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I hope to add some photos of actual logos in the
future as time permits. For now, hopefully the information below may assist you in identifying your toy by the maker name or logo which may
be an actual name, acronym, abbreviation or a symbol. The majority of the
manufacturers listed here currently made tin toys, some made pressed steel or
wood and /or plastic. I am gradually adding more makers of pressed steel,
die-cast, plastic etc.
This list of basic information is a compilation of information from collectors,
books, discussion boards, websites and research on my own "mystery" toy finds. It is far from complete, and always "a work in progress". If you have additional information you
would like to share or have added, please contact me.
AC Gilbert
• USA
A.C. Gilbert was an accomplished individual, being a medical doctor, magician
and a gold medal winner in the 1908 Olympics. The AC Gilbert Company produced
and distributed a wide range of toys, some of their own and of other
manufacturers. Recognized as the most creative inspiring toys were the Erector
Set in 1913 and the acquisition of American Flyer trains in 1937. The earliest
known tin vehicles by the company was a U.S. Mail and Ambulance in 1914. The
company struggled in the early 1960's and sold off the Erector name to Meccano
(not of England, but of Meccano,SA of France). In 1966, Lionel acquired all of
American Flyer. However, having a long history with Sears, Roebuck and Co.
marketing their products, 1965 was a success with the James Bond series of toys,
produced in Japan and under license agreements with Glidrose Productions, Ltd..
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A.Wells & Co.
• 1919-1932, later to become Wells Brimtoy Ltd., ceased production in 1965
• British
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AC Williams
• Founded 1886 by Adam Clark Williams
• Chagrin Falls, Ohio / USA
Toy production actually started in 1893 after a fire made the company move to
Ravenna, Ohio USA. They were largely known for cast iron cars and trucks, but a
few tin vehicles were produced and very scarce today. The company ended toy
production in 1938.
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Alps Shoji Ltd.
• Founded 1948
• Tokyo / Japan
Alps Shoji Ltd., is best known by their mountainous logotype. They were a top
tier builder of both battery and mechanical toys throughout the postwar period.
Alps appears to have abandoned toy making in the early 1970's during a
transition to consumer and industrial electronics, which they continue to
manufacture to this day.
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Arnold
• Founded 1906
• Germany
Founder: Karl Arnold
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Asahi
• Founded 1950
• Tokyo / Japan
Best known by their Santa Claus logotype, Asahi was a major postwar builder of
mechanical and battery-operated toys, with particular emphasis on scale-like
models of then contemporary vehicles.
Asahi's fate remains unclear. Also identified as "ATC" on many toys.
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Bandai
• Founded 1950
• Tokyo / Japan
A powerhouse of Japanese toy making, Bandai thrives to this day as Japan's
largest and most successful toy maker.
During the postwar period, Bandai specialized in vehicle toys, dominating that
segment of the industry for more than twenty years. Also known as 'B' Sign of
Quality, toys.
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Bing
• Founded 1863 (toy making in 1880)
• Nuremberg / Germany
Brothers Ignaz and Adolf Bing began the manufacture of metal objects for the
home and kitchen. In 1880 they began to make their first toys: success was
enormous and in a few years the factory became the most important for toy
production in the world. Before the first world war, if one counts the various
factories and agencies throughout Europe, the company employed nearly 5,000. The
company exported all over the world, but above all to America. In fact the 1929
crisis dealt it a fatal blow, and it foundered.
The factory was acquired in 1932 by Karl Bub. This was the end of the largest
toy factory that had ever existed in the world.
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Brimtoy
• Founded 1910
• England
Brimtoy manufactured in collaboration with Bing, numerous toy cars. It was
absorbed by A. Wells & Company in 1919 and in 1932, became Wells Brimtoy, Ltd..
Production ceased in 1965.
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Burnett Ltd. 1914-1939
• made Ubilda Toys
• was taken over by Chad Valley 1939
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Bub
• Founded 1851
• Nuremberg / Germany
Another ingenious toy maker from Nuremberg, Karl Bub produced beautiful tin cars
and trains. In 1917, when Carette's factory closed, Bub acquired it. Then in
1932, Bub acquired the remaining assets of the then defunct Bing. The company
closed altogether in 1960.
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Buddy L
•Began in 1910 as Moline Press Steel company (IL)& started toy manufacturing in
1921
•Heavy steel & wood vehicles
Fred Lundahl originally began making toys for own his son at his truck & farm
machinery business. They became so popular, he devoted the business to the
toys.
