Pickwick Night Coach, cast iron, circa 1920, made by Kenton.
The bus was produced in various sizes and different forms.
One of the more fascinating pieces that Resch has loaned to
this exhibit is the Radicon Bus made by Modern Toys, in Japan,
1960. "They bill it as the world's first complete remote control
toy, and I found it complete in its box. It's the American version
of it, so the box is in English with this blond boy on the cover,
but when you open up the manual inside, everything is in Japanese,
so you can't understand the instructions. It's got this big remote
with a tall antenna that you put onto the roof of the bus. It's a
funny piece; it reminds me of watching a TV show from 1960," says
Resch.
The pieces in the collection also serve to represent a historical
perspective of the materials used to make toys throughout the
various decades represented among the buses. As collector
Dockendorf explains, "There's a mixture of different types. Some
of the real older ones are pressed steel; they're kind of heavy,
they're a little bit crude and then some of them are cast iron,
which is probably the most common type of toy in the 20s - that
was before plastic came along. Half a dozen are tin, but they're
US tin.
"After the war, virtually everything tin was made in Japan.
Because the Japanese imports were so cheap they kind of drove
most of the US toy companies out of business. But prior to World
War II there really was not any trade with Japan of any
consequence, so these are US tin toys mostly of the 20s and 30s.
They're very light, they're very artistic, there's more shape,"
says Dockendorf. "The cast iron toys are kind of crude; they
don't have all the lines and designs quite like the tin. The cast
iron are probably the more popular because they were more
durable; the tins are much more fragile," he said.

Cannonball Express, made of tin by Upton toys, circa 1920s.
One of the tin toy buses featured, however, is postwar tin -
a more durable tin than the fragile prewar ones and a particular
favorite of Dockendorf's. "The Jackie Gleason Honeymooners
bus from the 1950s was made as a toy to help celebrate the
popularity of the show. I'm partial to that because it represents
an actual event, the TV show and the personality," he said. "The
other buses, by and large, don't have that type of connection. It's
cute and it's colorful and fun to see, but it's really nothing like
any bus that ever operated in the streets of New York. The litho
has paintings that are approximate to the characters, but it's
probably The Honeymooners and the Jackie Gleason lettering
more than anything that singles it out."
While the buses hold a revered place in this show, the trains
maintain their customary legendary status for the holidays. The
centerpiece of the exhibition is Lionel's newly created
34-foot-long "O" gauge train layout. It features model trains
running on eight separate loop tracks through a holiday scene
that begins in a living room on Christmas morning then travels
through a miniature New York City, past suburbs, farmland and on
to the North Pole.
"Those trains and that layout are really pop cultural
contemporary art, and what it evokes in people is almost
spiritual. People get tears in their eyes because they remember
the first time they saw a set like that or when they were kids
and they got it as a gift," observes Jerry Calabrese, president
of Lionel Trains.
In addition to the working holiday train layout, vintage Lionel
model trains from the New York Transit Museum's Lawrence Scripps
Wilkinson collection are on display. Included is a New Jersey
Central Railroad "Blue Comet," a "De Luxe Express" passenger
train and two Commodore Vanderbilt trains, one called "The Blue
Streak," a toy version of the actual train introduced on the New
York Central line in 1934.

This New York Central line Commodore Vanderbilt by The Lionel
Corporation in 1935 is based on the design of the first
American streamlined steam locomotive, which was built in 1934.
According to Wilkinson, "The real Commodore Vanderbilt was
the first streamlined steam locomotive in the United States and it
ushered in the era of streamlining on the American railroads. There
was only one ever built. It was created in conjunction with the Art
Deco movement and it pulled the old-style cars. When they saw that
it was so popular and that people would crowd around to see this
new locomotive, they commissioned to have the other cars built
streamlined as well.
"But the toy guys, they really went wild for this design, so
Lionel introduced a toy version of it. This was during the
Depression and Lionel recognized that it was cheaper to build a
toy version since it could be stamped in one piece. The Blue
Streak toy locomotive looks pretty much like the real one, but
the real ones were never blue. Lionel sold thousands of Blue
Streaks, and it really helped the company to come back
financially," says Wilkinson.
The buses, however, are getting the red carpet treatment, and for
Delbagno there are small treasures on exhibit. "My favorite is a
tiny little guy called Futuristic Bus - streamlined, sort of
bubble shape, very Buck Rogers-looking. It's very telltale of
that particular time period, 1940. The Depression had been going
on for ten years, the country had just gone to war; it was a very
tough time and science fiction was really big.
"Even though it was a tough time, there was still a lot of
optimism, and this is what the '39 World's Fair was all about -
progress and the future. We were going to find solutions to all
of our problems and they were imagining buses that would go to
Mars. This one little bus, if you look at it closely, is part
bus, part space ship; it comes out of that whole thinking.
There's a lot you can tell about the time period from the piece,"
says Delbagno.
The 1939 New York World's Fair is represented through two pieces
made by Arcade. One looks like a trolley but it is indeed a bus,
a replica of those used to transport people around the fair. As
Resch notes, "Arcade was a great toy company, which started in
the 1880s. They made cast iron toys and most of the cast iron toy
companies went out of business at the beginning of World War II
because they couldn't find the metals anymore. But they made
these cast iron pieces for the '39 New York World's Fair. The
trolley piece actually came in three sizes; the biggest one was
over a foot long."
Putting together a vintage toy exhibition is no easy feat when
one considers toy-making history. The tendency to lean toward
older pieces, which inevitably look more interesting than newer
ones, makes it a daunting task, as Delbagno well knows. "Because
we were thinking only of motorized buses for this show, while the
first toy buses go back to 1905, the toys that were available to
us were from the 20s. I don't think there were a lot of toys
being made in the teens because World War I was going on and a
lot of the toys that American kids played with in the Nineteenth
Century came from Germany, which we stopped trading with when the
war broke out.

"The first and only complete remote control toy" was the claim
made for the Radicon Bus, circa 1960, 14 inches long, by Modern
Toys of Japan.
"Manufacturers in the United States started making toys in
that era, so it's much less common to find toys from the teens than
it is from the 20s, which was a prosperous time in which people
could afford to buy toys for their kids. There was an explosion of
toys at that time," says Delbagno. During World War II, when metal
was scarce, some toy manufacturers made their products out of wood
and even cardboard. It's anyone's guess how many objects made of
these materials have withstood six decades worth of play.
Fifth Avenue may have since given over to modern modes of
transportation, but those early buses from a century ago, long
forgotten by most, are nostalgically remembered in this
exhibition. For Delbagno, all roads lead toward one destination:
the New York Transit Museum Gallery Annex in Grand Central. "It's
just a very fun, nostalgic place to be, and I think we got what
we were looking for in a Christmas show."
Admission is free. For information, 212-878-0106 or
www.mta.info.