Nearly 2,500 lots of American, European and Japanese toys will take the spotlight November 7 to 9 at Bertoia Auctions’ gallery, Vineland, New Jersey, with prestigious collections anchoring the sale. Automotive collectors will be treated to more of the late Bob Smith’s friction and pressed-steel toys, while holiday enthusiasts will be invited to take a third helping from the mind-boggling Fred Cannon collection and choose favorites from the revered Mary Lou Holt collection. In addition, Bertoia’s will present still banks from the collection of the late Dick Sheppard, European toys from the late Steve Olin and his wife Diane, and a remarkable Midwest private collection of horse-drawn cast-iron toys of every imaginable discipline.
Friday’s session opens with still banks from the late Dick Sheppard, who favored fine painted examples, especially buildings with cupolas. Among the top pieces are a very rare Boston State House, House with Bay Windows, and both slotted-roof and painted versions of the rare Old South Church.
The mechanical bank section features many pristine examples, including Elephant and Three Clowns, Paddy and the Pig, a beautiful Presto bank, Chief Big Moon, Globe, one of the nicer Trick Dog banks, and a fine Coin-Registering bank that Bertoia’s owner Jeanne Bertoia predicts will be a “high-ticket item”.
A premier collection of horse-drawn cast-iron toys highlights Friday session. Bertoia’s associate Rich Bertoia remarked, “These toys will continue to gain popularity after the new book on the subject comes out.” The many categories in the collection include work wagons, plantation wagons, leisure wagons and fire wagons. Three of the top pieces are a beautiful Oxford trap, a 4-seat Hubley brake, and a Pratt & Letchworth ladder wagon with original box.
Continuing with toy vehicles, Bertoia’s will auction nearly 150 cast-iron autos and trucks, as well as racers, busses, motorcycles and Vindex farm toys. The extra-nice Vindex selection incorporates nearly the entire range produced by the Illinois firm.
Closing out Friday’s session are figural cast-iron doorstops. Little Red Riding Hood with the Wolf, a very desirable Sailor, Guitar Player and Tropical Woman with Fruit Basket are among the top lots. The latter three doorstops were probably all manufactured by Littco of Littlestown, Pennsylvania. “They may be the best examples of those three designs ever to come to auction,” said Jeanne Bertoia, a renowned authority on cast-iron doorstops. She also noted that the sale includes an outstanding example of the flashy Wine Merchant doorstop. Jeanne’s pick among the building-style doorstops is the self-descriptive example embossed on its base with the words “Highland Lighthouse Cape Cod”.
Saturday’s session opens with Part II of the late Bob Smith’s friction toy collection, featuring Dayton Hill Climbers, D.P. Clark pressed-steel vehicles, and highly desirable Hercules tin toys. Nearly 100 examples of pressed steel are entered from the Smith collection, including rarities by Buddy “L,” Hoenes, Keystone and Structo.
In the folk art/advertising section, bidders will find a striking Indian princess cigar store, several well-carved carousel horses, and an unusual three-dimensional carved-wood fish sign once used outside a fishmonger’s shop. Other important pieces include a rare shooting gallery with two blacksmith figures, a tin self-framed advertising sign touting Brookfield Rye Whiskey and featuring a woman in lingerie – “risquÈ for its day,” according to Rich Bertoia, plus country store display cases, a pie shelf advertising Black & White Cigars, Nipper dogs and a nicely detailed and painted Stevens & Brown birdcage.
Also on the Saturday are approximately two dozen cast-iron stoves – some pictured in Dick Ford’s book – and a panorama of early German toys: battleships and oceanliners, autos of all types, penny toys, whimsical clockwork circus-theme toys, and ever-popular Lehmann tinplate windups. Lehmanns include boxed examples of the Baker & Chimney Sweep, Tut Tut, Mars Hot Air Balloon, and Naughty Boy.
Four complete, boxed Heyde sets in excellent condition will be sold, as will a comprehensive grouping of trains and accessories by Marklin, Carette and Bing; and a gathering of antique vintage games and magic sets. Within the latter category are German, American and French boxed games, some of them sports themed. Collectors will immediately recognize the desirability of the Stanley in Africa game, the French-made Fishing Pond with lead figures, and the large Hide and Seek game. Approximately half of the games have a black Americana focus, like The Bogie Man and Cakewalk. “There should be great crossover interest in those games in particular,” said Jeanne Bertoia. Saturday’s session also includes celluloid and comic character toys.
Sunday leads off with Schoenhuts, led by an exquisite boxed Teddy Roosevelt Adventures in Africa set. Rare in any condition, this particular set includes lithographed cardboard scenery, an optional purchase at the time of the toy’s original retail release. “When the set first came in and I opened the box, I simply could not believe the condition,” said Rich Bertoia. “It was just extraordinary, with immaculate paint. It’s as though it had been packed away in its original box with instructions saying ‘Do Not Open Till 2008 at Bertoia’s’”.
Approximately one dozen automata will follow, with the headliner being an 18-inch-tall Vichy rabbit, covered in rabbit fur and with a cabbage concealing a monkey inside. The session continues with German shops, rooms and dollhouses, including a including a huge Victorian dollhouse with kitchen wing from the late Flora Gill Jacobs’ collection.
Dolls in the sale include French fashions, many 24-inch (and larger) bisque-head dolls, china-head dolls, and teddy bears, including a few scarce early Steiffs. Out of consideration to bidders, Bertoia’s X-rayed the especially rare “rod” bear and confirmed that it contains interior rods that function as “joints”. The presence of these desirable rods validates that the long-limbed circa-1903 bear has a special pedigree and is, in fact, one of the rarest of all Steiff productions.
?The auction concludes with a spectacular Christmas display comprised of Part III of the Fred Cannon collection and a dazzling array of Christmas antiques from the Mary Lou Holt collection. The sale features nearly 100 Dresden ornaments, vintage stuffed Christmas stockings, nearly 100 glass ornaments, incredible Santa-on-reindeer displays and candy containers, a large Father Christmas chalkware figure, and a very large electrified reindeer with seated Santa. An exceptional piece in this category is a 30-inch Father Christmas display figure of artistically molded composition, which may have come straight from Germany to Pennsylvania, where it remained for many years.
Bertoia’s Toys for All Seasons Sale will start at noon on Friday, November 7; at 9 a.m. on Saturday, November 8; and at 10 a.m. on Sunday, November 9. All items will be available to preview during the month leading up to the sale; please call to arrange a preview time during this period. The preview will run from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. throughout the week preceding the opening session. On auction days the ongoing preview will start on Friday at 9 a.m., and Saturday/Sunday at 8 a.m.
All forms of bidding will be available at this sale, including live via the Internet through eBay Live Auctions. The full-color hardcover catalog costs $45 postpaid to United States addresses and $55 if sent overseas. The entire fully illustrated catalog may also be viewed online approximately one month prior to the sale at www.LiveAuctioneers.com.
Bertoia Auctions is located at 2141 DeMarco Drive, Vineland, New Jersey 08360. For information, to order catalogs or to arrange a phone line during the sale, call 856-692-1881 or e-mail [email protected]. Visit Bertoia’s Web site at www.BertoiaAuctions.com.