The name Buddy L came from his beloved son Arthur's nickname Buddy. Co had
to make wood toys only during the war II due to steel shortage.
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Cardini
• Founded 1922
• Omegna / Italy
Short lived and closed its doors in 1928. It manufactured only 13 types of toys,
of them only three cars, one lorry and a large bus with a chocolate company
advertisement. The box that that contained each toy, when opened, became a
garage, track, hangar, harbor etc., and was illustrated by a famous draftsman of
those years, Attilio Mussini.
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Carette
• Founded 1886
• Nuremberg / Germany
Some may consider Carette as a French manufacturer, however this is only half
true. George Carette, a French photographer, opened the factory bearing his name
in Nuremberg, Germany and in partnership with Paul Josefsthal. In a matter of a
few years the company became famous for its cars, steamships and trains. At the
Universal Exhibition of 1893, it presented the first electric train.
When the First World War broke out, George Carette returned to France,
production ceased and the factory was not to be re-opened. In 1917, Bub acquired
the remaining assets of Carette.
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Chad Valley Co. Ltd.
• Founded 1823 to 1978 (but did not produce toys until after 2nd. WW)
• Harborne / England
Producer of many games and toys. Acquired Burnett Ltd (est. 1914) in 1939. Very
few tin cars were produced in the early years (pre-WWII), but some of the
popular ones were John Cobb type speed record cars and later a truck
lithographed with many of its games advertised on it in 1947. The company
existed to 1978.
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Chein (J)
• Founded 1903
• New Jersey / USA
Julius Chein's company was known for producing a wide variety of tin toys but
not as much for its cars. The few vehicle toys produced including army and
commercial trucks, busses, taxi, touring cars and a few racers. They quit making
toys in 1979 but are still in business.
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C.I.J. (Compagnie Industrielle de Jouet)
• Founded early 1900's
• France
A small French factory that produced many toys. It reached commercial success
with its reproduction of the Alfa Romeo P2 as seen on the Tin Car Garage
background. The popular Alfa Romeo P2 toy was sold from 1924 to 1939 and
probably would have continued had in not been for Germany's invasion.
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Citroen
• Founded 1923
• France
The French car manufacturing firm produced many toy cars from 1924 to 1936 and
the models were faithful reproductions of the full size cars. Andre Citroen's
motto was that all children, after having learned to say "Maman" and " Papa" and
then "Citroen".
Most amazing is many of these toys have outlived the real cars!
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CKO
• Founded 1910
• Germany
CKO for Georg Kellermann & Company, produced a wide range of toy cars modeled
after real ones. It ceased in 1979 but a Chinese manufacturer in the 1990's has
reissued some its toy vehicles.
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Courtland
• Founded 1944
• Camden, New Jersey / USA
Walter Reach started out producing die-cut cardboard toys and turned to tin
after the war. In 1947 its sales exceeded 1.5 million dollars, had 600 workers
and had moved production to Philadelphia. Production ceased in 1954.
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Cragstan
• Founded 1950's
• New York / USA
A New York based toy marketing and distribution firm which specialized in
importing mechanical and battery-operated toys from postwar Japan.
Cragstan was likely the creation of toy industry veterans; the name "Cragstan"
is believed to be a combined name of the names of the two company's owners.
Cragstan appears to have operated from the late 1950's through to the late
1960's.
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Daiya
• Founded 1950's
• Tokyo / Japan
An important toy maker from Tokyo, active through the postwar period.
Daiya appears to have been most active from the late 1950's through the early
1970's, after which they disappeared from view.
Daiya's current disposition is unknown, but it is presumed to have succumbed to
marketplace pressures of the early 1970's period.
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Distler
• Founded 1900
• Nuremberg / Germany
Founder Johan Distler initially manufactured small 'penny toys', but during the
1930's produced larger toy cars in printed tinplate. Their toy car style of
reproducing the real ones varied throughout the years but were of high quality.
The factory finally closed its in 1962.
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Eberl
• Founded 1900
• Nuremberg / Germany
Hans Eberl was another craftsman who established himself in the surroundings of
good company and competition. The Eberl company specialised above all in
lavishly finished cars and some being whimsical. They are scarce today as they
were back then as most were produced in limited runs. It closed its doors in
1929.
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Elvin
• Japan importer
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Ficher
• Founded 1899
• Nuremberg / Germany
Heinrich Fischer's company was known for producing refined and carefully colored
cars. It struggled to keep its doors open during the American depression and
through 1931. It ceased and finally closed its doors in 1932.
