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100 Classic Toys

Lawn darts (I'd like to know what maniac thought that was a good idea.)

Don't know, but if the kids who owned them were maniacs then a disturbingly large percentage of my junior high school friends were seriously disturbed creatures. I played with them just once or twice and had my fill of the things.
 
American Flyer Trains
Marx Trains

EDIT to add:

How about a toy Kitchen set? - NO
Toy cash register? - NO
PONG? - NO
video game systems? - NO

* Raggedy Ann & Andy
* Checkers
* Chess set
* Shirley Temple Doll
* How about Porcelin Dolls or China Dolls? Probably more of a collector thing...
* Board game Monopoly (sp?)
* Board game "The Game of Life"
* Board Game "Clue" (damn that Col. Mustard and his candle stick)
* Hula-Hoop
* Beach ball (OK, it's a reach)
* What about "scale models" or "plastic model kits" I had tons of planes, battleships, cars and, yes, a certain Star Ship as a kid....

Hula hoop - already mentioned

No board games using dice are in the book (if I remember correctly Mousetrap has a spinner?)

Raggedy Anne - YES - Inventor: Johnny Gruelle
Model Airplanes and other plastic models - YES - Airfix models are mentioned. The first Airfix models were sold to the public in 1952.

NO to the rest.

Sylvanian Families for the clue?

YES - No inventor listed. 1985.

CLUE - there are two toys in which you have to remove something in the hope that something doesn't fall.
 
Some of these might have been mentioned already

Action Man
Connect 4
Top Trumps
Battleship
Operation
Roller Skates
 
Some of these might have been mentioned already

Action Man - YES - Inventors: larry Reiner, Stan Weston and Don Levine (same guys who invented G.I. Joe). 1966.
Connect 4 - YES - Inventor: Howard Wexler. 1974
Top Trumps - NO
Battleship - YES - Inventor: Clifford Von Wickler. 1931
Operation - already mentioned
Roller Skates - NO
 
Lawn darts (I'd like to know what maniac thought that was a good idea.)

Don't know, but if the kids who owned them were maniacs then a disturbingly large percentage of my junior high school friends were seriously disturbed creatures. I played with them just once or twice and had my fill of the things.
IIRC, one kid was killed by a falling lawn dart in a freak accident and suddenly lawn darts were summarily banned. I mean, hell, you probably have a 1000 times greater chance of dying from being sucked up by a tornado.

CLUE - there are two toys in which you have to remove something in the hope that something doesn't fall.
Strip poker? :lol: (Sorry, couldn't resist.)
 
Major Matt Mason
[yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MNPQQjbSgjQ[/yt]
Johnny West
[yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wb6t1ldgL4Q[/yt]
Dark Shadows Game
[yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rvzwVpV8yRM[/yt]
 
Major Matt was great. If, on the other hand, medieval characters were your thing, the Noble Knights were awesome.

[yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-IHDdprrK6o[/yt]
 
Brio trains - YES - inventors: Victor, Anton and Emil Ivarsson. 1957.

My sons had Brio when they were quite young. I liked the way the wooden rails clipped together like jigsaw puzzles.

Jenga - YES - Inventor: Leslie Scott. 1983
Kerplunk - YES - Inventors: Eddy Goldfarb and Rene Soriano . 1967. EDITED TO ADD - I overlooked bbailey861 mentioning this toy earlier in the thread.

Clue: a generic flying toy

Clue: Cut-outs to make scenes with.
 
Last edited:
I think I know that last clue as it features in Oranges Are Not The Only Fruit :).

But I'll save for someone else...
 
I'll suggest the balsa wood "glider". The rubber band powered propeller type might be considered a subset.

"ColorForms" for the "cut-outs", maybe?

Oh, were coloring books and/or crayons (particularly the Crayola brand) mentioned?

Sincerely,

Bill
 
I loved ColorForms as a kid. I had so many different sets and still own many of them. That was back when something with such a relatively simple and cheap concept could keep children engaged for long periods of time and didn't have so much competition from electronics and other more sophisticated toys and gadgets.
 
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