Enrolment Pack
mid 1990s (assembled)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
This Tufty Club material was given out as part of new members' enrolment packs, after they had learned the Green Cross Code. The clubs were instigated by the Royal Society for Prevention of Accidents in the 1960s and this material came from the Theydon Bois club, which continued up until 2001.
Tufty Fluffingtail was an anthropomorphised squirrel, designed to teach children about the Green Cross Code with his woodland friends. Created by Elsie Mills in 1953, Tufty featured in a number of books and safety instructions for the society and in 1961 the Tufty Club was set up as a nationwide network of local groups. At the club meetings, usually once a month, children were told stories, encouraged to join in games, read the Tufty books together and take home the message of road safety. This craft pattern would have been produced to capitalise on the Tufty club phenomenon, which by 1973 had more than 10 000 affiliated clubs and over two million members.
Although Tufty was restylised in 1979, and again in 1993, his presence in RoSPA campaigns has much diminished over the ensuing years. Local Tufty clubs have been wound down and little merchandise is available on their website, but he is still used by the RoSPA in publications and educational packs for schools.
Tufty Fluffingtail was an anthropomorphised squirrel, designed to teach children about the Green Cross Code with his woodland friends. Created by Elsie Mills in 1953, Tufty featured in a number of books and safety instructions for the society and in 1961 the Tufty Club was set up as a nationwide network of local groups. At the club meetings, usually once a month, children were told stories, encouraged to join in games, read the Tufty books together and take home the message of road safety. This craft pattern would have been produced to capitalise on the Tufty club phenomenon, which by 1973 had more than 10 000 affiliated clubs and over two million members.
Although Tufty was restylised in 1979, and again in 1993, his presence in RoSPA campaigns has much diminished over the ensuing years. Local Tufty clubs have been wound down and little merchandise is available on their website, but he is still used by the RoSPA in publications and educational packs for schools.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Parts | This object consists of 5 parts.
|
Materials and techniques | Offset lithography on paper, stapled to thick paper cover. |
Brief description | Tufty Club enrolment pack for new members, containing paper items published by the Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents between 1972 and 1993, and a pencil engraved by the Theydon Bois Tufty Club. |
Physical description | Tufty Club leader's manual, containing ideas for activities to be conducted at Tufty Club meetings. Cover features title and illustrations of the Tufty characters on a white background. |
Production type | Mass produced |
Credit line | Given by J M Harvey on behalf of the Theydon Bois Tufty Club |
Object history | This leader's manual was used by the leaders of the Theydon Bois Tufty Club. |
Subjects depicted | |
Literary reference | Tufty Fluffytail by Elsie Mills MBE |
Summary | This Tufty Club material was given out as part of new members' enrolment packs, after they had learned the Green Cross Code. The clubs were instigated by the Royal Society for Prevention of Accidents in the 1960s and this material came from the Theydon Bois club, which continued up until 2001. Tufty Fluffingtail was an anthropomorphised squirrel, designed to teach children about the Green Cross Code with his woodland friends. Created by Elsie Mills in 1953, Tufty featured in a number of books and safety instructions for the society and in 1961 the Tufty Club was set up as a nationwide network of local groups. At the club meetings, usually once a month, children were told stories, encouraged to join in games, read the Tufty books together and take home the message of road safety. This craft pattern would have been produced to capitalise on the Tufty club phenomenon, which by 1973 had more than 10 000 affiliated clubs and over two million members. Although Tufty was restylised in 1979, and again in 1993, his presence in RoSPA campaigns has much diminished over the ensuing years. Local Tufty clubs have been wound down and little merchandise is available on their website, but he is still used by the RoSPA in publications and educational packs for schools. |
Collection | |
Accession number | B.118:1 to 5-2011 |
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Record created | January 6, 2012 |
Record URL |
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