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F.S.C.
• Italy
Better known as Siro. In the early years they producing detailed lithographed
motorcycles and scooters. Today, some of Siro's tin cars share very similar
design, if not, exact to some of the 60's and 70's toy cars from Japan. It is
not known if the same designs and patterns are from Japanese tooling.
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Martin Fuchs GmbH & Company
• Founded 1919
• Nuremberg / Germany Ceased toy production in 1982.
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Gama
• Founded 1882
• Nuremberg / Germany
Georg Adam Mangold established Gama and was known for producing a variety of
metal playthings. Thru GAMA, the company and name Trix was established in 1938,
but was previously known as Vereinigte Spielwarenfabrike Andreas Fortner back to
1925. Gama also is widely known for distribution of other makers toys and in
1971, established, TRIX-Mangold (GAMA).
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GeLy
• Founded 1921
• Nuremberg / Germany
Founded by Georg Levy. Closed in 1971
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Gescha
• Founded 1924
• Germany Known as Gbr. Schmid / Gescha. Existed to 1967
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Girard
• Founded 1906
• Girard, Pennsylvania / USA
C.G. Wood established Girard Metal Works by providing tooling and patterns for
Marx and other toy companies. In 1931, Marx had controlling interest. Toy
production ended in the mid- 1970's and closed in 1980.
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G & K
• Gundka, Brandenburg / Germany Greppert & Kelch
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GOSO
• Founded 1878
• Germany
Christian Gotz and Sohn (Son). Disposition unknown after 1960.
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Gunthermann
• Founded 1826
• Nuremberg / Germany
In its time, one of the most respected toy manufacturers. During the early
automotive years, Gunthermann produced accurate reproduction tin toy cars. Also
used the SG logo. The factory was destroyed in World War II.
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Haji
• Founded 1951
• Tokyo / Japan
Also known as Mansei Toy Co. Ltd., Haji was a small Tokyo based toy maker that
focused mainly on producing toys in the the vehicle category, but occasionally
produced other metal toys as well.
Haji is not known to have produced any toys after the 1960's.
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Hess
• Founded 1826
• Nuremberg / Germany
Founded by Mathias Hess, one of the earliest known toy makers. Long before
automobiles existed, Hess produced toy trains without rails. Eventually the
automobile came and Hess produced high quality toy versions with lead flywheel
motors. It is believed production of toys ceased in 1941.
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Hess Amerada Corp.
• Founded 1964
Not to be confused with the pre-war Hess and tin vehicles but known for offering
limited series trucks and vehicles as instant collectables. Early on were
involved with Marx.
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Horikawa (SH)
• Founded 1959
• Tokyo / Japan
One of the most successful of all postwar Japanese toy makers, yet also one of
the least respected by collectors.
Horikawa specialized in robot/astronaut battery operated toys with great
marketplace success,
Horikawa has survived to this day as a specialty niche builder of vintage style
playthings for the collector market.
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Hubley
• Founded 1892
• Lancaster, Pennsylvania / Germany
Founder John Hubley was well known as a producer of cast iron goods including
toys. Hubley cast iron and zinc alloy cars have always been favorites by
collectors, but few recognize them for their tin cars, such as the Mr. Magoo
comical car in 1961. Some may have been imported from Japan and in 1965 was
acquired by Gabriel Industries.
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Huki
• Founded 1907
• Nuremberg / Germany
Founded by Hubert Kienberger
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Ichiko
• Founded 1950's
• Tokyo / Japan
A small Japanese toy maker known mainly for it's vehicle toys.
They currently produce a wide range of mechanical / electrical components, but
they are presumed to have stopped toy production in the early 1970's.
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Ideal
• Founded 1940's
• New Jersey / USA
Ideal Toy Company was a New Jersey based toy maker during the postwar period
Ideal was known for a wide variety of products in many different categories.
Ideal later merged with Sawyer's ViewMaster, and was ultimately taken over by
Tyco, which itself was consumed by Mattel in recent years.
The Ideal brand name is no longer used.
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Imar
• India
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I.N.G.A.P.
• Founded 1919
• Padua / Italy
(Industry National of Automatic Toys, Padua) - A most recognized Italian
manufacturer who produced many types of toys including automobiles, animals,
trains and military toys. Considered reasonably priced toys, they reached their
peak in the 1930's. The factory was bought out by Eurotoys in 1972.
