A boxed Teddy Roosevelt Adventures in Africa set made by Schoenhut would be rare in any condition. The figures and many accessories that came with this particular set – including optional lithographed cardboard scenery — display immaculate original paint. The top-finishing lot in the sale, it made $34,500.
:Teddy Roosevelt's aim was true in Bertoia Auctions' Toys for All Seasons sale, as an early Schoenhut boxed set titled Teddy's Adventures in Africa swept top-lot honors in the $1.8 million event. The November 7–9 auction featured 2,516 antique toys, banks, dolls, dollhouse furniture, automata and Christmas antiques, with several prestigious private collections anchoring the bountiful array.
The Roosevelt set, dating to the early Twentieth Century and featuring painted wood figures, a lithographed scenic backdrop and a multitude of safari-theme accessories, was numbered 20/84. The early play set from Schoenhut's Humpty Dumpty Circus Toys range was in immaculate condition, an added enticement that carried the lot to a winning bid of $34,500.
A curious European toy that attracted heavy bidding was the fur-covered Vichy rabbit with cabbage automaton. Capable of playing two French melodies, the smartly dressed 19-inch rabbit featured multiple movements, while the cabbage had its own trick: opening to reveal a monkey that opened and closed its mouth. "A large field of active bidders eventually boiled down to two people who really wanted it," said Bertoia Auctions associate Rich Bertoia. "It went far beyond its estimate — $8/$12,000 — and finally sold for $28,750."
From the French maker Vichy, this musical clockwork rabbit with cabbage automaton is covered in rabbit fur and has glass eyes. When activated, a monkey emerges from the cabbage. Against an estimate of $8/12,000, the whimsical entertainer outperformed at $28,750.
Another surprise performance came from a circa 1896 Britains clockwork bicyclist toy of painted die-cast metal. Its cloth-dressed rider bore a striking resemblance to the irascible puppet show character "Punch." Entered with hopes of achieving $1/1,200, it streaked to $21,850.
The priciest German tin toy in the sale was a 20½-inch-long Fleischmann clockwork battleship equipped with a full complement of observation decks, turrets, stacks, masts and guns. Estimated at $4/5,000, it dropped anchor at $11,500.
A 16-inch Steiff "rod" bear that had come to be known as "A-Rod" was probably the most publicized entry in the sale. The turn of the Twentieth Century cinnamon mohair bear had been x-rayed at a local veterinarian's clinic to confirm the presence of desirable metal rods, which function as joints. His adventures at the Bertoia family vet's office appeared in many antiques and collectibles publications. His distinguished pedigree validated, the long-limbed charmer finished near the top of its estimate range at $17,250.
The array of Christmas antiques from the collections of Fred Cannon and Mary Lou Holt was "merry and bright," and prices rose higher than Santa's sleigh on a rooftop. A late entry to the sale, a 30-inch German Father Christmas display of molded composition, holding a feather tree and cloth sack, slid down the chimney to land at $9,200.
There were noteworthy highlights in virtually every section of the sale. A boxed Yonezawa Space Man robot traveled to a stratospheric $9,200; while early American toys were led by a boxed 23½-inch-long Carpenter horse-drawn ladder wagon with two firemen figures, which blazed to $6,325.
This very rare and unusual 17-inch-long Britains toy of painted metal features a whimsical hand-painted figure with a striking resemblance to the puppet show character "Punch.” The cloth-dressed fellow rides in a circle on a two-wheel bicycle attached by a wire support to a heavy base. A popular entry, it concluded its auction outing at $21,850.
Cast iron was especially strong, painted banks, in particular. A pristine 1881 Turnbull Squirrel & Tree Stump bank, designed so the squirrel springs forward and deposits a coin from his front paws into a stump, exceeded estimate at $9,200. In the still (i.e., non-mechanical) category, a colorful three-dimensional depiction of the Boston State House — 51/8 inches high and made in the late 1800s by Smith & Egge — hit the jackpot at $12,650.
All prices reported include the 15 percent buyer's premium. Bertoia's now turns its attention to the Donald Kaufman antique automotive toy collection, which will be auctioned in a series of semiannual auctions to be spread over two to three years. The auction series will premiere March 19–21 with fall dates confirmed for September 25–26. For information, 856-692-1881 or
www.bertoiaauctions.com
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