Tiffany Burbidge Tiffany Burbidge

Its all about the story

Sparky loves his family and loves his signs:)

Sparky learned a long time ago it is not often about the currency. Many collectors start off saying the do not want to sell the wanted treasure until…. the right thing is offered and then game on. Many collections are priceless to the owner and are thought of as a treasure not to be bought. This is where the fun begins and negotiations take place. Most owners don’t even know there is something other than cash that will entice them so creativity is a huge part of the fun. Unfortunately auction houses entered the game and almost gone are the days of negotiating or trading . Makes it so the stories are gone and it is not as fun as it once was. Sparky is all about the hunt, the game, the stories, the new friends and yes about finally getting the sign.

Read More
Tiffany Burbidge Tiffany Burbidge

hunting and gathering

One of the many sign trips around the country picking signs and gas pumps up.

The hunt was on! Sparky used every means possible to gather the pumps and signs we have including many trips across the USA and as far as Edmonton Canada, but have had signs shipped from New Brunswick Canada, Toronto and British Columbia as well as Maine, Florida and about everywhere else. Sparky has about 3000 collector friends on Facebook that help him find all the good stuff:)

Finding signs is its own story., then buying them is another story and finally getting them home is even a different story. They can be very complicated and are big and heavy and difficult to move. The gas pumps aslo have this challenge. Every one has it’s own colorful story. They most fun is meeting the people along the way, making new friends and learning the history of the signs. Sometimes a sign is spotted and not until years later is the deal actually made when the owner finally decides what it will take to trade or to sell it

Read More
Tiffany Burbidge Tiffany Burbidge

What spurred the Petroliana collection?

First sign acquired sign hangs on this white building. Gargoil Mobile and Willis Knight.

In 2013 when Sparky and Jeannie were headed to Guatemala to serve a mission their son Tim was running the Storage Park. He suggested “dressing up the park a bit” Sparky had been mildly collecting a few gas pumps here and there and had about 11 in total. Restoring the first pump that once sat outside Sparky’s home. We put them in front of the office of the Storage Park and some of the few old signs on the walls there.

Tim restored a few more pumps while Sparky was away and when Sparky returned is when the real collecting begin to take place. Tim suggested they go hunting for more pumps and so they did. So back to “picking “ it was but new and improved with the internet and facebook in tow. They learned that gas pump collectors also collected signs and so the sign collecting was added to the search. The first sign was the Kendall Oil sign which hangs on the right upper side of one of the outdoor buildings.

This begin the new and improved hunting and picking that is what Sparks Event Center has now become!

Read More
Tiffany Burbidge Tiffany Burbidge

The man behind the Mue

It all begins with an idea.

The seeds of the collection at Sparks Museum and Event Center were sewn in the Summer of 1957 as Sparky (the creator) went with his friend Todd Roberts, on a trip thru old ghost towns in Nevada and found a very nice original 1929 Model A Ford pickup that he bought for $25 . They tied it to the back bumper of his 49 oldsmobile and towed it all the way over the mountains back to Bel Air where he lived and began restoration on it while still in high school. He sold it before he finished and has always been sorry. Always a dreamer and creator even int the 50s he had the eye to collect and to restore. He loved old things then and loves them even more now.

In 1979 he bought an Erskine in Helper, Utah and that spouted those seeds again . That car he restored when I was a child about 10 years old. I remember him spending hours upon hours on it. He was in need of the parts to get it all back together and would drive all over, becoming what now days is called a “picker” as that was the only way to find parts. There was no internet only your car and lots of farmland with what to many would deem as junk piles. However he would see that so called junk and find the treasure part he had been in search of. Picking was the very best source.

He was a super picker and hauled huge loads of awesome stuff home from every trip he took. Back then the signs and gas pumps he saw he thought of as “junk” The exception was the old visible gas pumps. He did haul a few of those home and restored one as a Texaco and put it in front our home when I was young. We now have that pump in our collection at Sparks Museum and Event Center . This pump is located outside across the street in front of Lakeside Storage along with two signs he picked up. The Gargoil Mobile sign and the Willis Knight sign.

Read More