Mike was the BEST
I remember when I first met Mike. It was in the beginning days of the VCCC (what we refer to now as the "old" VCCC). Mike was in the 'second' wave of members, after the first 12 met at Alex Taber's house.
Mike was the most outgoing, funny, knowledgeable person. He had a penchant for Lewyt Electronics, very early Kenmore PowerMate models, and Compacts. His Kenmore collection was very vast. Hans sent a very unique Kenmore canister from Mike's collection - a round canister with two 'trays' on a rolling cart. The trays hold cleaning cloths, furniture polish, and the attachments. I've only seen it in the catalog from the mid 1950's. It now sits with pride in the 1950's room of the Vacuum Cleaner Museum.
Mike himself gave me a Royal upright model 1. I brought it to the 'old' VCCC convention in Milwaukee and demonstrated it for everyone. That was one of my favorite conventions of all time.
It was Mike who talked the Ann Haynes from Hoover into letting the 'old' VCCC into the Vaults at the Hoover Factory. It there we saw a Constellation with an electric hose and power nozzle, as well as a clear Dimension 1000. I have all the pictures of the 'vaults' in the newsletter (that was in the days when the 'old' VCCC used to have a printed, color newsletter four times per year). No one else but Mike could have talked our way into the vaults, since they sat to the right of the research and development rooms. I don't think we were supposed to take pictures, but we did.
The next year, I was President of the 'old' VCCC and we had our Convention in St. Louis. Mike helped with the first Cleaning Contest which was held in my living room at my home. That was the year that we met Tania Voigt and Craig Long. Mike had the most outrageous things to say - and we thought Tania would be horrified and probably leave. She didn't. She stayed, and she laughed. Mike could 'read your beads' but in a nice way (if that makes sense) so that no one was mad after he said it.
I remember the first time I was at Mike's home. It was there that I saw the very first KitchenAid mixer (weighted like 50 pounds). As well as his 'double' central vac units he had tied together (two central vacs operating together at the same time through one pipe). He had vacuums everywhere, but they were all rare models you don't see anywhere else.
I'm really going to miss him. He made the 'old' VCCC into the unique club that it was - so unlike anything today. It was before the days for forum, cell phone, internet, etc. When collectors were really excited to see each other and show their 'treasures'. When we were just a group of friends who enjoyed each others company. I'll never forget him.