Showing posts with label Milton Bradley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Milton Bradley. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

COLLECTION #214: Cowboy Toys & Collectibles


When I was a little girl, cowboys were all the rage. The 'golden age' of the cowboys began in the 1930s and 1940s, with the advent of celebrity cowboy movie stars and singers, such as Gene Autry, Hopalong Cassidy, the Lone Ranger, Roy Rogers, Dale Evans, and Tex Ritter. Of course, there had been earlier cowboy celebrity heroes, such as Tom Mix and William S. Hart, but these later stars became much more commercially successful and marketable.  [OK, to be fair, there was an earlier Golden Age of Cowboys....that would have been when the genuine cowboys roamed the Wild West in the 19th century!]

In the 1950s, when I was little, television westerns were the most popular genre for entertainment. In addition to the above stars, we kids adored Davy Crocket, Zorro, (he may not have been a cowboy, but he was definitely a western hero!) Rin Tin Tin (a doggy western hero), Daniel Boone. My personal favorite TV westerns were Maverick, Wagon Train, the Rifleman, Gunsmoke, Bonanza, the Virginian, and the Wild, Wild West.  By the mid-60s, the western genre had lost popularity, and only a few die-hard series such as Bonanza, Gunsmoke, and the Big Valley remained.

But cowboys weren't just for the movies, television and records. Cowboys were everywhere. On lunchboxes, games, home accessories, table linens, clothing, dishes, books, jewelry, calendars, and of course, toys. Some toys capitalized on licensed characters such as Hopalong Cassidy and Roy Rogers. (Very collectible, and expensive today). Others just clung to the spurs, so to speak, of the trend, and used generic cowboys and cowgirls to sell merchandise.

Here's my collection of mostly toys, but a few other items used by children and adults alike. I hope you like, and if you had, or still have any cowboy or cowgirl toys, why don't you leave a comment and share your story? (Click on any image for a closer view).

Cowboy Checkers by Fairchild Corp. Cowboy game by Milton Bradley. Notice the Cowboy Joe game piece from Go to the Head of the Class

Roy Rogers and Trigger neckerchief

More cowboy themed handkerchiefs


Misc. cowboy toys

Roy Rogers watch, and some toy watches

Toy watches and western set


Miss Davy Crockett purse

Cowboy dishes

Cowboy themed wall art and accessories

Cowboy paper doll
Cute cowgirl birthday card 

Mattel cowboy 'Ge-tar'
Cowboy and horse themed wall plaques


I have a few other cowboy themed items, you can see them here, here, and here. Oh! And here too.

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

COLLECTION 149: Vintage Children's USA Puzzles & Games

Welcome to Toy Tuesday! There's just something about maps that I love! I especially love old maps, with their fascinating shapes, names, highways, cities...and I love maps of the USA. Maybe it's because I'm unashamedly in love with my country, just seeing these old map puzzles makes me feel proud and nostalgic.  (Click on any of the photos for a closer view)

Oregon, where art thou?
These are my collection of vintage USA puzzles, plus one map game: The Game of the States. One of these map puzzles was my own as a child, the one shown below. I'm so glad that I never lost a piece, and that I somehow managed to hang onto it all these years.

Mostly, I just put them up on a high shelf as part of my greater toy collection, and rarely explore further. When I was cleaning these off to photograph, I opened the box of the one on the bottom right side- in the orange box. I thought it would be fun to see if all the states were there, and I was surprised to find two Texas pieces! What? They were completely different, and I quickly realized I had two map puzzles! (well, mostly two, several of the states were missing, but enough to see what fun puzzles I had.) The second puzzle was quite different from the first. The older puzzle, was rather boring and ordinary, but the second one had cool late '50s or early '60s graphics with cute, stylized illustrations of sheep and cows and trains and the like.

Also included in my collection is the old Hasbro Teach-A-Toy map, which includes little flags you can put on the map with the names of capitals and other important cities.



Most of these maps were created before 1960, when the last of the two 50 states were added. But they were sometimes included because they were territories at the time, and considered part of the USA. On one map, the Philippines is included.

I hope you enjoy my little map puzzle collection!