From Smithsonian Magazine, May, 1999
"Hello Boys! Become an Erector Engineer!"

. . . A. C. Gilbert's Erector sets
taught boys more than just the nuts and bolts
Christmas of 1918 was just
months away, and the United States, immersed in the war effort, was
considering calling off Santa. Perhaps parents should invest in Liberty
bonds rather than in toys, the powers-that-be reasoned. Why should toys be
saved when so many other items were being sacrificed during wartime?
Addressing the Council of
National Defense in a special meeting, an energetic businessman from New
Haven, Connecticut, explained why. America, argued A. C. Gilbert, was the
home of educational toys, toys that prepared our boys for adulthood. He
also brought examples. Soon, the Secretaries of War, the Navy, Commerce
and the Interior were playing with tiny submarines and engines, reading
children's books and tinkering with A. C. Gilbert's own popular creation:
the Erector set.
He was touted in the press
that year as "The Man Who Saved Christmas," but as author Bruce Watson points out, A. C. Gilbert and his trusty Erector sets also saved "rainy
afternoons from boredom" and "inquiring minds...from the tedium of science
textbooks." From 1913, when he released his first boxes of steel girders,
nuts and bolts, till his death in 1961, A. C. Gilbert was inseparable from
the popular toy, and the toy was inseparable from American boyhood.
Whether as a champion pole-vaulter, a professional magician or a
purveyor of constructive fun, A. C. Gilbert set out to be the very best —
and encouraged the same drive in his young customers. Times and toys have
changed, and Gilbert's Erector sets and science kits now sell only among
collectors. But the fond memories of millions of grown-up "Erector
Engineers" — including our author — live on.
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For more information on this topic, see the Smithsonian Additional Sources Page and explore the Archives of Smithsonian
Magazine.
______________________________________________________________________________
Christian Science Monitor Review of Bruce Watson's New Book
Greenbergs' Guide to Gilbert Erector Sets
ErectorSet.Net - Front Page
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