Re: Reenacting In The Centennial Years
By the way, for you younger guys who missed out on those great Centennial Years (remember everything including the toys was CIVIL WAR) here, in my opinion, was the greatest Civil War toy a boy could get for Christmas at that time. By the way, that little record in the lower left part of the picture provided those cool sound effects you needed to recreate the battle including gun shots, the sound of cannons, and yes even someone doing the Rebel yell. The two white figures in the upper right of the picture are Grant and Lincoln. I believe they also gave you two white figures of Lee and Davis. The bridge they are crossing is suppose to be the Burnside bridge. The mansion in the background was made out of tin with a lithograph printing of the bricks, windows and door on it. You had to bend the walls and assemble it. This was very typical of the structures provided with these Marx playsets in those years.
By the way, for you younger guys who missed out on those great Centennial Years (remember everything including the toys was CIVIL WAR) here, in my opinion, was the greatest Civil War toy a boy could get for Christmas at that time. By the way, that little record in the lower left part of the picture provided those cool sound effects you needed to recreate the battle including gun shots, the sound of cannons, and yes even someone doing the Rebel yell. The two white figures in the upper right of the picture are Grant and Lincoln. I believe they also gave you two white figures of Lee and Davis. The bridge they are crossing is suppose to be the Burnside bridge. The mansion in the background was made out of tin with a lithograph printing of the bricks, windows and door on it. You had to bend the walls and assemble it. This was very typical of the structures provided with these Marx playsets in those years.
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