A Cast Iron Mechanical Football Kicker In Original Paint - When The Lever Is Pressed The Player - Feb 18, 2024 | Hyde Park Country Auctions In Ny
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A cast iron mechanical football kicker in original paint - when the lever is pressed the player

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A cast iron mechanical football kicker in original paint - when the lever is pressed the player
A cast iron mechanical football kicker in original paint - when the lever is pressed the player
Item Details
Description
A cast iron mechanical football kicker in original paint - when the lever is pressed the player kicks the football which is missing. It measures 3 1/2" x 7" at base x 7 3/4"H. Some wear loss to paint, but overall good condition. The following courtesy of Terry Kovel (antique reference guides): "During football season, fans shop for T-shirts, banners, nodding heads, glasses and other souvenirs of the game. Through the years, many football toys also have been made. A 1930s iron mechanical place-kicker toy actually could kick a tiny football. This toy has been attributed to the Hubley Manufacturing Co. of Lancaster, Pa., but we found the toy’s 1934 U.S. patent (No. 1,954,838). It was granted to Charles Woolsey and Henry Bowman of Minneapolis, who assigned it to the Hinsdale Manufacturing Co. of Chicago. The invention was a game, not just the place-kicking figure. There was a fiberboard backboard that represented a football field. It had football-shaped holes that were targets for the football kicked by the iron mechanical man. The kicker could be moved into different positions. The idea was to get the toy man to kick his miniature ball through one of the backboard’s holes for a goal. Few of the backboards have survived, so collectors often think the football player merely kicked the celluloid or tin ball into the air. Some information about the game is still unknown....". Provenance: From the Thomas & Gail Rockwell collection, LaGrangeville NY. Tom is the son of the renowned American artist, Norman Rockwell and the author or many children's books. His late wife Gail, was an artist-illustrator and the daughter of Arthur E. Sudler and Janet Whitson Sudler, both early 20th century artists - she illustrated several of her husband's children's books.
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A cast iron mechanical football kicker in original paint - when the lever is pressed the player

Estimate $150 - $250
See Sold Price
Starting Price $70
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Item located in Poughkeepsie, NY, us
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