Pages

Tuesday, September 3, 2019

R is for Return - to Nazi Flats

So we looked at these a while ago and I asked whether they might be post-war, maybe East German or Russian parodies of Nazi's as part of some propaganda exercise, possibly cigarette premiums, but I had shot them hurriedly, at a show, and had not had time to investigate them properly.

Now that I have looked at them closely (they are in the collection!) the only fact remaining from the earlier musing would seem to be . . . they might have been cigarette premiums! Everything else is up for grabs!

'Foreign'; Aluminium Cockerel; Aluminium Duck; Aluminium Flats; Aluminium Goose; Aluminium Hippopotamus; Aluminium Horse; Aluminium Ibex; Aluminium Mountain Goat; Aluminium Rabbit; Aluminium Squirrel; Aluminium Stork; Bactrian Camel; Bear; Bisque Soldier; Camel; Chicken; Cigarette Premiums; Cockerel Flat; Die Cast Toys; DRGM; Duck Flat; Farm Animals; Flat Figures; German Flats; German Soldiers; German Toy Figurines; Goose; Goose Flat; Hippopotamus Flat; Horse Flat; Ibex Flat; Llama; Mandril; Mazac; Mazac Toy; Metal Toy; Metal Toy Soldiers; Mountain Goat Flat; Nazis; NSADP Toys; Penguin; Pig; Premium Flats; Premiums; Rabbit Flat; Rhino; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Squirrel Flat; Standard Bearer; Stork Flat; Stork; Wild Animals; Unknown NAZI Figures; Wild Life; Wildlife; Zamac; Zamak; Zoo Animals;
The first clue is that they are all marked DRGM (Deutsches Reich Gebrauchs Muster = a minor patent or registered design), which was [one of] the German equivalent[s] (they had dozens) of the English 'Pat.Pend' or French/Italian Depose, and which ran from before the Nazi rule, until after it, so wherever they came from, the evidence says it was within the confines of either 'greater Germany' or the later West Germany?

'Foreign'; Aluminium Cockerel; Aluminium Duck; Aluminium Flats; Aluminium Goose; Aluminium Hippopotamus; Aluminium Horse; Aluminium Ibex; Aluminium Mountain Goat; Aluminium Rabbit; Aluminium Squirrel; Aluminium Stork; Bactrian Camel; Bear; Bisque Soldier; Camel; Chicken; Cigarette Premiums; Cockerel Flat; Die Cast Toys; DRGM; Duck Flat; Farm Animals; Flat Figures; German Flats; German Soldiers; German Toy Figurines; Goose; Goose Flat; Hippopotamus Flat; Horse Flat; Ibex Flat; Llama; Mandril; Mazac; Mazac Toy; Metal Toy; Metal Toy Soldiers; Mountain Goat Flat; Nazis; NSADP Toys; Penguin; Pig; Premium Flats; Premiums; Rabbit Flat; Rhino; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Squirrel Flat; Standard Bearer; Stork Flat; Stork; Wild Animals; Unknown NAZI Figures; Wild Life; Wildlife; Zamac; Zamak; Zoo Animals;
The next clue is that the flag has a large swastika clearly visible upon it, and if you're wondering why I obliterated the swastikas on the Atlantic set but not here; it's simply that the Atlantic set is a weird modern 'homage' to a vile, murderous, militarised, yet 'civilian' political regime, while these - as we will see - are probably 'historical artifacts' - it's all about context!

Another possible clue is the short arms on the flag's swastikas, which could point to something? Did the SA use short arms; production likely during the NAZI period, or did the artist not know the correct dimensions because it was so new; production likely before the Nazis came to power?

'Foreign'; Aluminium Cockerel; Aluminium Duck; Aluminium Flats; Aluminium Goose; Aluminium Hippopotamus; Aluminium Horse; Aluminium Ibex; Aluminium Mountain Goat; Aluminium Rabbit; Aluminium Squirrel; Aluminium Stork; Bactrian Camel; Bear; Bisque Soldier; Camel; Chicken; Cigarette Premiums; Cockerel Flat; Die Cast Toys; DRGM; Duck Flat; Farm Animals; Flat Figures; German Flats; German Soldiers; German Toy Figurines; Goose; Goose Flat; Hippopotamus Flat; Horse Flat; Ibex Flat; Llama; Mandril; Mazac; Mazac Toy; Metal Toy; Metal Toy Soldiers; Mountain Goat Flat; Nazis; NSADP Toys; Penguin; Pig; Premium Flats; Premiums; Rabbit Flat; Rhino; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Squirrel Flat; Standard Bearer; Stork Flat; Stork; Wild Animals; Unknown NAZI Figures; Wild Life; Wildlife; Zamac; Zamak; Zoo Animals;
Swastikas are also suggested on several arm-bands, and the reason this is such a clue is that the showing of Nazi iconography was made illegal soon after the end of the war as part of the de-Nazification effort, which means we can probably rule out West Germany, as we have now ruled-out the East.

