Thanks for the input guys!
I already pulled the steering wheel back off and there is no visible evidence that the wires have chaffed and are grounding out. I unscrewed the TS switch from the column and it looks good too. No telling if anything's amiss in the sealed portions of the switch, but since my turn signals and flashers are working normally I think they're probably OK.
unplug the TS switch at the column & test all the wires to ground both up the column & in the main harness , if the fuse is blowing you have a short , locate the short , if the short is in the switch remove the switch from the column & make sure no wires are damaged
I did this already with the body side of the plug, noting the resistance readings with my meter (before I began to suspect the new TS might be the problem). Here are the readings I got, with everything in the "off" position:
BLK (horn ground) = no continuity
LGN (LH signal lamp in cluster) = 1.5 Ohms
Tan (RH signal lamp in cluster) = .9 Ohms
Pink (emergency flasher) = no continuity
Red (turn signal flasher) = 72.4 Ohms
DGN (to rear stop lamps) = .9 Ohms
BR (to rear stop lamps) = 1.0 Ohms
White (stop light switch) = no continuity
I find it interesting that the LH signal lamp circuit is .6 Ohms more than the RH side, but I don't think that's my problem. The high reading for the turn signal flasher I attribute to the coil windings in the flasher unit itself. My meter reads .2 Ohms when the two leads are crossed, so one needs to subtract that amount from the numbers above to get the actual resistance.
I was also wondering if something might creating "feedback" through the circuit, creating a situation where two positive voltages are being "seen" at the fuse. I have a reproduction factory manual and know how to read wiring schematics, but it doesn't show everything (such as the inner workings of the TS and emergency flasher switches).
I'll go back out today and check the resistance to ground for the TS switch.
Thanks again guys!