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IY Metal Toys
• Japan
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Jouet
• Founded 1899
• Paris / France
It became JEP in 1929, after the merging of SIF and JdeP (Jouets de Paris).
Jouet produced appealing and quite complex toy cars in the 1930's, especially
Delage, Rolls Royce, Talbot, Renault, Hispano Suiza and other great marks of the
era. In 1965, the factory closed as the owners pursued other interest. The Jouet
name is used by a later company les Jouets Montblanc.
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JML
• France
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JNF
• Founded 1920
• Germany
Josef Neuhierl's company produced quality tin cars with clever operating
features. Most were modeled after actual production automobiles. Through the
years, their were close relationships with Distler produced toys. JNF is now
Carrera.
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Kingsbury
• Founded 1886
• Keene, New Hampshire / USA
The Wilkins Toy Company was purchased by Harry T. Kingsbury but he did not
change the name until after World War I. Kingsbury produced many types of
heavier gauge cars and trucks, but probably survived the depression in the late
1920's by producing the popular speed record cars. They are still in business
but ended toy production in 1942.
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Koh -I- Noor Hardtmuth
• Toy manufacturer of Czechoslovakia
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Kunstlerschutz
The Wagner Handwork Kunstlerschutz company got its start in the late 1940s when Fritz Wagner (1906-1971), a sculptor and mold designer, began an arts and crafts workshop in the German town of Rodental. T he created over 300 different animal molds. The animals ranged in size from 5 cm to 20 cm. Part of a long German history of creating animal figures from wood, plaster, clay, and papier-mache, then covering them with wool or other fibers (the flocking) to create top-quality toys and "putz" (Christmas nativity scene and village) creatures. Each animal was made by hand from a paper-and-clay-based composition "blank," then covered, or flocked, with cotton fibers. Color was applied next, using nontoxic paints. Fine details such as claws, nostrils, eyebrows, spots and the everpresent smile were also handpainted. Last of all, trimmings such as plastic horns, saddles, and the like were glued in place. Some species even had clothes made for them. This careful process produced about 400,000 animals every year. The company ceased production in 1998.______________________________
KW
• Founded 1895
• Nuremberg / Germany
Founder - Wilhelm Krauss. Closed in 1938.
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KY
• Toy manufacturer of the Peoples Republic of China
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Lehmann
• Founded 1881
• Brandebourg / Germany
The Lehmann Company is a German toy manufacturer founded by Ernst Paul Lehmann,
most famous for their colorfully lithographed and detailed mechanized tin toys.
While the company was founded in the 19th century, it came into prosperity in
the early 20th century when it switched to making lightweight yet intricate tin
toys in popular themes at a time when most other toy manufacturers were still
making only heavy iron toys. In addition to being lighter and easier to play
with, they were able to be lithographed with detailed graphics and vivid colors
not possible with iron toys and were more affordable too. The Lehmann Company is
still in business today (may be under LGB name), but their peak years of
production and the most highly collectible period is from about 1905 through the
early 1950s.
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Lincoln International
• 1960's
• Hong Kong
Logo "Empire Made". Their current disposition is unknown.
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Linemar
• Founded 1950's
• New York / USA
Linemar was the import subsidiary of Louis Marx & Co. Louis Marx was an early
adopter of overseas manufacturing and distribution relationships and established
Linemar to facilitate the importation of mechanical and battery-operated toys
from Japan. Linemar appears to have been in business from the late 1950's
through about 1968, when Marx ostensibly disbanded the organization and assumed
corporate responsibility for subsequent imported products.
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Lineol
• Germany
Known for producing quality cast and tin toys and in the 1930's, accurately
depicted military vehicles.
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Lupor Metal Products
• New York / USA
Produced economical lithographed friction toys. Disposition unknown. Many
similarities to the MARX cars in the late 1940's and 1950's.
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Mamod
• Founded ----
• England
Known for quality, large scale toy vehicles on which many were steam powered.
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Marklin
• Founded 1859 (Produced toys as early as 1840)
• Goppingen / Germany
Initially, Theodor Friedrich Marklin produced scale model trains, most
spectacular in quality. Marklin acquired other smaller factories in the area,
such as R.G.N. and Lutz. They exist to this day with very highest of standards
in toy manufacturing.