'Foreign'; Aluminium Cockerel; Aluminium Duck; Aluminium Flats; Aluminium Goose; Aluminium Hippopotamus; Aluminium Horse; Aluminium Ibex; Aluminium Mountain Goat; Aluminium Rabbit; Aluminium Squirrel; Aluminium Stork; Bactrian Camel; Bear; Bisque Soldier; Camel; Chicken; Cigarette Premiums; Cockerel Flat; Die Cast Toys; DRGM; Duck Flat; Farm Animals; Flat Figures; German Flats; German Soldiers; German Toy Figurines; Goose; Goose Flat; Hippopotamus Flat; Horse Flat; Ibex Flat; Llama; Mandril; Mazac; Mazac Toy; Metal Toy; Metal Toy Soldiers; Mountain Goat Flat; Nazis; NSADP Toys; Penguin; Pig; Premium Flats; Premiums; Rabbit Flat; Rhino; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Squirrel Flat; Standard Bearer; Stork Flat; Stork; Wild Animals; Unknown NAZI Figures; Wild Life; Wildlife; Zamac; Zamak; Zoo Animals;
Which leaves the figures as German-made and set in or just before the Nazi's came to power? Here we see that the helmeted figures have the side-studs for mounting things like face -guards/visors on, and - while the tops have been rendered slightly flatter by removal from the runner - still, the lines of the helmet are the squarer one of WWI Stosstruppen 'Boxheads', rather than the later, rounder/cleaner-lined one which 'soldiered-on' with the West German fire-brigade until quite recently.

'Foreign'; Aluminium Cockerel; Aluminium Duck; Aluminium Flats; Aluminium Goose; Aluminium Hippopotamus; Aluminium Horse; Aluminium Ibex; Aluminium Mountain Goat; Aluminium Rabbit; Aluminium Squirrel; Aluminium Stork; Bactrian Camel; Bear; Bisque Soldier; Camel; Chicken; Cigarette Premiums; Cockerel Flat; Die Cast Toys; DRGM; Duck Flat; Farm Animals; Flat Figures; German Flats; German Soldiers; German Toy Figurines; Goose; Goose Flat; Hippopotamus Flat; Horse Flat; Ibex Flat; Llama; Mandril; Mazac; Mazac Toy; Metal Toy; Metal Toy Soldiers; Mountain Goat Flat; Nazis; NSADP Toys; Penguin; Pig; Premium Flats; Premiums; Rabbit Flat; Rhino; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Squirrel Flat; Standard Bearer; Stork Flat; Stork; Wild Animals; Unknown NAZI Figures; Wild Life; Wildlife; Zamac; Zamak; Zoo Animals;
Other clues include the grey-green coated figures; the Germans used a very similar coating on their steel training ammunition to prevent surface-rust (arrowed - where the varnish seal was broken extracting the black-powder) in storage, while it is a neutral varnish to the figures green, the thinness, with metal showing through, and the all-over, thin-wash, one-coat nature is the same, it's not conclusive evidence, it's a clue, and it allows me to show you a rare'ish piece of militaria!.

Bit of a departure mid-post, but I'd better explain; The rounds (stained pink for an unknown reason; mould inhibitor, 'live' status designator?) are wooden, they would not have travelled far, or done much damage, but at short ranges (indoor or pipe-ranges) might have marked a target, while on exercise; they would have provided realistic 'kick', noise and smoke/smell, and could launch rifle-grenades without mishap. However, the hollow in the wooden bullet, would have caused drag-turbulence and lost momentum very quickly - they are basically blanks!

The cases are steel (cheaper than brass; by '43 they were losing the war) and compared here with a modern 5.56mm SA80 blank-round (which is brass). They are sitting in the magazine re-loading clip they came with, which is very similar to the ones we used with SLR's in the 1980's (but then the cartridge bases are near identical on both rounds) but this is stainless, or a non-ferrous steel-like alloy , while ours were steel, painted gun-black and would rust in damp pouches!

