Thursday, April 23, 2026

T is for Toys—A Road Back to Childhood

Toys was an easy pick for my letter T in the A to Z Blogger Challenge. I did consider writing about the tornado that wiped out my husband’s entire family farm when he was a teenager, but those memories are documented in a past post. That tornado—his family’s second—killed 24 people, injured over two hundred, stayed on the ground for 39 minutes, and carved a 14‑mile path of destruction. It was also the reason my husband spent his entire adult life trying to buy back the toys of his youth. And then some.

If you’ve ever seen the TV series Hoarders, you already know that most hoarders have major losses in their lives coupled with untreated depression. Their common thread is loss—loss that drives them to surround themselves with whatever they collect, be it trash or treasures. Another contributing factor is insecurity so deep most of us can’t understand how they can live that way.

Don was not a hoarder like you see on that show. But he could have been—would have been—if he hadn’t had years of treatment for depression. His thing was collecting: road maps, coins and currency, gas and oil memorabilia. And his gateway “drug” was buying back the antique toys similar to what he and his brothers once owned, the ones that flew over the fields and woods the day of the tornado.

By the time we met, I was collecting antiques too. I started with furniture I restored and used, then I moved on to smaller things—like filling in the missing pieces of the dish set my folks used at their cottage. I also had (and still have) marbles, Cracker Jack toys and wooden nickels. By the time I moved out of the house after Don died, we had a library room full of well‑organized “smalls” in showcases and collector boxes. Some might have called it hoarding; most people labeled us collectors because everything was clean, researched, and neatly displayed. Visitors often said coming to our house was like going to a museum. A friend once gave Don a retractable pointer as a joke because he loved giving tours of our “museum.”

After Don died, it took me two years to downsize—two years of selling things on eBay, hauling boxes to an auction house and selling through an antique mall where we’d been vendors for years.

But I will say this: we never met another vendor who didn’t have at least a few hoarder tendencies. Don’s basement and garage before we married were stuffed, but never as bad as the hoarding situations you see on TV. Don had a method to his madness, and I can already hear someone in the cheap seats of Bloggerland saying, “Sure. All hoarders say that.” But not many hoarders can say their widows sold one bread‑box‑sized item for $19,000 and a half dozen more for $4,000 to $7,000. He studied the collectibles he loved and had the disposable income to buy what he knew would go up in value.

Not everything did go up, of course. As kids we both collected stamps, and it was hard to even get face value out of those. I ended up donating a box of newer commemorative sheets to a place that uses them to teach kids about history. The moral of that story: never, ever buy anything sold as a collectible. No one lives long enough for those “investments” to pay off.

All collectors have a backstory—whether it’s the good stuff with actual value or they have houses overtaken by plastic recycling, rotten food and human waste. I’m grateful my obsessed collector was the former (sentiment‑driven) and not the latter (insecurity‑driven). If he hadn’t stood watching old license plates, pedal cars, live chickens, and ten‑gallon milk cans spinning upward, Don probably wouldn’t have spent his adult life trying to buy back his childhood toys and the family pieces handed down through generations. His grandfather’s pocket watch, for example, was lost to the tornado but after Don died he had a dozen I had to sell.

He couldn’t pass an estate sale, garage sale, auction or antique store without stopping. And we had fun doing it. We even managed to find most of the toys he’d gotten out of cereal boxes in the ’40s. And I still have his Captain Midnight decoder ring, signal‑mirror ring and bomb rings. Small trinkets, but they come with a large box of memories. ©

 

 

Photos: At the top of the post is one of the showcases in our library for our smalls. The photo here at the bottom is of one wall in our garage for Don's signs. The center picture is of Don showing his friends his gas & oil smaller items. Another wall had 1920s, fully restored gas pumps with the glass globes---can't find a photo of those. But you get the idea. Don was a hoarder but I was an organizer so it all worked out. 

23 comments:

  1. It would be cool to find all my childhood toys again! I would want to play with them though, not leave them in a box 😀

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    1. They are out there, if you searched but collector prefer them in their boxes so if you did find them, they'd be cheater without the boxes.