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Max Carl (or Max Carl Original) - Has the logo/tag with "MC, Originals, with a monkey head"
The MC is for the old German toy company Max Carl (MC). From what I can find, MC had a variety of makers produce the different toys for them. Wagner Handwork Kunstlerschutz used the monkey-head label from 1951 to 1965, when it made animals by hand for the old German toy company Max Carl (MC). These old animals are also often called MC Originals, because the label has an M and a large C surrounding the monkey head with "originals" written in the C. I have seen items listed stating or guessing ages of Max Carl marked toys anywhere from 1930's thru 1960's, but I do not have any additional info on the company at this time.
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M & L
• Founded 1920
• Paris / France
Short lived Martinan & Larnaude (M & L) produced tin toy cars exclusively up to
1933.
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Marusan (SAN)
• Founded 1947
• Tokyo / Japan
Best known by their circular "SAN" logo type. The Japanese word “Maru” means
circle, thus the mark of SAN in a circle. But the word “San” also means three,
which refers to the 3 founders of this company in 1947. Circles along with
diamonds were popular logo marks for Japanese companies at that time as
evidenced by the many marks we see within a circle or diamond.
The roots of this company began in 1923, when Naokichi Ishida founded Ishida
Manufacturing, based in the Tawarachou, region of Asakusa, Tokyo. Their primary
business was selling optical toys like toy binoculars, and telescopes. The
Asakusa area of Tokyo was home to many toy companies. In 1947 Naokichi Ishida’s
sons, Haruyasu Ishida and his younger brother Minoru Ishida, and Yasuo Arai
founded MARUSAN in the toy industry. Their business also was mainly selling tin
toys and optical toys.
In 1950, the company was formally incorporated as MARUSAN SHOTEN LTD. “Shoten”
means company or shop. The 1968 bankruptcy of Marusan eventually led to the
establishment of two companies: In1969 Minoru Ishida, the president of Marusan
Shoten Ltd. and Maruzan Co.,Ltd. rebuilt Marusan as Marusan Co., Ltd. At the
same time, Koutaro Ishida, who was a director of these companies and a nephew of
Minoru Ishida, built a new company named Bullmark. During the 1970s,
Marusan eventually moved primarily into the OEM
business of producing toys and parts for others as opposed to producing original
brand toys including small elaborate
gearboxes, which were used for many companies’ products, in 1981.
Marusan founder, Minour Ishida died on December 3, 1987 at the age of 72 and
Aiko Ishida was appointed president. The following year manufacturing was begun
in China. Marusan now remains one of the survivors of the Japanese toy industry.
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Louis Marx & Co.
• Founded 1919
• New York / USA
Marx toys is by far one of the most recognized and popular names
among today's antique toy collectors. The founder of the company, Louis Marx,
was born in Brooklyn, NY, in 1896. At the age of sixteen, Marx began working for
F. J. Strauss Company, a toy manufacturer that produced items for Abraham &
Strauss Department Stores. In 1919, Marx had a falling out with Strauss. Deciding that it was time to
venture out on his own, he established Louis Marx & Co., and set up office at
200 Fifth Avenue, in New York City.
His brother David decided to join him a couple of years later. "Give the
customer more toy for less money" and "Quality is not negotiable". By 1921, the
brothers were able to start independently producing toys from their own designs.
By the 1930's, despite the Great Depression, he built three new plants.
Louis Marx was not only a designer, but a marketing guru.
By offering quality at the lowest price possible, Marx was very popular with
toy buyers. This
popularity caused rapid growth, and the first and largest plant was in Erie,
Pennsylvania, the second, which produced toy trains, was in Girard,
Pennsylvania, and the third, which produced toy cars, was in Glendale, West
Virginia. Marx also produced and distributed toys in England from 1937 to 1967.
Marx continued to enjoy steady growth until the start of World War II, when the
factories converted for the war effort. The company grew even stronger into
the "Golden Era" of the 1950's. By 1955, Marx produced over 20% of all the toys
sold in the U.S., and had factories in ten different countries, including Japan,
with divisions such as Linemar. Marx also distributed toys produced by
manufacturers in Germany, including those from Distler.
Marx continued right up until the 1970's when he decided that, at age 76, it
was time to retire. In 1979 Louis Marx sold his
massive empire to Quaker Oats for $52 million. Three years later, Quaker
turned around and sold the company to England's Dunbee-Combex, who kept the business afloat until they filed for bankruptcy in 1980. American
Plastic Equipment of Florida resurrected the Marx name by acquiring the
company's assets in 1982, and intellectual rights in 1988. In 1995, a new entity,
Marx Toy Corporation*, was formed in Sebring, Ohio. The
new company has begun manufacturing from molds built by Marx as well as other
prominent toy companies of the past Louis Marx died in 1982 at the age of 85.
