Yorkshire Post

Museum keen to share toy stories

The collection, which includes a Russian circus boy’s bear and a 16th century doll, will be used in schools

- RUBY KITCHEN NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT Email: ruby.kitchen@jpimedia.co.uk Twitter: @ReporterRu­by

A TALE of social history is told in the toys of generation­s of children and how they have changed over time.

Now the Ilkley Toy Museum, which houses a treasure trove of ancient curios, is to share lost trinkets and games in new heritage boxes for schools.

Old toys evoke a sense of childlike reminiscen­ce that never fades, said museum owner Alex Samuel, and with a little imaginatio­n can inspire a journey through time.

“Children have always played with toys,” said Mrs Samuel, who has many thousands of items a few dating back to the fourth century BC. “People love to see them, and to say: ‘I used to have one of these’.

“Though dolls and games may have been made from different things over the centuries, they are a part of our social history.

“In the national curriculum we look at toys through time, and so many in our collection have a story.

“While it’s not always possible for schools to come to museums any more, this is finding a way to take the museum to schools.”

The Ilkley Toy Museum, opened in 1999, began as a way to showcase Mrs Samuel and her husband’s own assortment of old trinkets and dolls. When Hartleys Auctioneer­s put up a collection from the Museum of Childhood, it rapidly expanded and has grown ever since.

There are working fairground models, dolls house displays, tin soldiers, spinning tops and rattles, Thunderbir­ds models and puzzles.

The oldest item is a Corinthian terracotta dancing doll, dating from early 4th century

BC, which still has an ornamental headband, pointed shoes, and some painted decoration.

The teddy bears come with a storyboard of their history, with some featuring heartbreak­ing background­s.

One Steiff bear Boris, circa 1909, belonged to a Russian circus boy who was adopted at birth as his German soldier father wished to hide his existence.

Another, called Thomas, was the most treasured possession of a young boy who drowned while on holiday in Norfolk in the summer of 1948. With every item in the collection, said Mrs Samuel, it is impossible to forget the children who would have played with them. One of its most recent acquisitio­ns is a 16th century wooden doll, made around 1560.

Measuring eight inches tall, it has a “severe” expression.

“It’s lovely to hold,” said Mrs Samuel. “When you hold it in your hands it’s so smooth – you know it has been held and played with and well-loved over the years.

“Even if we don’t know where it’s come from, we can imagine who has played with it, and how it has passed down the generation­s.

“Children have always had dolls, even if we go back to Roman times.

“Some of the games are very similar to the games children play today. Just made from wood or clay.”

This is finding a way to take the museum to schools.

Alex Samuel, Ilkley Toy Museum.

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 ?? PICTURES: JAMES HARDISTY ?? TREASURE TROVE OF CURIOS: Ilkley Toy Museum owner Alex Samuel with a figure dating from 1912-3, left, a bear called Boris that belonged to a circus boy, above, and Action Man, below; inset, a boy with his bear, Thomas.
PICTURES: JAMES HARDISTY TREASURE TROVE OF CURIOS: Ilkley Toy Museum owner Alex Samuel with a figure dating from 1912-3, left, a bear called Boris that belonged to a circus boy, above, and Action Man, below; inset, a boy with his bear, Thomas.
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