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  2. Hubley Manufacturing Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hubley_Manufacturing_Company

    The Hubley Manufacturing Company was first incorporated in 1894 in Lancaster, Pennsylvania by John Hubley. The first Hubley toys appeared in 1909 and were made of cast-iron, with themes that ranged from horse-drawn vehicles and different breeds of dogs, to tractors, steam shovels and guns. [1]

  3. Auburn Rubber Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auburn_Rubber_Company

    In 1935, it began making rubber toys, including a variety of toy cars, trucks, tractors and animals. Most vehicles were four to eight inches in length and cast in a variety of colors. During World War II , the company continued to make soles – now for combat boots – and also gaskets for so-called " jerry cans ."

  4. Gama Toys - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gama_Toys

    Gama tin toys wind-up tractor from the mid-1950s. Gama is a German maker of toys, usually cars and trucks, dating from before World War I. The company is headquartered in Fürth, Bavaria, near Nürnberg, a traditional German toymaking center. Other German companies that competed with Gama Toys were Schuco Modell and Conrad Models.

  5. Lesney Products - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lesney_Products

    Milk Float (1949), later scaled down to become Matchbox no. 7; this was the 1st toy made in Lesney's second factory at Barratts Grove; Soap-Box Racer (1949) Rag & Bone Cart (1949) Prime Mover & Trailer (1950), used in different scales later as Matchbox 1-75 and Major Pack models; Jumbo the Elephant (1950), a clockwork toy (marketed by Moko)

  6. Louis Marx and Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Marx_and_Company

    Lithographed tin tanks, airplanes, police motorcycles, tractors, trains, luxury liners, and rocket ships were all produced in bright colors. One toy, the Tricky Taxi seems to have had origins in a Heinrich Muller toy from Nuremberg in Germany. [8] The 1935 G-Man pursuit car was possibly the largest vehicle Marx ever made at 14½ inches long. [1]

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  8. Majorette (toy manufacturer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Majorette_(toy_manufacturer)

    Majorette is a French toy manufacturer which mostly produces small Die-cast scale model cars, commercial vehicles, aircraft, and other vehicles, particularly in 1:64 scale. This is a normal 2.5–3 in (64–76 mm) size, thus Majorette has sometimes been called "the Matchbox of France".

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