave the house in 2020, when my husband had to keep working through the hell that was going on.  There is a reason I no longer vote for millages for my local fire department.  (It's volunteer, so my house will burn down anyway before they arrive.) 

There are so many more things I want to write and I cannot.  I'm not allowed to.  I'm not sure it would matter, because like that firefighter, if one's mind is made up, no amount of proof  will change it.  Anything I say is just wasted words.

But I'm already seeing and hearing something horrible.  We have had a lot of politicians and political people shot and killed this year.  This newest assassination is no less or more horrible than any of the rest.  Why is it to remember one is to imply that everyone else is forgotten?  

So I'm going to mention a few truly forgotten individuals, people who never got national recognition for their deaths.  You'll have to look them up yourself and figure out why I don't forget.  And no, none of it makes sense at all.  Tragedy doesn't make sense, unless you look through the lens of the cross.  I can't make anyone do that.  

Jessica Nagle-Wilson

Mark Sawyers

Aaron Ureel

Friday, April 4, 2025

Something Humorous...

 I wrote this 4 years ago, making fun of a typical situation one might find in any job.  Enjoy.  I still think it is some of my best work.

January 4, 2021

MEMO

RE: Punctuation Misuse by all employees.....

This is an extremely simplified explanation as there have been way too many people misusing punctuation... I can't believe I have to explain this, What are we, in the 3rd grade?  

There should only be one point at the end of the sentence... unless you are combining it with a second sentence to create a linear thought, at which point you use 3 points (...) to combine the sentence into a multiple thought. When you are extremely annoyed.... four points should be used.... to join the sentences in order to stress your point and make everyone understand it is getting important. In the event it is an extremely important point..... or very annoying to the person writing the memo..... then 5 points must be used. You cannot use 5 points to make a linear thought... you must use 3.  At no time can 5 points be used to join two sentences..... unless I'm getting ready to yell at you. And I am yelling..... knock it off!!!!!!

Obviously you were all sleeping in english class when punctuation was discussed.... what is this world coming to??? Apparently none of you pay attention either... since I am now writing this Memo after I spent all my time on the last one!

I hope that I will not have to yell about the misuse of exclamation points next!!!!!!

 

Saturday, March 15, 2025

The Patent 469199 Machine name list

 Because of the interest in my little write up about The Patent 469199 Machine (Needlebar classification National Seamstress class), I decided to collect the names I know of this machine being called.  It seems to have been a popular badge machine, a machine sold in batches with the purchaser's desired name on it.  

As I find memorabilia or names are sent to me, I'll add them here.  This is a call out to the sewing machine community, because without everyone's help this kind of information can't be collected.


Known Patent 469199 Machine names


Arlington

Burlington Hawkeye

Germania (name of many German language newspapers in USA)

New England Queen 

Pokrok Zapadu (Czech language newspaper in USA)

Seamstress

Seebote (German language newspaper in Milwaukee, Wisconsin)

Texas Advocate


Possible:  Courier Journal (an ad resembles this machine but none have showed up in person)


Serial numbers:  Both 5 digit and 6 digit numbers have shown up.  My Germania is SN 33,255.  The Pokrok Zapadu was in the 500,000s.  There is no idea of how long these machines were made, or if they were their own separate serial number list. 

Thank you to:  Marion, Robyn, Laura, Damascus Annie, John, Judy (aka dvrtiska from ISMACS)

PS -- if anyone knows what happened to Judy aka dvrtiska, I'd like to know.  She sent me the below scans from Pokrok Zapadu newspaper Nov 3, 1897.  It matched her family machine, which I helped her ID as The Patent 469199 Machine.








Thursday, March 13, 2025

The Patent 469199 Machine (National Seamstress model)

The Patent 469199 Machine aka National Seamstress model

 Every once in a while a machine shows up that convinces everyone it is a New Home. I don’t know how many times I have heard “only New Home had a machine that looked like that.” As long as I live I will call the “impostor” out.

My relationship with The Patent 469199 Machine began January 9, 2009 when the late Katie Farmer sent Marion Kish (then Mikula) and me this email:

I am forwarding this e-mail from Robyn on to you.

The machine & cabinet are gorgeous (!), but White

never made a leaf tension machine to my knowledge.

Can you please let Robyn know if it is a badged New Home?

Thank you!

Katie Farmer

 

Robyn had sent Katie an email about a badged machine that looked like a New Home called the Texas Advocate that didn’t seem to fit any of the known series of New Home. (New Home referred to their machines as “series” not “model”.) Someone suggested to her it looked more like a Minnesota B, so she contacted Katie. Katie contacted us, and a long run of emails began. My first thought was it was a New Home, but when Robyn shared the serial number in the 500,000s, something seemed wrong. Then Marion popped in and said she also thought it was a New Home, but could we get more pictures. After more pictures, Marion said, “Wait a minute, it looks like a machine I have that I thought was a New Home but I’m not so sure.” Hers was called Arlington.

Marion emailed me pictures and we spent several hours on the phone discussion ad nauseum discussing this machine. Then I pulled Damascus Annie in who researched National. She was (and probably still is) an absolute whiz with National. She had been convinced that these machines were New Home, but after I was done with my method of sewing machine identification, she was convinced it could more likely be a National.

