Friday
May182012

America's National Toy

I’ve started the holiday weekend early (It’s Victoria Day on Monday), so it’s a repost of an old post tonight. Yesterday I had a twitter conversation about Lego and Tinkertoys. It reminded me of this post from four years ago, so I’ve fetched it from the archives for you.

Long ago, before the age of Lego, there were Lincoln Logs. Do you know who invented them? I’ll give you a hint: It wasn’t Abraham Lincoln.

Do you need another clue? Lincoln Logs were the brainchild of the son of the architect who designed the hotel to the left. You can click on the photo for a larger view if you think that will help you identify him. Even if you don’t know enough about architecture to recognize this man’s work, you may want to take a closer look at the photo. It’s a grand building, yes, but doesn’t it look a little Lincoln loggish?

It was when this son-of-an-architect traveled with is father to Tokyo while this hotel was being built that he saw the interlocking beams in the basement, beams specially designed to withstand Tokyo’s earthquakes. These beams were his inspiration for a toy construction set.

Necessity, they say, is the mother of invention. In this case, invention came before necessity, but necessity was certainly the motivation behind the development and marketing of this invention. When his famous architect daddy refused to pay him a salary, son-of-an-architect began pilfering a bit here and there from the fees he collected for his father on this hotel. Daddy found out and fired him, and children everywhere benefit because the filching son was forced to fend for himself.

The Christmas ad pictured above is from the December 1928 issue of Child Life, four years after Lincoln Logs were first sold to the public. I’ve cut the copy from the ad, but you can still see the entire thing if you wish. Here’s some of it:

The very “Spirit of America” is typified by the creative possibilities of LINCOLN LOGS. A new enlarged Design Book shows many novel building ideas and suggests ways of using LINCOLN LOGS which arouse and maintain interest in this “ALL AMERICAN Toy” and make it “the most used Toy in the Playroom.”

And you thought people today overuse quotation marks. 

“LINCOLN LOGS,” we’re told, “‘Fit In’ with Other Toys.” Good to know. The playroom is no place for misfits.

A single set of logs sold for $1, a double for $2, and a triple for $3. There was no savings for buying in bulk back then. I have photos of ads from 1928 and 1934 (scroll down) and the prices are exactly the same, but by 1934, a set that includes log wheels for making “OX CARTS, WHEELBARROWS, WAGONS and CANNON of the olden times”, “modern Motor Cars,” and airplanes has been added to the selection.

My sister and I received a set of Lincoln Logs for Christmas when I was five years old. I had very few toys as a child because my family had no money for extras, and toys, believe it or not, are extras. But that Christmas three teenaged boys from the church my father pastored made each of us a big doll cradle, and they threw in a set of Tinker Toys and a set of Lincoln Logs, too.

I never did play with my cradle because I didn’t do dolls. I preferred cars and trucks, and not in the “Hi, baby truck, I’m a big truck and I’m your mommy!” way my youngest daughter did. No, I built national parks in the dirt and drove in the tourists. You can imagine how much I loved my Lincoln Logs.

The only problem with Lincoln Logs is that there are never enough of them. Do you know how many sets it would have taken to make the whole town pictured above? Remember that each roof slat is a piece, as well as each single linker used in the doors and windows. I doubt you could make the large central building from even a triple set of 166 logs. My husband solved the piece shortage problem for my own kids by making them hundreds and hundreds of additional pieces out of wood scraps from his shop. They filled whole rooms with their cities.

Somewhere in the storage room in the basement is a 4 foot by 2 foot by 2 foot cardboard box containing his home made Lincoln logs. Before long, there will be grandchildren filling whole rooms with cities and national parks. They will not know their grandpa, but they’ll be able to play with the toys he made. That’s a consolation prize, I suppose, but it’s better than nothing.

There is no prize, consolation or otherwise, for guessing which architect’s son invented Lincoln Logs. If you know only one famous architect and you guess him, you will probably be (w)right.

Lincoln Logs are, you might say, “America’s National Toy” from the son of “America’s National Architect.”


More fun with toys:

Thursday
May172012

Thankful Thursday

I’m thankful to be a grandmother again. My oldest daughter had a baby girl on Saturday. Little Amelia was born in Vancouver, so I haven’t seen her yet, but I’m thankful for her. I’m thankful that she is healthy and doing well. I’m thankful that I’ll be flying down to see her soon.

I’m still thankful for Natalie, granddaughter #1, who just got her first tooth. I’m thankful that she is healthy and happy and sociable. Today, she crawled a tiny bit before she fell over, so she’ll probably be getting around by herself before long. I’m thankful that she’s learning new things every day.

Grandmotherhood is a gift and calling for which I am thankful.

I’m thankful for other gifts, too.

  • Sunshine and warmer temps. It snowed yesterday, but it’s proper spring weather today.
  • The pond behind our house. It may be a mosquito factory, but the dogs love to cool off in it, and the birds love it, too.
  • That it will soon be time to plant the garden.
  • That the trees will have new leaves.
  • Strawberries in season.
  • God-breathed scripture. How would I know Jesus without it? 

What are you thankful for?

Thursday
May172012

Syttende Mai 

800px-Flag_of_Norway.svg.png

It’s the 17th of May (Syttende Mai), National Day or Constitution Day for Norwegians. It was in 1814 that Norway broke away from Denmark after being under Danish control for several hundred years. On May 17th of that year, Norway’s constitution was established. Nevermind that Norway was part of a kingdom with Sweden until 1905, this is the day that they celebrate their independence. 
 
To celebrate the Seventeenth of May, I’m posting the words to the Norwegian national anthem, Ja, vi elsker dette landet. There’s a link at the end so you can hear it, too.

I have no idea what that one line in the English means and Google was no help. So I’ll ask you: What is a “saga night” and how does it send “dreams to our earth”? 

In Norwegian:

Ja, vi elsker dette landet,
Som det stiger frem,
Furet, værbitt, over vannet,
Med de tusen hjem.
Elsker, elsker det og tenker
På vår far og mor
Og den saganatt som senker
Drømme på vår jord,
Og den saganatt som senker
Senker drømme på vår jord,

Norske mann i hus og hytte,
Takk din store Gud!
Landet ville han beskytte
Skjønt det mørkt så ut.
Alt hva fedrene har kjempet,
Mødrene har grett,
Har den Herre stille lempet,
Så vi vant vår rett,
Har den Herre stille lempet,
Så vi vant, vi vant vår rett.

Ja, vi elsker dette landet,
Som det stiger frem,
Furet, værbitt over vannet,
Med de tusen hjem!
Og som fedres kamp har hevet
Det fra nød til seier
Også vi når det blir krevet,
For dets fred slår leir,
Også vi når det blir krevet,
For dets fred, dets fred slår leir.

 In English:

Yes, we love this country
as it rises forth,
rugged, weathered, above the sea,
with those thousand homes.
Loving, loving it and thinking
about our father and mother
and the saga night that sends
dreams to our earth.
And the saga night that sends,
sends dreams to our earth.

Norseman, in house and cabin,
Thank your great God!
It was His will to protect the country
Although things looked dark.
While fathers fought
And mothers cried,
Our Lord quietly opened the way
So that we won our right.
Our Lord quietly opened the way
So that we won our rights.

Yes, we love this country
as it rises forth,
rugged and weathered, above the sea,
With those thousand homes.
And as our fathers’ struggle has raised it
from distress to victory,
even we, when it is demanded,
for its peace will encamp
even we, when it is demanded,
for its peace will encamp.

Listen