The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Bidders not for playing, as rare toy nets £5,800

- by Norman Watson

Among bits and bobs at home is a small collection of the boxes produced by the Dundee jam and marmalade firm

Keiller’s. Keiller’s were also known for sweets, which filled the most extravagan­t boxes.

A particular favourite among collectors is the 1960s Keiller’s sweetie tin in the shape of a ‘pop-era’ transistor radio. Another in the collection is the ‘Keiller’s Big Top’, a gaily-painted circular tin which, although filled with mouth-watering confection­ery, spins around when a string is pulled.

Which takes me in a thematical­ly-circuitous way to the ‘big top’ of circular toys. C&T Auctions of Tunbridge Wells have just offered a rare Britain’s circus roundabout in its original box, along with its receipt from Harrods, dated July 29, 1936. In terms of provenance, it doesn’t get better.

Toymakers Britain’s launched the Mammoth circus series in 1936 and kept it in production until the war began three years later. The circus roundabout was considered the rarest and most desirable of the set, as it was issued in limited numbers. It measured about six inches wide by the same deep and comprised a gold-painted lead organ at the centre of six lead horses, ridden by three boys and three girls.

Britain’s were establishe­d in the 1860s by William Britain in the north-east of London and, in the early 1890s, the firm began to specialise in toy soldiers. Under Britain’s son, William Britain junior, the company expanded its range and began to produce sophistica­ted toys, such as the Mammoth circus range, while also introducin­g the hollow casting process which it applied to the production of millions of ‘English Made’ lead soldiers that were part of every boy’s upbringing for a century.

Even with a punchy pre-sale estimate of £2,500-£4,000, the rare Britain’s roundabout caused quite a stir at C&T, eventually being taken all the way to a tip-top £5,800.

Picture: Britain’s circus roundabout, £5,800 (C&T Auctions, Tunbridge Wells).

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