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Masudaya
• Founded 1924
• Tokyo / Japan
The K.K. Masutoku Toy Factory was a long time Japanese toy maker whose corporate
history dates back three quarters of a century.
Masudaya was a leading builder of mechanical and battery operated toys in the
post war period, and unlike most of their competitors, has managed to survive to
this day.
Masudaya normally identifies their toys using the M-T, or Modern Toys logo.
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Masuo
• Founded 1950's
• Tokyo / Japan
Masuo, also identified as Masuya, was a small Japanese toy maker best known for
their mechanical and friction toys marked with an SM or MS logo type.
Little is known of this company's existence after the 1960's.
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Matarazzo
• Argentina
Identification 'M' for Matarazzo of Industria Argentina.
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Mattel
• Founded 1950's
• California
An American toy maker whose roots extend back to the early 1950's in Hawthorne,
California.
Mattel was best known for their Barbie and Hot Wheels lines. They are currently
based in El Seundo, California, and they are the largest toy maker in the world.
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Meccano
• Liverpool / England
Company founded by Frank Hornby, makers of Meccano, Dinky and Hornby Trains from
a factory in Binns Road, Liverpool England
Originally produced construction sets, leading to toy train sets and in the
1930's automobile kits could be purchased pre-assembled. Its diversity created
the successful Dinky brand of small cast vehicles. The Meccano name lives on
under the control of Meccano, SA France.
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MEGO
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Metalgraf
• Milan / Italy
Originally produced tin boxes but were better known for producing quality toy
Fiat's during the 1920's and heavier gauge trucks and cars.
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Metal House LTD
Founded in 1943 as Marumiya, this little firm went on to provide both
manufacturing and designs of Robot Tin Toys for the great Japanese exporters of
the 50’s and 60’s such as Horikawa, Yonezawa, Nomura and Daiwa.
In 1989, this family run business changed its name to Metal-House and it is
still carrying on the tradition of excellence in design and manufacturing for
which it was always known.
These toys are new, of Japanese origin. Some are recreations of the classics and
others are new interpretations of those historic designs. Each is beautifully
crafted and finished, a testament to Japanese Tin Toy craft that will surely
increase in value in the heart of its owner.
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The Mettoy Company 1933-1983
•British
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M & K
• Muller & Kadeder
• Nuremberg / Germany
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Marchesini
• Founded 1908
• Italy
Produced tin plate cars under the MLB trademark.
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Modern Toys
•
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Naito Shoten
• Founded 1960's
• Tokyo / Japan
Naito Shoten toys are generally marked with the brands AN or AHI, and it is
believed that they were a division of or worked closely with Nomura. 'Shoten'
means shop.
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Nichols
•
____________________________
Noguchi
• Founded 1960's
• Tokyo / Japan
An obscure Japanese toy maker that is also thought to have been a division of
Nomura.
Noguchi was also known as N, and they were best known for their limited line of
paddle walking wind up robots and astronauts.
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Nomura
• Founded 1940's
• Tokyo / Japan
Nomura, also known at TN, was one of the biggest and most prolific of all
postwar Japanese toy makers. Nomura is believed to have built toys from the late
1940's through the 1970's.
Though their current disposition is unknown, it is believed Nomura transformed
itself into a manufacturer of other subject matter. Also of note is some of the
TN toys have reappeared with Masudaya.
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Ohta (K)
• Founded 1950's
• Tokyo / Japan
Ohta (K) was a small, short lived Tokyo toymaker that created a small collection
of playthings under their own brand, mainly during the late 1950's and early
1960's.
Ohta's current disposition is unknown, but it is presumed to have failed during
the 1960's shakeout of the Japanese toy industry.
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Osaka Tin Toys
High quality reproductions of tin toys & some new styles
_________________
Paya
• Founded 1906 (First produced toys in 1902)
• Ibi, Alicante / Spain
It was 1902 when Rafael Paya, the local tinsmith, made his first toy. Four years
later Rafael's sons Pascual, Emilio, and Vincente built the first toy factory in
Spain. By the 1920's Paya's toys were considered the equal of then great and
famous toymakers to the north. Not only was Paya quality the equal of Marklin of
Germany, but Paya's colors and imprints were graphically more interesting,
precise, and bolder. The 1930's, with Raimundo Paya at the helm, was the time of
great expansion. This was when the famous Bugatti race car was made. After the
war, in 1946, Paya once again started making toys. In 1985, Lino made the
decision to remake all of the classic old litho tinplate toys on a very limited
basis. The production of each was limited to 5,000 (or less) worldwide. King
Juan Carlos is a collector of these works of art!
