For the very young, I remember Playskool toys, especially a multi prime colored top and a hammer set with prime color cylinders, triangles, and square sided shapes to hammer through a wooden reversible bench. They also had their wooden puzzles age graded with bible and cartoon scenes. Did hula hoops come out in the 50s? I was in college when my niece could do it and I could not so I thought that was 60s. Daddy got his first transistor through the NM catalogue Christmas 1960 thou a few high priced models may have been sooner. Early 50s there were coloring books of Roy Rodgers, Gene Autry, and General Douglas MacArthur after he argued over Korean War policy with Truman and was fired. No action figures but coloring books with Marines and Sodiers at war. I agree slinky was in the 50s. Plus lead soldiers who were still made of lead, hand painted and gorgious. I got a set with the entire coronation of Queen Elizabeth, carriage, Buckingham palace guards, Beefeaters, Horse Guards, 200 pieces. What fun! Other board games included Clue and Scrabble. My sister, brother in law and parents spent hours at Scrabble, Canasta, and Samba. Mary Kirby On Sat, 9 Aug 2003 11:30:09 EDT Annmarie Zan <[log in to unmask]> writes: > Don't forget the boardgames. Candyland for the very young started in > the > 1950's. Monopoly started in the 30s but was popular in the 50s. I > remember Chutes > and Ladders from my childhood in the early 60s but I couldn't find a > date of > origin for it. I am guessing it came out in the 50s. Does anyone > know for sure? > Annmarie > > ========================================================= > Important Subscriber Information: > > The Museum-L FAQ file is located at > http://www.finalchapter.com/museum-l-faq/ . You may obtain detailed > information about the listserv commands by sending a one line e-mail > message to [log in to unmask] . The body of the message > should read "help" (without the quotes). > > If you decide to leave Museum-L, please send a one line e-mail > message to [log in to unmask] . The body of the message > should read "Signoff Museum-L" (without the quotes). ________________________________________________________________ The best thing to hit the internet in years - Juno SpeedBand! Surf the web up to FIVE TIMES FASTER! Only $14.95/ month - visit www.juno.com to sign up today! ========================================================= Important Subscriber Information: The Museum-L FAQ file is located at http://www.finalchapter.com/museum-l-faq/ . You may obtain detailed information about the listserv commands by sending a one line e-mail message to [log in to unmask] . The body of the message should read "help" (without the quotes). If you decide to leave Museum-L, please send a one line e-mail message to [log in to unmask] . The body of the message should read "Signoff Museum-L" (without the quotes).