Showing posts with label 1930s. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1930s. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Flash Gordon Signal Pistol (Marx / 1935 / U.S. / 5 x 7 inches)

There are only really two jobs open to a guy with a name like Flash Gordon: Stripper and Space Hero. Happily, ol' Flash chose the latter, and the universe became a much safer place.

When Flash Gordon was created in the 1930s, it was inevitable that a flood of space toys would follow. One of the best was the Flash Gordon Signal Gun. Looking like a rocket that blasted straight out of the character's comic strip, the Signal Gun is big, heavy, and loud. In short, it's pretty much a perfect toy gun.



I've always loved how the designers at Marx managed to fit so many curves and swoops into the toy, from the fin on the back to smoothly arcing handle to the blob-like body that is often affectionately referred to as... well... ahem... a Martian boob. I'll let y'all figure that one out for yourself. 




The gun came in three colors: mint green, fire-engine red, and a purplish grey that a friend of mine insists is "periwinkle." Having never owned the huge box of Crayola crayons that might have a shade known as periwinkle, I'll just take his word for it. It certainly sounds better than "purplish grey." In terms of scarcity, the green and red are the most common -- this is fine with me, since the green is my favorite. When buying one, try to find an example with as much of an intact decal as possible. They're almost always worn off to some extent, so you'll have to judge for yourself how much is enough.




The signal pistol featured a siren mechanism inside its pressed steel body. Pulling the trigger caused the gun to wail like a banshee while firing a shower of sparks.


This gun stands as perhaps my luckiest eBay win ever. Allow me to be blunt for a moment: Even in slightly rough condition, this is not an inexpensive toy. It's highly desirable and none too common. So when I saw it sitting on eBay with three hours to go, no bids, and a starting price in the double digits, I naturally assumed that a number of collectors had simply armed their sniping software and were waiting until the last minute before driving the price into the orbit of Mongo. 

I was on the way out to a friend's birthday party. It was a Saturday night and the local pool hall was calling our names. But before I left, just for the heck of it, I set my own sniping software to place an extremely low, softball kind of bid. I didn't think anything would come of it, I just wanted a hand in the game. Then I went to the party and forgot all about it.

Until about three hours later, when I suddenly remembered the auction. I realized it must have ended, and I was curious as to what the toy had sold for. I didn't think I'd won the auction, but I liked to track prices. By that point, it was well past midnight on the east coast, so I called up a friend on the other side of the country and asked him to jump onto eBay. "I only want to know the final price," I said. "I'm guessing it was maybe double my bid."

My friend was silent.

"What? More than double? Geez... that gun really popped!" (Get it? Popped? But seriously, I probably really said that.)

My friend was still silent. Then I heard a sort of gurgling noise, the kind that people make when they've lost the ability to form syllables but still desperately want to convey an important message.

"What, did it triple? A new record? Madonna's tap dancing on your table? Fourteen penguins just materialized inside your fireplace? Your microwave is speaking in tongues? C'mon, spit it out!"

"Dude... you won the toy."

And then it was my turn to start making strange noises. It just didn't seem possible. It didn't even cost me my maximum bid. Truly, a score to end all scores. Which is why today, years later, every time I look over at my shelf and see that Flash Gordon gun, I still find myself blubbering and drooling just a bit.



Friday, June 26, 2009

Buck Rogers XZ-31 Rocket Pistol (Daisy / 1934 / U.S. / 6.5 x 9.5 inches)

As promised, today I wrench open the hundred-foot thick doors of the Atomic Armory so I can bring you the finest space weaponry of the Thirties, Forties, and Fifties. And what better place to begin than in the beginning.

Presenting the Buck Rogers XZ-31 Rocket Pistol. 

This, friends, is the very first toy ray gun ever produced. Made by Daisy (whose BB rifles are probably most responsible for creating a mainstream market for child-sized eye patches), the XZ-31 is constructed out of sturdy, blued steel. You cock it by pulling back the handle, and firing it creates a loud Pop! It's not a very complicated toy, and its design avoids the multiple rings, embossed stars, and wild curves that would define later space guns, but maybe it's this subtlety that's helped keep it near the top of most collectors' want-lists for 75 years.

It was available in bare metal and a blued finish -- but the latter is almost always worn away. Mine has a mottled coating of finish, which I think makes the toy look like it was rendered in water colors or something. Rather striking, yes?


On its side, the XZ-31 is stamped with the words:



Buck Rogers
25th Century
DAISY MFG Co., Plymouth, Mich. U.S.A.
PATENTS
1,466,131  1,633,031
1,666,771  1,779,892
OTHERS PENDING


On the handle is an engraving of Buck Rogers himself.


The XZ-31 has an interesting history. Buck Rogers first leapt from the pages of Amazing Stories magazine in 1928. Soon after, he was given a comic strip, drawn by the legendary Dick Calkins. This lead to licensing deals, and it wasn't long before a whole store's worth of toys bearing the likenesses of Buck and his partner Wilma were vying for parents' money. None of them could compare with the XZ-31, though. 

Daisy produced the toy for the 1934 Christmas season. Macy's was granted exclusive sales of the gun for a whole week if they agreed to promote the living hell out of it. They certainly did agree, and set up an entire "World of Tomorrow" section of their store on 34th Street and Broadway, complete with rockets, moonscapes, and people dressed like spacemen. No one was sure whether a space gun would sell, and in fact, when parents first heard about this Buck Rogers fella, they thought he was a cowboy.

But on the day the toy went on sale, lines stretched around the block. The department store kept selling out, and Daisy went into overtime to manufacture and deliver the ray gun to New York. Everyone was making money hand-over-fist, and life was easy for the Macy's executives.

But then their week ran out, and Daisy started shipping Rocket Pistols to Macy's fiercest rival, Gimbel's department store. This kicked off an apocalyptic price war. Macy's would lower the cost of their XZ-31s to attract customers, so Gimbels would lower the cost of theirs. Back and forth, back and forth, until one store would run out of stock. Then the other would immediately jack its price back up! Often, the stores would cut the price so much that they'd be selling it for less than they paid to buy the toys from Daisy. At which point Daisy would come in and buy back their guns -- only to turn around and sell them once again to the retail giants!

One other quick note: Daisy decided that it would be just wonderful if Calkins redesigned the comic strip's gun to reflect the toy. He gladly did so. Nice.

I've always loved the XZ-31, but it was a long time before I bought one. They're super common, and you can almost always find them floating around on eBay, even in excellent condition -- these toys were built to last. Consequently, they're not particularly expensive, despite how popular and desirable they are. Given all that, I decided to save my money so that I'd be able to grab rarer toys whenever they popped up. The XZ-31 could wait -- it wasn't going anywhere.

But eventually I became tired of people asking how I could have such an extensive ray gun collection and not have the world's first ray gun. I decided that it's just such an amazing toy with such a fantastic history, I really had no excuse for not adding it to my shelves. Once a nice one appeared, I pounced.

Finally, I leave you with a photo of a brick. 


This isn't any brick -- it's a brick from the original Daisy Manufacturing Plant in Michigan! A few years ago, condo developers were tearing down the old building. A collector I know named Darryl snuck into the construction site late one evening and snagged me a brick for posterity. 

What a nice gesture. I make sure to send a card to his prison cell every Christmas.

Daisy would go on to produce a number of Buck Rogers weapons, all of which will eventually appear in these pages.

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Ray Gun Teaser Shot

To tide you over until I get my camera back, here's a teaser shot of a toy from an upcoming post. 



And for now, that's all you're gonna get.