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  2. Sounds like you were a good team!

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  3. I grew up around collectors but escaped the bug. Sounds like you and Don had fun at it and that you made some actual cash at the end. Good for you! Me? I don't have the patience to sell anything. I go like a house afire at giving things away, though. Just wish, sometimes, that I could remember who got what or even that I gave something away! Wish I could even remember to what radio show my ring (bought with cereal box tops + 25 cents) was affiliated. It glowed in the dark, had a secret compartment for notes, a magnifying lens, and a ballpoint pen built into it. Sky King?

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    1. The 1940's Sky King glow in the dark ring with a secret compartment but I don't recall it having a magnifying lens and pen. Several are listed on eBay right now with actions starting at $38 to over $100. The Lone Ranger Ring had a signal mirror and a 'silver' bullet. I love those cereal premium rings because it as such a big part of our childhoods.

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    2. Thanks for the push. I found an offering with an illustration that is an exact match to what I had: 1950s Sky King Magni-Glow Writing Ring, ebay item 318058464115. The "cabochon jewel" of the ring is the magnifying lens that opens up to access the hiding place and the pen. The pen is set in a plastic piece that glows in the dark (through the lens when folded). I did not know about the 1940s ring and I must have bought mine in early 1950s as I was graduated HS 1955.

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    3. That must have been exciting to see. If you happen to buy one make sure you put it box with a label or attach a label with a description of what it is because younger generations don't have a clue and vintage toys usually hold their value if not go up.

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  4. It sounds like he had a hobbyist's passion for specific things and they brought you both joy. Lovely memories too.

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    1. I also have photos of everything I sold which is nice when I wonder what happened to this or that.

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  5. I have none of my childhood toys. There is a local museum that had an exhibit of toys of the 1950's (my era) and before several years ago. To me, it was absolutely fascinating, but I've never been moved to collect any of the toys I remember having.

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    1. I still have a lot of my toys. We didn't have them in the quantity kids today seem to have, though.

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  6. I've been collecting since I was a kid and my mom was, too. I don't think either of us ever fell into the hoarder category but we did fall into the "gotta have it!" category. You had quite the diverse collections. There are a few of my toys I'd love to see again. And my Beatles trading cards.

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    1. That "gotta have it!" category is a hard habit to break. I'm still fighting it after my major downsizing almost five years ago.

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  7. I believe "collector" is much more accurate. "Hoarders" are those people who hang in to newspapers, used dental floss, and litter boxes because "you never know."

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    1. True but I've seen a few Hoarder shows where people had huge amounts of collectibles that over took their houses---dolls, paintings, Beanie Babies, purses---to the point there were there were pathways through their rooms.

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  8. I still have all my toys, mostly dolls. It is part of what I call my unhealthy attachment to inanimate objects. My kids think I am crazy. They do not share my attachment, lol.

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    1. I know what you mean. And how could they? They didn't play with our stuff four hours like we did. They didn't have tea parties with our dolls or tell their secrets to them. I came to the conclusion when I was downsized that it was better to sell stuff to people who actually wanted my things than gifting them to family who had no interest.

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  9. It sounds like selling a lot of that off is funding your retirement somewhat. I think the difference is in the cleanliness. And storage capacity.

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    1. It did fund half of my apartment when I bought it...and it wasn't cheap. And storage and house size makes all the difference. I measured every room, closet and cabinet in my new apartment---it wasn't even built yet but I had a blueprint---and knew exactly what and how much I could take. I downsize probably over to 3/4 of our stuff.

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  10. I remember reading along as you sold things before your move. I was amazed by the things you had -- and so many were really valuable. We have a fair amount of "stuff" but not much is as valuable as the collectibles and antiques you had. :-)

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    1. Sentimental value trumps money value any day in my book. I'm amazed, too, by what I still have. We come into this world with nothing and piece by piece stuff comings into our lives. Just my jar of 100 wooden nickels represents 100 purchases at flea markets or antique malls.

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