By Robert Tate, Automotive Historian and Researcher
Images courtesy of the National Automotive History Collection
Posted: 10.29.2017
One of the great books that documents this era is Ken Botto’s “Past Joys,” which takes a look back at this period in the country when toy making was considered an art form. The book depicts not only car miniatures but other toys now considered to be highly collectible and quite valuable. The book was released during the early 1970s when antique toy collecting was becoming a popular interest among many adults myself included.
Pioneering toy car manufacturers in the early days produced cars and trucks in rubber. Rubber toys were less expensive than their metal, die-cast counterparts and usually available for purchase in many dime stores such as Woolworth’s - a major chain retail store with locations across the country.
Steel toys were very popular toys as well during the early part of the 1920s to 1940s. Steel toys were constructed from stamped or pressed heavy-gauge automotive sheet metal. These were the larger pedal cars and trucks that children could ride. These were heavy duty toys that could not be easily destroyed or broken. Many of these larger riding toys incorporated popular advertising from the day including the Coca-Cola brand and Wrigley’s chewing gum which featured branding artwork that has become ingrained into American culture.
During the 1920s through 1930s Tootsietoys (not shown here) became a very popular toy for younger kids and are very collectible today. They were manufactured as an assortment of cast-metal miniature look-alikes from the popular automotive brands of the day including La Salle, Ford coupes and sedans, Graham coupe, Mack trucks and other well known, now iconic, automotive companies. Mr. Theodore S. Dowst from Chicago started the Tootsietoy Company in the 1920s.
Ken Botto once said, “The toys themselves are important because they comment upon the real society that made them.”