They were de-activated many years ago by yours truly, who put the black powder to good use, that is; if you consider Tobin and myself nearly blowing our faces off with a home-made chair-leg cannon and then almost drilling a large hole in my brother's head with a tractor-wheel bolt-grenade 'good use', otherwise the black-powder was recklessly used in haste, dangerously, but all three of us had a brilliant afternoon - 41 years ago, summer half-term!

'Foreign'; Aluminium Cockerel; Aluminium Duck; Aluminium Flats; Aluminium Goose; Aluminium Hippopotamus; Aluminium Horse; Aluminium Ibex; Aluminium Mountain Goat; Aluminium Rabbit; Aluminium Squirrel; Aluminium Stork; Bactrian Camel; Bear; Bisque Soldier; Camel; Chicken; Cigarette Premiums; Cockerel Flat; Die Cast Toys; DRGM; Duck Flat; Farm Animals; Flat Figures; German Flats; German Soldiers; German Toy Figurines; Goose; Goose Flat; Hippopotamus Flat; Horse Flat; Ibex Flat; Llama; Mandril; Mazac; Mazac Toy; Metal Toy; Metal Toy Soldiers; Mountain Goat Flat; Nazis; NSADP Toys; Penguin; Pig; Premium Flats; Premiums; Rabbit Flat; Rhino; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Squirrel Flat; Standard Bearer; Stork Flat; Stork; Wild Animals; Unknown NAZI Figures; Wild Life; Wildlife; Zamac; Zamak; Zoo Animals;
So, back to the figures; there are several possible scenarios, the first (1) still being that they were piss-taking parodies?

But now of German origin (rather than the Ost Deutsche or Soviet proposed last time) and from someone on the 'Left', satirising the early Nazi's; all that prancing about with Ernst Rohm and his mob of bully-boy, brown-shirt, boy-scout SA, happy-campers! And most of the figures are wearing the little SA kepi?

Being manufactured before they came to power, in which case it's a fair bet everyone involved in these figures may have ended-up in a concentration camp, a - likely - fate which would add a certain poignancy to the set.

But then -  Rohm was a bit of a short-arse? If the 'Hitler' character (third from left?) is a piss-take of Rohm, these could be SS or NSADP-sanctioned (2) piss-takes of the SA, in order to prepare the ground for The Night of the Long Knives? Or even - referring back to the same, in order to explain/excuse [propagandise] it, after the event?

I can only find this and while he was banned by the Nazi's, he wasn't killed, and his style is different?

'Foreign'; Aluminium Cockerel; Aluminium Duck; Aluminium Flats; Aluminium Goose; Aluminium Hippopotamus; Aluminium Horse; Aluminium Ibex; Aluminium Mountain Goat; Aluminium Rabbit; Aluminium Squirrel; Aluminium Stork; Bactrian Camel; Bear; Bisque Soldier; Camel; Chicken; Cigarette Premiums; Cockerel Flat; Die Cast Toys; DRGM; Duck Flat; Farm Animals; Flat Figures; German Flats; German Soldiers; German Toy Figurines; Goose; Goose Flat; Hippopotamus Flat; Horse Flat; Ibex Flat; Llama; Mandril; Mazac; Mazac Toy; Metal Toy; Metal Toy Soldiers; Mountain Goat Flat; Nazis; NSADP Toys; Penguin; Pig; Premium Flats; Premiums; Rabbit Flat; Rhino; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Squirrel Flat; Standard Bearer; Stork Flat; Stork; Wild Animals; Unknown NAZI Figures; Wild Life; Wildlife; Zamac; Zamak; Zoo Animals;
Or . . . (3) that they were comedy figures - but possibly based on characters that would have been known to the populace at the time, perhaps from a newspaper strip-cartoon?

Taking the Mickey out of one's own military in order to humanise it (especially when it's rightly regarded as the instrument of a totalitarian, fascist dictatorship, busy 'disappearing' people in the middle of the night . . . or broad daylight!) has a rich history . . .

. . . one thinks of Old Bill and Woodbine Willy in WWI, the 'Two Types' in WWII, or Bilko, Beetle Bailey, Dad's Army, It 'Aint Half Hot Mum, ITMAR and The Navy Lark on radio or MASH, and all the great double acts; Abbot & Costello, Bud & Lou, Laurel & Hardy had/did military parodies?

