Skip to content
Steam toys work

Steam toys work for Pook & Pook/Noel Barrett auction June 15

Steam toys work
Group shot of steam toys representing Part II of the Morton A. Hirschberg Collection. Pook & Pook image

DOWNINGTOWN, Pa. – In collaboration with Noel Barrett, Pook & Pook will conduct their latest antique toy auction, on Saturday, June 15, consisting of hundreds of exciting toys and unique offerings from a number of collections. Bid absentee or live online through LiveAuctioneers.

The highlight of the sale will be part two of the Morton A. Hirschberg Collection, made up of fascinating and vibrant kinetic steam toys. The first group was sold in Pook & Pook’s December 2018 sale. A former president of the Antique Toy Collectors of America, Hirschberg is also the author of the definitive book on the subject: Steam Toys: A Symphony in Motion (Schiffer, 1996). Steam toys, often referred to as steam engine accessory toys are designed to be operated by drive wheels attached to stationary steam engines but can also be operated by hand.

As a collector since the 1980s, the variety in Hirschberg’s collection is astounding and includes windmills and lumber mills, lighthouses and other forms of machinery. An excerpt from Hirschberg’s book articulates his decades-long passion: “Steam toys from the late 19th and early 20th centuries occupy a special niche in the world of antique toys. But steam toys are appreciated in their own right, as ingenious inventions and charming contraptions. Hooked to a steam engine or operated by hand, these pieces move – mills grind, blacksmiths hammer, Ferris wheels and carousels revolve, woodsmen chop and minstrels dance. They can be delightfully intricate, colorful and creative.” More than 130 lots of Hirschberg’s steam toys will be sold. Some top lots from this offering include a painted tin airship carousel steam toy accessory, with provenance from the Atlanta Toy Museum ($2,000-$3,000), a scarce Bing cotton mill steam toy accessory ($2,000-$3,000), and a Carette tin lithograph factory steam toy accessory, with five factory workers ($2,000-$3,000).

A few last-minute additions to the sale are consignments from the estate of a private collector. One exciting item is an extraordinary English butcher shop diorama in intricate detail, with two carved and painted butchers wearing aprons, rows of meticulously painted carcasses and various cuts of meat, all arrayed in a painted brick façade with potted plants ($3,000-$5,000). A good portion of this consignment is comprised of tin lithographed penny toys, more than 75 in total, featuring everything from trains, to animals, to people at work and play. One special example is a scarce Meier animated tin lithograph Punch & Judy penny toy ($1,200-$1,600).

Steam toys work
Dozens of tin lithograph penny toys will be sold. Pook & Pook image

Other miscellaneous toys from this collection include a D.S. Cohen clockwork Autoperipatetikos Walking Doll, in the original box and with her original outfit ($800-$1,200), a collection of figural animated whistles, and a grouping of advertising toys.

Another impressive grouping in Pook’s June auction are pieces from the Bill and Stevie Weart Collection. Items include a number of exceptional cast-iron vehicles, fire pumpers and patrol wagons, along with horse-drawn wagons and drays. Among the highlights of the Weart Collection is a remarkable Carpenter cast-iron floor train, with provenance from the Hegarty Collection ($1,200-$1,600), and an Ives cast-iron Phoenix fire pumper, with the original labeled pine shipping box ($1,200-$1,600).

Steam toys work
Horse-drawn cast-iron toys include examples by Ives, Pratt & Letchworth, Wilkins, Hubley and Carpenter. Pook & Pook image

More consignments from lifelong antique toy enthusiasts include a variety of American tin toys: horse-drawn and early trains. Pieces of note include a scarce Carlisle & Finch Buffalo train ticket office ($1,500-$2,500), a Carlisle & Finch five-piece freight train set, 2-inch gauge ($1,200-$1,600), a Carette tinplate clockwork limousine ($1,000-$1,500), and a Hull & Stafford painted American tin clockwork horse with gig pull toy ($500-$700).

Steam toys work
Dozens of trains including painted tin, brass, wood, cast-iron and pressed steel examples. Pook & Pook image

Not toys but truly toy-like is a group of agricultural salesman samples from a Florida estate. Of note is a spectacular example of an Adriance Buckeye sickle mower, identified by raised lettering on the cast metal gearbox ($4,000-$6,000). Other salesman samples include a C.M. Clinton horse-drawn hay rake ($3,000-$4,000), an excellent W.H. Hathaway buckboard wagon, and a horse-drawn road roller ($1,500-$2,500).

Steam toys work
Salesman’s samples of farm implements. Pook & Pook image

This consignment also includes a grouping of traction engine models, including an impressive 36-inch-long 1912 Case tractor, with wood bunkers ($8,000-$12,000).

An online only toy auction to complement Saturday’s sale will be held the following week, on Monday, June 17 at 9 a.m. This auction will feature antique toys along with mid-century, retro, and vintage objects.

Live bidding for the June 15 sale will commence at 10 a.m. Eastern time.

For details contact Pook & Pook Inc. at info@pookandpook.com or 610-269-4040.

[av_button label=’View the fully illustrated catalog and bid on LiveAuctioneers.’ link=’manually,https://www.liveauctioneers.com/auctioneer/106/pook-and-pook-inc-with-noel-barrett/’ link_target=’_blank’ size=’medium’ position=’center’ label_display=” icon_select=’no’ icon=’ue800′ font=’entypo-fontello’ color=’theme-color’ custom_bg=’#444444′ custom_font=’#ffffff’ av_uid=’av-68lu8f6′ admin_preview_bg=”]

Steam toys work