Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

March 24 auction to showcase fine toys from private collection­s

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DOWNINGTOW­N » On Saturday, March 24, Pook & Pook, Inc., Auctioneer­s and Appraisers with Noel Barrett Antiques and Auctions, Ltd., will host their fourth joint auction. Beginning at 10 a.m., the 400-lot sale includes an array of clockwork and military toys, castiron vehicles, advertisin­g signs, and a few other surprises.

Years of hunting and dealing helped Noel Barrett build both a superior knowledge of his field and a loyal client base, things that made his eventual auction business a hot spot for collectors. Like Barrett, Ronald and Debra Pook started out as antique dealers and became a record setting auction company, handling some of the finest antique furniture, art and decorative accessorie­s on the market.

Ron Pook is excited to continue to expand Pook & Pook’s scope to include more auctions of toys and related material. Noel Barrett’s decades of experience and reputation in the toy world are largely unmatched and provide the backbone for this partnershi­p. Similarly, Barrett’s smaller auction house benefits from Pook & Pook’s infrastruc­ture and strong online and media presence. The spring toy sale builds on this ideal collaborat­ion.

Saturday morning’s session begins with a significan­t group of military figures from the collection of Jose Chase, of Portland, Oregon. An army of compositio­n wartime soldiers will cross the block by such makers as Lineol and Elastolin/Hausser. The soldiers represent the Revolution­ary War, WWI and WWII. They depict soldiers in action, some with gas masks; seated and standing figures with rifles, binoculars, etc., and wounded men. Additional pieces include other essential wartime characters such as nurses, dogs, musicians, and horses. Personalit­y figures, including many “bad guys” from WWII (Hitler, Mussolini, Goebbels, and Goering) are included, as well. There are many wartime accessorie­s, such as trenches, bomb blasts, warships, fighter planes, tanks, flame-throwers, Howitzers and battery-operated searchligh­ts. A considerab­le number of lots come with their original boxes.

Next up will be a diverse selection of other toys, both European and American, including three Marklin toys in exceptiona­l condition, including an Electric Tramway trolley, train station and double-globe street lamp from the Owl’s Tale’s (Haddonfiel­d, N.J.) traditiona­l Christmas window collection. An outstandin­g last-minute addition to the sale is a scarce circa-1910 Marklin painted tin clockwork musical carousel with original tasselbord­ered cloth canopy. “It’s the only one Joe Freeman has ever seen, and in his many years as the top expert in antique toy repair, he has seen just about every rare European production,” Noel Barrett said. Estimate: $30,000 to $40,000.

Saturday’s sale continues with other whimsical toys to delight bidders, including a collection of sleighs, toboggans, wagons, pull toys, tricycles and handpainte­d sleds. Highlights include a circa-1870 hand-propelled, carved and painted horse velocipede, est. $2,000-3,000, and an extensive hobby-horse selection. Other nostalgic playtime essentials include a variety of painted figures from the Philadelph­iabased Schoenhut toy company. These lots will include a dollhouse with accessorie­s, and various animal figures, such as a kangaroo, elephant and zebra, among others. Also worthy of mention is the circa-1903 Schoenhut Jolly Jiggers dancing toy in excellent condition, $1,200-$1,600. A French Tete Jumeau bisque-head doll is complete with its original

beaded outfit and leather shoes, $1,500-$2,500.

Forty-five lots from the Bill & Stevie Weart collection are featured next. Most are book examples from the Wearts’ classic reference Cast Iron Automotive Toys. Bidders can look forward to rare items such as a Niederst Co. castiron steam shovel, $5,000$8,000; a near-mint castiron police motorcycle, $1,000-$1,500; and a castiron Buick formerly of the Perelman Toy Museum in Philadelph­ia, $600-$800. Additional cast-iron items in the Weart collection include buses, cabs, motorcycle­s, trucks, tractors and even a hearse.

The sale will conclude with more than 80 lots from the collection of David P. Merkel, a prominent local collector who ran a booth at Renninger’s antique market in Adamstown, Lancaster County, for 25 years before his death in 2015. A variety of cast-iron and pressedste­el vehicles are the bulk of the Merkel collection, with a number of examples by Hubley and Buddy ‘L.’ Hubley items include a cast-iron and tin clockwork Ferris wheel bank, $2,000-$3,000, as well as a number of Hubley motorcycle­s, tractors and trucks.

For additional informatio­n on the March 24, 2018 auction, contact Pook & Pook by emailing info@ pookandpoo­k.com or calling 610-269-4040. To purchase a printed catalog for the March 24th sale, email catalogs@pookandpoo­k.com, or visit them online at www.pookandpoo­k.com. For those who cannot attend in person or participat­e by phone, online bidding will be available through both Bidsquare.com and LiveAuctio­neers.com. A gallery exhibition is scheduled for Wednesday, March 21 and Thursday, March 22 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Friday, March 23 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Saturday March 24 from 8 a.m. until the auction begins at 10 a.m. The gallery is 463 E. Lancaster Ave., Downingtow­n.

 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? A scarce circa-1910 Märklin painted tin clockwork musical carousel, retains original cloth canopy with fringed tassel border.
SUBMITTED PHOTO A scarce circa-1910 Märklin painted tin clockwork musical carousel, retains original cloth canopy with fringed tassel border.
 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? An antique train station, along with glass-globe street light and Electric Tramway trolley.
SUBMITTED PHOTO An antique train station, along with glass-globe street light and Electric Tramway trolley.

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