This machine would show up in many incarnations: Texas Advocate, Arlington, Pokrok Zapadu (Czech newspaper in USA), New England Queen in a Morley Bros treadle stand (Standish, MI), Germania (name of multiple German newspapers in USA), Burlington Hawkeye, Seebote, and Seamstress, just to name a few that I have run across.

Many more emails, a few years later on November 22, 2013 I was told “a lot of collectors decided that this machine cannot be a National.” This after I found the patent for the machine, patent 469,199 awarded to Willis S Brown, with witnesses David Patton and B. Eldredge. If you do not know who these men were, let me explain. Willis S. Brown was Superintendent of National SMCo; David Patton was secretary of National SMCo; and Barnabas Eldredge was none other than the president and interesting personage of National SMCo.

(More about these men here: https://books.google.com/books?id=YBcVAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA31&dq=national+sewing+machine&hl=en&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjLtIX159iLAxXXRzABHWs2O_YQ6AF6BAgKEAM#v=onepage&q=national%20sewing%20machine&f=false

 At that point, in a moment of frustration, and yes, anger, I began referring to these machines as “The Patent 469199 Machine.”

 I was given one of these machines on October 28, 2012. Mine is a Germania. It sews like a champ and is a machine I quite enjoy. They seem to be good little machines, even if they do try to look way too much like a New Home.

Following is my guide to differentiation between a real New Home and the “impostor” National machine. For this I used a 1923 New Home A and my Germania.  I used the New Home A because that seems to be the machine The Patent 469199 Machine is most commonly confused with.  (I used to have an 1895 New Home that I gave to a really nice ISMACS member, but the 1923 does a really good job showing how similar these machines are.)



Exhibit A -- Two identical machines that... aren't.

The Impostor Germania is on the left, the New Home is on the right.  (Hey, I've seen people miss the name on the arm before!)  First differences, look at the top tension bar.  New Home has a different lever on theirs.  The bobbin winder is in a similar but different place, but I'll talk about those differences later.



Note the tension bars top view.  I marked the differences and think they are pretty self explanatory. 
The Patent 469199 Machine has a bend upward in it which doesn't show up in this picture; New Home is flat, flat, flat (like the world!  just kidding.)

Handwheel comparison:

Look at the center of the wheel with the clutch knob and the design in the wheel.  The Germania has the clutch in the middle like a Singer; New Home As have the little knob offset from the center.




Rear view -- yup identical... oh wait -- look at that lever for the presser foot, the screw above it, and the knob for the pressure foot tension.  I think this picture proves that National was up to no good with this machine.    





Now for the real fun, in case you thought I was wrong....  The New Home has a machine latch to hold it in the bed; The Patent 469199 Machine does not.  That alone is hardly proof, so by number:

1 -- The New Home has a rounded spring, a rounded plate with 1 screw to support the flat bar; The Patent 469199 Machine has a square plate with 2 screws, no spring, and the corresponding bar is round.

2- -- The stitch length bar.  Besides the fact the end of the New Home stitch length bar end is rounded and The Patent 469199 Machine is squared, New Home used a squared support piece with a screw compared to the rounded connector of The Patent 469199 Machine.  

3 -- If I have to explain this.... I have no words.  This is the definitive point of difference between the New Home and The Patent 469199 Machine

4 --- Sorry, it was late at night on another busy night so I mislabeled #4 as 5.  But I will point out that there are so many other little differences -- have fun finding them.

5 -- Note the difference in the pivot for the arms.  Oh, and on The Patent 469199 Machine note the diamond shape by the shuttle carrier.

And if for some reason you aren't convinced at this point.... The New Home has cast into it New Home SMCO Orange Mass.



Next up, the faceplates.  Pretty self explanatory, I think.  The arrows point to the difference in needlebars -- New Home is flat, The Patent 469199 Machine is round.  The thread take up levers are in two different places.  The needle clamps are totally different.  And if you aren't sure, the New Home (right) is slightly smaller than The Patent 469199 Machine.  This picture does a good job of showing the size difference.





Now for the bobbin winders.  I was going to mark this one up, but it's so hard to.  Note the arm difference behind the thread guide; New Home is flat, The Patent 469199 Machine is curved.  The thread guide arm is different, though I will concede that The Patent 469199 Machine winder highly resembles the old style New Home arm winder.  However, note the case around the cam wheel on The Patent 469199 Machine, and the lack of one on the New Home.  



Once final glaring difference:  the serial numbers.  New Home did not put their serial numbers under the slide plate until Free became involved.  Let me repeat that: New Home *did not* put their serial numbers under the slide plate until Free got involved.  (New Home serial numbers are a topic for another day, and a topic that gets my goat as well.)  National was well-known for putting their serial numbers under the plate.  Another later point of difference is the release button for the shuttle, but not all New Home As have that.   This one happens to.
 
I hope this helps explain the differences between the New Home and The Patent 469199 Machine.

And yes, I still love my New Homes... but I am fond of my Germania as well, even if it does try to look like something it isn't!

Edit:  Forgot to mention... The Patent 469199 Machine has a National shuttle.  New Home shuttles don't fit.