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PN
• P. Niedermeir Company
• Germany
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Rico
• Spain
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Rocket USA - reproductions
Rocket USA says it's committed to reproducing toys from, as it puts it,
"America's Space Age of Innocence: a time when space exploration and robotics
were in the beginning stages and every man, woman and child was full of fanciful
notions about robots, space travel and galaxies beyond." The
company offers faithful replicas of the space toys produced in Japan in the
1950s and 1960s, buying the toys directly from original manufacturer Masudaya.
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Rossignal
• Founded 1868
• France
Charles Rossignal established the most important toy factory in France.
Initially, production centered on trains and low cost toys, but later
specialized in cars and Parisian buses. Especially well known is the
reproduction of the 1912 Renault limousine, also known as the Taxi de la Marne.
Production ended in 1962.
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Rosko
• Founded 1950's
• Tokyo / Japan
An American toy importer, similar to Cragstan, which specialized in importing
Japanese mechanical and battery operated toys.
Rosko appears to have been most active from the late 1950's through the late
1960's after which they disappeared from view. They are best known for their
logo type "Rosko Tested Toys".
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S & E
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SNK (Sankei)
• Founded 1950's
• Tokyo / Japan
SNK, also known as Sankei, was a small time Japanese toy maker.
SNK is best known for their copy (in more than one variation) of Zoomer type
robots, but they also manufactured toys of other varieties.
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Sanyo
• Founded 1950's
• Tokyo / Japan
A little known Japanese toy maker that thrived during the 1950's and seemingly
vanished thereafter. Primarily a builder of penny toys and other cheap
playthings, Sanyo diversified into slightly up market playthings during the
1950's.
Their current disposition is unknown, but they are presumed to have gone under
by the 1960's.
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Saxo
• Argentina
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Schuco
• Founded 1912
• Nuremberg / Germany
Founded by Heinrich Muller and Herr Schreyer as Schreyer and Co. and then
adopted the Schuco name as its trademark. As a model maker with Bing, the famous
toymaker, Muller developed a reputation as a man who could both invent the toy
as well as the machinery and tooling to build that toy. A powerhouse of toy
production from the 1930's to the 1950's. Schuco toys are legendary for their
innovative mechanisms and in longevity play worthiness. Later, the company was
sold to numerous times to different owners and new reissues are sold today. The
reissues are not worth the value of the original Schuco company toys (pre-war
and US Zone). Regardless, they are all works of art, are just as good as the
original and being limited, are very collectable.
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SFA
• Paris / France
Society of Fabrication and Assembly (Société de Fabrication et d'assemblage) was
founded in 1936 in Montreuil, FRANCE, and closed the doors forever in 1960. The
company was one of France's major toy manufacturers.
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Showa
• Founded 1950's
• Tokyo / Japan
A small time subcontractor that worked with a variety of builders, most notably
Nomura. Showa's mark can be found on many different toys and packages.
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Siro
• Italy
See F.S.C.
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SSS International
• Japan
Also produced toys under the 'H' logo. Not much more is known of them, however
they created tin cars with additional vehicles to play with. The caravan series
in the 1950's (both large and small scale) and the truck transporter series in
the 1960's were popular toys.
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Stock
• Founded early 1900's
• Solingen / Germany
Founder Walter Stock, mainly produced imaginative cheap toys and toy cars. It
closed in 1930.
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Strauss
• Founded 1918
• East Rutherford, New Jersey / USA
Ferdinand Strauss, from Alsace, France was a toy importer in the early 1900's.
During the World War I embargo of German toys, Strauss began producing his own.
Strauss also employed Louis Marx and continued to produce a variety of wind-up
toys until 1942.
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SY
• Founded 1960's
• Tokyo / Japan
SY was a little known brand believed to be related to either N or Yoshiya (KO).
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Taiyo
• Tokyo / Japan
Also known as Taijo Kogyo Company
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Technofix
• Founded (toy mfg.) early 1950's
• Nuremberg / Germany
The founder, Gebruder Einfalt, was engaged in German military technology during
WW II. After the war, Technofix diverted to tin toy manufacturing. In the late
1950's, vacuum formed plastic took the place of tin and as a result, quality
declined and sales dropped. Later, many Technofix toys carried the Ohio Art
trademark.
