 |
Tinkertoy®
Stonemason Charles Pajeau and partner Robert Petit dreamed up the "Thousand
Wonder Toy" in the early 1910s after watching children create endless
abstract shapes with sticks, pencils, and old spools of thread. Adding
holes on all sides of a round wooden wheel sized for sticks included in
the set, they named their creation Tinkertoys. Shopowners successfully
promoted the toy with elaborate store displays. Tinkertoys joined a host
of other construction toys in the early 20th century, including Lincoln
Logs and Erector Sets, helping kids to learn by exercising what we now
think of as "spatial intelligence." Originally intended for
younger boys, after 1919 Tinkertoys attracted budding engineers through
the addition of an electric motor. The toys even came with instructions
for creating elaborate mechanical "tools," such as printing
presses, lathes, airplanes, and power saws. The postwar boom years of
the 1950s finally brought color to the classic wooden toy. Playskool acquired
Tinkertoy in 1985 and redesigned the toy in 1992 in honor of its 80th
anniversary. No longer the wooden rods and spools of old, the new version
featured brightly colored plastic parts, with each set designed to create
particular objects.
|