Wednesday, 7 October 2009

Bloggiversary Special: Nostalgia Ain't What it Used to Be by Barry Ford

It’s funny how things turn out sometimes: Paul asked me to write a few a words just at the same time as I had recently returned from a day trip to Blackpool. Actually day trip is a bit of a misnomer as it was more like a half day trip because any longer and depression starts to set in, after looking at a once vibrant seaside town well past its best. I must admit I’m not quite sure why I still go to Blackpool: obviously there’s the pilgrimage to David Nightingale’s shop to see if he has any new Thunderbirds merchandise, but I think the main reason I go is that it does evoke memories of a happy past.

Being born in the mid-sixties a day trip to Blackpool was always something to look forward to. If the weather was fine we could play on the beach and paddle in the sea, in the days when we didn’t pay too much attention as to what exactly was floating past us. Then after a picnic lunch we would go for a walk around the shops. Not the posh ones like Lewis’s or Binns, but the small shops that lived in the various back streets off the Promenade. Now, if you’re not of a certain age you are probably wondering why is this guy getting all misty eyed about looking into to pound shop windows. But back in the late sixties and seventies we still had these things called toy shops. Not large chain stores all selling the same thing wherever you go, but small family run businesses that sold different things, and Blackpool was a Mecca for these kind of shops. Whilst we didn’t have a lot of money it was just fascinating looking into these shop windows which were like looking into Aladdin’s cave for a youngster, and it would be an unusual visit if I did not receive a treat of some kind.

The beauty of toy shops in Blackpool over anywhere we visited was that they tended to keep old stock, so this meant that even into the mid seventies you could pick up a rare Century 21 treat. I’ve mentioned in some posts on the eagletransporter.com forum how I would have picked up the Stingray Sub-carrier on one of these visits, which although extremely well played with and minor some parts was recently unearthed during a rummage through my garage.

One of the trips that will always stick in my mind would have occurred during the mid-seventies. After years of looking for a Thunderbird One toy or model to complete my well played with set of Rosenthal TB vehicles, Mum, Dad and I were about to cross the road after parking up at the old central station, when my Dad suddenly made a dash across the road yelling “they’ve got one”. Mum and I looked at each other wondering what the heck they'd got and after carefully crossing the road using the Green Cross Code, as we all did in those days, found Dad pointing at the battery operated JR TB1 in a toy shop window. Now these days a shop would consider this a collector’s item and price it accordingly, but to the shopkeeper it was just something he had found on a shelf in a store room and was just looking to sell it to make room for new stock. You can tell how long the shopkeeper had kept it as it was still priced up in old money and we had to try and convert it from something like 14/6 to seventy-odd new pence. Fortunately when I got this beauty home I was a little bit older than when I had received the likes of TB2 and 4, which have suffered the indignities of being extremely well played with, and treated it with a little more respect so that it still resides in nice condition in its box in my bedroom.

I also remember another trip when I was that little bit older when I noticed a box for a JR TB3 in the window of the shop under a pile of the usual tat that you find in seaside shops. Obviously we had to go in and ask for it, but were most disappointed to find that it was purely an empty box the shopkeeper was using to prop something up. Of course, at the time we never even considered asking if we could have the box, because it was considered something that you would normally throw away whenyou got the toy home.

And that is something that I think people have lost these days: whilst we can buy fantastic ready made replicas and toys of our favourite characters and vehicles that far surpass the quality of toys produced years ago, we have forgot to enjoy them for what they are and not as future investments. Whilst the toys of yesteryear have needed viewing under a dim light with your eyes squinted for you to convince yourselves that this was an accurate replica of that on-screen model, our imagination filled in the gaps, so to speak, and we played with them and had fun with them. I cannot but wonder if future generations will have such happy memories of their youth, because there is not the same need to use their imaginations; and that’s if their parents let them play with toys and not keep them “mint in box” because they might be worth something one day: which they wont , of course, because everybody keeps things unplayed with because of the hope of future wealth, and we all know that high value of old toys comes about because people didn’t keep them as something precious.

Please don’t get me wrong: as an adult collector please enjoy your perfectly preserved treasures. I just hope that future generations are given a chance to enjoy themselves as we once did, and every now and again why not get that model out of the cabinet and fly it round the room making the appropriate vroom-vroom noises and let out that small child that is still hiding inside you.

Barry Ford
September 2009

Excellent piece Barry, a really great read. Took me back to my Lancashire childhood. You had a great Mum and Dad! Can't decide whether I'd rather be in Sixties Blackpool or your garage! Does everyone have a favourite toy shop I wonder? Mine was Thomas Mears in Preston!, where I got all my SWORD and stuff! Nice one. Cheers, Paul

2 comments:

  1. The Philosophic Toad10/08/2009 1:21 pm

    As I've said before, here and elsewhere, I think we older peeps were very lucky in comparison with today's children. I could be wrong, but for all the health improvements and all the amazing things that are available, children today seem so impoverished in comparison with our childhoods. Maybe they don't see it that way; perhaps there is an element of rose-tinted spectacles, but I doubt it.

    I would hate to be a child now, with all the grow-up fast, worry yourself senseless about global warming, and have the best mobile phone poop that seems to be their world. Dull, dull, dull.

    Does everyone have a favourite toy shop I wonder?

    There were two goods ones within walking distance of where I lived as a child. One was Ottley's, on the Harrow Road (opposite part of St. Mary's Hospital, before said Hospital was demolished). Most of my Thunderbird toys and Lego came from there. The name of the other I can't recall, but it was from there that I got things like the monsters WOTAN knows so much about.

    But the best toy shops were those I visited only when we went on holiday. One was in Herne Bay, and again the name escapes me; I tended to think of shops as where they were located rather than what they were named. It was from here that my Major Matt Mason stuff came from. But best of all was a fascinating little shop on a caravan site only a few miles away. It was one of those stores that sold everything from sweets, tobacco, souvenirs and toys. That was where I first saw Spacex, and from where I got most of the Stage One toys. It wasn't properly a toy shop, but it did stock the most amazing toys, and also those American comics which weren't so readily available where I lived.

    ReplyDelete
  2. im in complete agreement with Barry and Kim - there was as ubtle magic inherent in toys back in the day, nowdays toys have lights, sounds, remote movement, transformation - everything we provided with our imagination. I went out down the Welsh coast a few weeks back to the main coastal road down past Prestatyn and Rhyl, Gronant and FFrith. Most of my childhood holidays were spent there and alsmost all of my early space toys were bought in the towns and in caravan camp shops. All are now gone and the mysterious magic of glowing toy shop windows has been wiped away by boarded up windows and discount stores. I have a seven year old son and show him the toys of my youth and completely unbidden, he immediately starts to fly them enthusiastically around, going vrooom!! although my nerves are shredded, it brings a big smile to both our faces.

    ReplyDelete