While British firms were developing Hong Kong's
toy trade (with Lois Marx's help!),
most of the US import firms, Cragstan,
Azrak Hamway International (AHI) Shackman
(along with Marx) et.al., were taking
advantage of the cheap labour, broken economy and Marshall Plan's need for a
resurgent Japan to buttress the West against bolshevism and the Chinese
Communists by using Japan for the same thing Britain, the Europeans and Marx were using Hong Kong for - a good
supply of cheap toys, but tending to lead, tin-plate and composition rather
than the colony's polymers.
Japanese firm Sonsco are known to have supplied Shackman and this set's internal divider seems to have a section of
Sonsco logo on, so I've called-it for
Sonsco, I wanted the iteration
anyway! TJF will - I'm sure - indicate if he disagrees in his usual dulcet
fashion!
Although the quality was often poorer than the
Western firms whose custom they were taking, they knew how to market and this
colourful label beats the boring monochrome labelling of 1950's Britains or Comet into a cocked-hat - there might be a tank or charging cavalry
in the box! The fact that these figures are a good as any Barclay (or the other lot . . . Manoil
Manufacturing) to the eye, only seals the deal.
The code's probably 2450 or something similar, one
of the hollow-cast sites used to have a set of Anti Aircraft figures with the
same code (listed as 2450), containing 3xAA guns, 1 radioman and 1 charging soldier; it sounds like it was half the size of this set, so maybe the missing bit of the label is a ..51 or ..60, or even 2470, is that the tail of a seven coming down in the corner?
It used to be great fun to go into their Manhattan store and browse available clockwork toys. Sadly now gone they exist on line with similar items to Paperchase in the UK
ReplyDeleteAhhh! I thought they'd gone altogether, so it's nice to know they're still importing something . . . there may be useful stuff among it, erasers, etc...
ReplyDeleteH