In the old days, it was 'one size fit's all.'
When John Lucia, and the rest of us began getting the club going, it was mostly trial and error. Establishing rules, and guidelines was not an issue, providing a sounding board was our only desire.
Back then, there were companies by the dozen who made vacuum cleaners, and the common names of today, didn't exist. Hoover, Eureka, General Electric, Regina, Shetland/Lewyt, and others were everywhere. Department stores, K-Mart, and thousands of fly by night vacuum cleaner shops blanketed the country. In addition to these, were the rather high end machines. Air-Way, Compact, Electrolux, Filter Queen, Kirby, Royal and a few others that were sold on an in-home demo basis.
All of us had one goal, to learn as much as we could about these brands. We shared stories of each others interests, swapped instruction books, (and in some cases actual vacuum cleaners) and phone calls by the score. Please remenber that this was long before internet, cell phone, and E-bay. Each of us liked what was in grandma's closet, and had to have it. And what's most important, aside from Hoover, who accepted us, Electrolux, Kirby and so on were interested in sales. They couldn't care less about their history, that didn't make money!
Then in 1985, we held our first meeting (not convention) there were 5 of us there to set the rules. Again the classic brands like Hoover, Eureka, Electrolux and so on were the issue. Nice as a 1205 was, it didn't fit in the mix. Too new!
Cut to 2013, there's the V.C.C.C., Vacuumland, and The Vacuum cleaner assoc., (am I missing anybody?) Knowledge is everywhere, we have the forum, and place to buy, trade sell or swap. In the old days the only way to show what you had was the Neswletter, and it came out every two months, until John Lucia and I got tired doing it alone, and cut back to a quarterly. Trust me, that was a backbreaking job. Today, it's all a mouse click away.
Antique, vintage, collectable is not important! what it has to be, or should be, is what's important it to you. So what differance does it make if it's a Hoover model O, or a Romba?
Alex Taber.