Social History — 1906
Mechanical toy figure and sleigh, candy container
This mechanical tinplate toy was also used as a container for sweets or candies. It was purchased for one penny (1d) from a London street trader on 17th December 1906. It forms part of a large collection of over 1500 penny toys and novelties purchased by the City Director Ernest King between 1893 and 1918.
King purchased his collection from the men, women and children who lined the gutters from St Paul's Cathedral down to Ludgate Hill selling a range of penny toys and novelties from trays hanging from their necks. This item was purchased in December, the most lucrative month for the traders, their cheap goods attracting vast crowds of Christmas shoppers causing disruption to the flow of traffic and people through the financial City. Regular traders were joined, at this time, by seasonal traders causing additional congestion.
In his 1897 survey of London’s poor Charles Booth’s identified street sellers, often known as gutter merchants, as being amongst the poorest of the capital’s workers. Classed alongside loafers, criminals and semi-criminals the occasional street sellers lived the ‘life of savages, with vicissitudes of extreme hardship and their only luxury is drink.’ Experiencing ‘an appalling amount of poverty and discomfort’ they were often found to be living in licensed common lodging houses and casual wards.
The toy was manufactured by Johann Phillipp Meier in their factory at Nuremberg, Bavaria. This area of Germany specialised in the manufacture of tinplate penny toys. Meier operated in Nuremberg from the 1880s. In the early days toy parts were assembled by home workers.
London was a major market for Nuremberg tinplate penny toys and many were designed specifically for the British market. The main distribution point for imported German toys arriving at London's docks was the Houndstitch area on the edge of the City. Here wholesale warehouses were often established by Bavarian agents working on behalf of companies such as Meier.
Tinplate penny toys were particularly popular between the late 1890s and 1914 but with the advent of the First World War trading with Germany largely ceased due to the Enemy Amendment Act of 27 November 1914.
- Category:
- Social History
- Object ID:
- 80.525/1426
- Object name:
- mechanical toy figure and sleigh, candy container
- Object type:
- Artist/Maker:
- Meier, Johann Phillip
- Related people:
- —
- Related events:
- —
- Related places:
- Production date:
- 1906
- Material:
- iron, tin, paint
- Measurements/duration:
- W 93 mm, D 22 mm, H 35 mm
- Part of:
- —
- On display:
- —
- Record quality:
- 100%
- Part of this object:
- —
- Credit:
- —
- Copyright holder:
- digital image © London Museum
- Image credit:
- —
- Creative commons usage:
- —
- License this image:
To license this image for commercial use, please contact the London Museum Picture Library.