Ed,


The Flexible Flyer brings back memories.  My aunt gave me one for Christmas in 
1947, and it lasted until about 1955.  I went sledding on it in many places in 
Minneapolis: Theodore Wirth Park, Marshall Golf Course, just over the Lake 
Street bridge from Minneapolis, Riverside Park.  Great fun and great memories.  
I just bought another one like the one I had from an antique store in 
Marshalltown, Iowa, so that my grandsons can sled on the hill in our little 
Michigan town of Eau Claire.  Yeah, they were well made.



Tom

________________________________
From: [email protected] [[email protected]] on behalf of Ed 
Kozlowsky [[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, January 17, 2012 1:18 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: {S-Scale List} Re: Made in the USA



Are you sure the sled wasn't a Flexible Flyer?

Ed Kozlowsky
Sanford, Maine

From: Rance Velapoldi <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Tuesday, January 17, 2012 12:47 PM
Subject: Re: {S-Scale List} Re: Made in the USA


Not only had a radio flyer wagon, but what I believe was an American Flyer sled 
- don't know how it got by ACG - but it was around 1948.  This was in 
Connecticut.  Nice, wood (maple?) slats with steel runners, room enough for 
about 3-4 kids/people.
Rance Velapoldi  (Tranby, Norway)

On 1/17/2012 15:13, shabbona_rr wrote:

True, but you had to go to those stores to find it. Today, it is more the norm 
than not. That's why the Pawnbrokers and Pickers pay a premium for old toys.

Even low-cost Marx trains were better quality than today's offerings (toys,that 
is). Anybody besides me have a Radio Flyer wagon in 1950?

Bob Nicholson ______________________________________

--- In [email protected]<mailto:S-Scale%40yahoogroups.com>, "richgajnak" 
<rustytraque@...><mailto:rustytraque@...> wrote:
>
>
>
> --- In [email protected]<mailto:S-Scale%40yahoogroups.com>, 
> "shabbona_rr" <user141771@> wrote:
> >
> > Look at how well toys and AF, etc., from the forties and fifties has held 
> > up compared to the cheap plastic disposable junk sold at Toys"R" us, for 
> > instance.
> >
> > In fact, AF was so well designed it blurred the line between scale models 
> > and toy trains in its day.
> >
> > Bob Nicholson __________________________________________
>
> There was a lot of cheap plastic, disposable stuff sold at F. W. Woolworth's 
> and S. S. Kresge's back in the 50's and 60's that did't survive the decades, 
> either... ;-)
>
> Rich G(ajnak)
>








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