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      In 
      1921, Lester Haft, an employee of the C.D. Wood Electric Company, filed a 
      patent application for what he called simply "Lighting Set." In the 
      patent, Lester described "new and useful improvements in Lighting Sets..." 
        
      Up until this time, standard 
      series lighting outfits were commonly available in sets of 8, 16, 24 or 32 
      lights. An eight light set was barely enough to light a table top sized 
      tree, while various numbers of lights were required to accommodate other 
      tree sizes. Lighting dealers were encouraged to carry all four sizes in 
      order to offer the widest variety to their customers. The sets were quite 
      expensive, and it was a bit of an economic gamble for dealers to carry a 
      big variety and risk having a large quantity remaining unsold at the end 
      of the season.  
      A crude form of extension 
      device had been available for several years which allowed sets to be 
      adjusted for the number of light strings connected to it, but it was not 
      the most practical of devices. The box allowed additional festoons of 
      eight lights each to be added by opening it up, and connecting wires to 
      the appropriate places. Here is a picture of a typical example, which is 
      made of heavy green glazed ceramic and was called a junction box: 
      
        
  
      While the device did indeed 
      allow for lighting sets to be expanded, it was quite a bit of trouble, and 
      most people were so unfamiliar with electricity at the time that they were 
      quite wary of attempting any electrical wiring modifications. In addition, 
      the junction boxes were heavy, and made decorating the tree inconvenient 
      at best. Needless to say, outfits equipped with junction boxes were not 
      huge sellers. Below is a picture from a 1921 Sears and Roebuck catalog 
      showing the junction box in use. I have colorized it for clarity. 
      
        
      The C.D. Wood Electric Company 
      was one of several companies involved in the manufacture of early 
      electrical devices. Seeking to improve the company's market share in the 
      sale of Christmas lights, Lester Haft, an employee of the company, hit 
      upon the idea of incorporating a device to allow easy connectability 
      between light sets to his company's outfits. Although several patents 
      already existed covering products that allowed other electrical devices to 
      be interconnected, no one thought of applying them to Christmas lights 
      until now.  
      On March 11, 1921, Haft applied 
      for his patent, describing the use of existing styles of screw-in and 
      bladed add-on connectors and their incorporation into a standard 
      series-wired lighting string of eight sockets. The patent application was 
      carefully worded so as to include almost all possible ways of wiring the 
      sets using the connectors. The key to the filing was that for the first 
      time, easy to use connectors would be incorporated into Christmas lighting 
      strings. Here are some excerpts from the patent: 
      "What I claim 
      as new, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is--" 
      "A unitary 
      Christmas tree lighting set comprising an attachment plug adapted to be 
      inserted in a standard lamp socket, a plurality of miniature lamps 
      connected together in series...and a complimentary attachment member 
      adapted to receive the similar attachment plug of a second lighting 
      set..."  
      "It will, of 
      course, be understood that any of the ordinary forms of quick detachable 
      connectors may be used in place of and as an equivalent for the screw 
      attachment plug, and that when such other form of connector is used the 
      proper complimentary connecting member is to be substituted for the 
      threaded socket here shown and described by way of example." 
      Quite suddenly, most of the 
      existing forms of plugs and sockets that allowed the inter-connectability 
      of electrical  
      devices would be covered by Haft's patent when used with Christmas 
      lighting strings. Needless to say, the filing of the application set the 
      entire industry a buzz. The C.D. Wood Company stood to profit greatly from 
      the situation should the patent be granted, as most lighting dealers would 
      be sure to appreciate the ability to carry a single light string to 
      satisfy all of their customer's needs. Some of the smaller companies 
      immediately agreed to license manufacturing rights to the Haft patent, 
      even though it had not yet been granted. The 1921 ad from Owl touts the 
      new add-on connector. Other companies offered strings with connectors of 
      their own, in blatant defiance of Lester's filing. The M. Propp Company 
      did not immediately license the rights, but developed their own connector 
      and string combination they called "One-4-All". The C.D. Wood Company sold 
      connectors for incorporation into strings and called them "Tatchon." 
  
      
        
        
          
            
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            | 1921 Haft Patent | 
            1922 C.D. Wood Tatchon | 
            
            1922 Propp One-4-All | 
            
            1924 Monowatt Tri Plug | 
           
         
        
       
      The next few years would be 
      most important for the Christmas lighting industry. The approval of Haft's 
      patent would be a complicated affair, as it basically incorporated devices 
      already manufactured and in use by other companies, but in this case with 
      a different application. Some companies challenged the filing, and it 
      would take more than three and a half years before the patent was granted 
      on October 21, 1924. Below are images of some advertisements sponsored by 
      a few companies using various forms of interconnecting devices before 
      the patent was granted: 
      
        
        
          
            
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            | 
            1921 C.D. Wood | 
            
            1921 Propp | 
            
            1921 Triangle | 
           
         
        
       
      The M. Propp Company challenged 
      the patent almost as soon as it was granted, but subsequently lost in 
      court. On July 28, 1925, Morris Propp, the founder of the company, applied 
      for a patent on a new style of add-on adaptor he had invented, in an 
      apparent last ditch attempt to work around the Haft patent. 
       
      The whole situation was 
      becoming more complicated, as by now, efforts were being made by a man 
      named Joseph Block and some others to band together some of the smaller 
      companies who were licensing the Haft patent rights into a trade 
      association.  The Association would have greater purchasing and 
      competitive power, and could more effectively compete against the larger 
      companies. The Association was formed late in 1925, and consisted of 
      fifteen companies then in the business of manufacturing Christmas lighting 
      outfits, and all of them licensees of the Haft patent.  The members named 
      their group N.O.M.A., which stood for the National Outfit Manufacturers 
      Association. All of these companies included a cloth tag on their light 
      strings, giving the patent information. Here is a picture of one of the 
      tags that was used:  
      
        
      1925 and 1926 were quite successful years 
      for the N.O.M.A., and the Association voted in 1926 to officially 
      incorporate into one company, NOMA Electric Corporation. The Corporation 
      started selling outfits under the NOMA name in 1927.  By 1928, Morris 
      Propp agreed to join the company, and surprisingly soon became its 
      president.  In a strange twist of fate, Propp's patent on his version of a 
      connector would be granted in March of 1930, a full year after he became 
      the president of the company he was formerly competing against. 
       
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