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Tekno
• Founded late 1920's
• Denmark
Originally produced very high quality tin plate vehicles that rivaled the best
of Germany's. During the WWII, restrictions had forced Tekno to quite using tin
and changed to produce vehicles in diecast. The company ended in 1972.
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Tipp & Co.
• Founded 1912
• Nuremberg / Germany
Founded in 1912, it was acquired by Philip Ullmann in 1919 and was to become
famous in the Thirties for its enormous toy cars made of tinplate. Identifiable
with its trademark TCO. With the rise of the Nazi's, Ullmann fled to England
where he founded Mettoy (1933 to 1983), now known as Corgitoys.
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Tomiyama
• Japan
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Toschi
• Italy
Best known among collectors for producing toy car replicas for the Ferrari
factory.
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T.N (in a horizontal diamond) Toy Nomura
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TPS
• Founded 1956
• Tokyo / Japan
Toplay Ltd, also known as Tokyo Playthings Ltd., are best known by their "three
fingers" logo type and initials. They were a third tier manufacturer, and TPS
was most active in the late 1950's and early 1960's focusing mainly on the
younger child's market segments and creating toys with colorful lithography.
The company's current disposition is unknown, but they were assumed to have
vanished during the market glut in the early 1970's.
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Tri-ang
• Founded 1919
• Merton (near London) / England
Tri-ang is the trademark by the three Lines Brothers, Ltd. who left a family toy
making business to became a giant British toy maker. Besides their well known
John Cobb Napier Railton and Goldie Gardner's MG tin record racers, the Lines
brothers established Scalex, Scalextric, Startex, Minix, Minic and large scale
ride-on cars.
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Unique Art Mfg. Co.
• Founded 1916
• Newark, New Jersey / USA
Pre and post WWII, produced a wide range of entertaining mechanical tin toys and
vehicles.
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Waco
• Founded 1950's
• Tokyo / Japan
Waco is another enigmatic Tokyo based toy maker whose products represent the
only information known about them.
Waco released only a handful of toys during a short run that spanned the decade
transition from the 1950's to the 1960's.
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Wuco
• Founded 1906
• Germany
Name derived from Fritz Wunnerlein & Company. Produced various types of tin
vehicles that were less detailed than other German toy makers and probably lower
cost. No further information is known of Wuco after 1960.
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Wyandotte Toys
• Founded 1921
• Michigan / USA
Wyandotte toys, also known as All Metal Products Company, was founded in the
fall of 1921.
During their first decade in business, they focused mainly on producing toy
pistols and rifles. Their slogan for that period was “Every Boy Wants a Pop
Gun”. By 1929, they were the world’s largest manufacturer of toy guns. Near the end of
their first decade in business, they diversified their product lines to include some girls
toys including doll buggies, musical toys, games, and wagons, as well as adding
a wide range of cars, trucks, and planes. At
this point, they decided to change their slogan to “Wyandotte Toys are Good and
Safe”.
Then came World War II, and the shortage of steel for
manufacturing. The company turned to producing toys out of wood and die-cut
cardboard, in a “build-your-own” play set format. Next the company bought Hafner trains, a company that manufactured
clockwork toy trains. In 1948, they began producing die-cast and hard-molded
plastic toys, in order to compete in the dime store low cost
markets.
In the 1950 steel shortages
and high labor costs made it difficult to compete and the company went bankrupt in 1956.
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Yanoman
• Logo is Y in an M shape
• May be also be marked Cragstan (for the importer)
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Yonezawa
• Y in a clover leaf-like flower is the logo
• Founded 1950's
• Tokyo / Japan
Also known as Y, or Yone, Yonezawa was one of the biggest and certainly the most
creative of all postwar Japanese toy makers. Other Yonezawa toys are labeled
under STS, possibly an importer.Yonezawa was a prodigious toy maker, responsible for literally thousands
of different battery operated and mechanical toys in all categories from the
early 1950's through the early 1970's.
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Yoshiya (KO)
• Founded 1950's
• Kobe / Japan
Also known as Kobe Yoko Ltd., Yoshiya was a major Japanese toy maker from the
postwar period.
Yoshiya (known by their mark KO) specialized in mostly mechanical or wind-up
toys featuring fanciful designs, but they are also known for its extensive line
of Robby the Robot knockoff toys. Tokyo based Yoshiya appears to have been in business from the early 1950's
through the early 1970's.