This guy almost looks 'familiar', was he one of the characters in a series of Nazi propaganda posters, or have I just Blogged him too much?!!

'Foreign'; Aluminium Cockerel; Aluminium Duck; Aluminium Flats; Aluminium Goose; Aluminium Hippopotamus; Aluminium Horse; Aluminium Ibex; Aluminium Mountain Goat; Aluminium Rabbit; Aluminium Squirrel; Aluminium Stork; Bactrian Camel; Bear; Bisque Soldier; Camel; Chicken; Cigarette Premiums; Cockerel Flat; Die Cast Toys; DRGM; Duck Flat; Farm Animals; Flat Figures; German Flats; German Soldiers; German Toy Figurines; Goose; Goose Flat; Hippopotamus Flat; Horse Flat; Ibex Flat; Llama; Mandril; Mazac; Mazac Toy; Metal Toy; Metal Toy Soldiers; Mountain Goat Flat; Nazis; NSADP Toys; Penguin; Pig; Premium Flats; Premiums; Rabbit Flat; Rhino; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Squirrel Flat; Standard Bearer; Stork Flat; Stork; Wild Animals; Unknown NAZI Figures; Wild Life; Wildlife; Zamac; Zamak; Zoo Animals;
Lined-up with a few known-WHW's, were they - indeed - (4) comedy WHW's?

From the left we have a bisque miner from a set of profession/occupation broach-figures (pin rusted to almost nothing), a composition pilot with string-hanger hole in his floatation collar (no Mae West 'boobies' for the Luftwaffe!) possibly from Elastolin or Lineol (?), two of the aluminium figures, one polished, the other coated, an unpainted WHW policeman, a painted 'historical uniform' figure (I seem to recall they were issued as Guard Regiments of Berlin) and one from the set we looked at the other day.

The police set has been tied-in to the Gau of Berlin (as issuer) also, but there are actually several versions, painted, unpainted and heavier-based, so like the commoner 'combat' set, there seems to be a history  of multiple issues and/or multiple issuers behind the set.

Finally (5) they could be 'just' post-war parodies, getting out before the ban on Nazi regalia and iconography took hold? But I think - now - we are looking at something earlier.

'Foreign'; Aluminium Cockerel; Aluminium Duck; Aluminium Flats; Aluminium Goose; Aluminium Hippopotamus; Aluminium Horse; Aluminium Ibex; Aluminium Mountain Goat; Aluminium Rabbit; Aluminium Squirrel; Aluminium Stork; Bactrian Camel; Bear; Bisque Soldier; Camel; Chicken; Cigarette Premiums; Cockerel Flat; Die Cast Toys; DRGM; Duck Flat; Farm Animals; Flat Figures; German Flats; German Soldiers; German Toy Figurines; Goose; Goose Flat; Hippopotamus Flat; Horse Flat; Ibex Flat; Llama; Mandril; Mazac; Mazac Toy; Metal Toy; Metal Toy Soldiers; Mountain Goat Flat; Nazis; NSADP Toys; Penguin; Pig; Premium Flats; Premiums; Rabbit Flat; Rhino; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Squirrel Flat; Standard Bearer; Stork Flat; Stork; Wild Animals; Unknown NAZI Figures; Wild Life; Wildlife; Zamac; Zamak; Zoo Animals;
Unifying the animal samples for a comparison/completion shot or two I can report that they are all unmarked with the exception of the rhinoceros which is clearly marked 'FOREIGN', suggesting they (some or all?) were imported into the UK at some point, where they would most likely have been Christmas cracker novelties.

The similarities in base are unmistakeable, but the animals - both farm/domestic and zoo/wild are of a slightly poorer finish, so a late use of older moulds perhaps? Hanomag and Fokker are still going strong, Elastolin survived until the 1990's, no reason why a small toy-maker or metal-fabricator from the Nazi-era shouldn't have dug it's old animal moulds out in the 1950's or '60's and run them again?

Mine have come as two, small, mixed lots (farm & zoo together both times), possibly with the Rhino' separate (I've rather lost track of them all by blogging them in the wrong order!), so it's all only conjecture, but I think a common-source is quite likely, especially as flats are often ID'able from the nuances of the bases, not that these - injection-moulded alloy - are exactly 'traditional' zinn flats!

No comments:

Post a Comment

Put your bit here and thanks for visiting....Feel free to correct, add something, ask a question, have a dig or blow a metaphorical raspberry!