
Toys like these are what many of us
spent many entertaining and happy hours playing with as children.
Who would have imagined that these, as well as many other adorable and fun
toys would become so desirable to collect...
Marx and other American Manufacturers were very
popular in the 1920's - 1960's. Now they have become extremely collectible not only for the wonderful memories that they evoke from our childhood but are a terrific investment. Many, depending on their rarity, can bring at auction hundreds and even thousands of dollars a piece.
Check the attic or basement at Grandma and Grandpa's, who knows what you may find?

Louis Marx & Co. was founded in 1919 by Louis and David Marx in Erie, Pennsylvania. Louis Marx was born in 1896 to Jacob and Clara Lou Marx in Brooklyn, NY, and after graduating from high school he worked at Ferdinand Strauss, a manufacturer of early mechanical toys. Marx specialized in and became the dominant American manufacturer of tin toys that reflected the quality and design inspiration of their European counterparts. Tin plate toys were originally introduced in Germany around 1874, using tin plate mostly used in the manufacture of oil cans. In the years following World War I, Germany lost its position as the leading producer of tin toys for children, and they were overtaken by the Japanese who produced tin toys for a global export market. With the founding of Louis Marx & Company in 1919 to produce tin plate wind up toys, an American company also sought to take advantage of this fundamental change in the global marketplace. At first, Marx mostly marketed toys from other factories overseas but they gradually built up U. S. production capacity by renting factory space from Carter Toys in Erie. Marx had the opportunity in 1922 to buy his old employer Strauss, and along with the purchase Marx gained dies to some famous Strauss toys such as the Zippo climbing monkey and the Alabama minstrel dancer. In 1928, Marx produced the first Yo-Yo and signed a distribution deal with Sears Roebuck & Co.

Quaker Oats bought the company in 1972 upon Louis Marx' retirement, and under corporate ownership the culture of the company suffered and the new product introductions began to fail after a near perfect string of successes. In 1978, the original Louis Marx & Co. ceased production. The box can make it easy to date Marx toys; for example, 5 digit zip codes and 2 digit state abbreviations were first used in 1963, zip + 4 in 1983, and bar codes were introduced in 1975 and did not become prevalent until 5 years after that. Prior to 1963, Marx toys either had postal zone numbers if produced within the U.S. and Japanese production was marked "Made in Nippon" from 1921 and earlier, "Made in Japan" from 1922 until WWII, and "Made in Occupied Japan" from 1945 - 1952.

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