Combat Jeep
Toy Jeep
1945-1950 (manufactured)
1945-1950 (manufactured)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
This battery-powered mechanical military truck was manufactured by Toys Nomura, just after World War II. Nomura was a company borne out of the Allied occupation of Japan, immediately after the end of the war. The development of manufacturing businesses was a key concern of the allies and they helped establish the toy manufacturers that produced most of the tin toys globally around this time. Ironically, it was American and British military themed toys that were the biggest selling in the post war period, and so the Japanese manufacturers had to make toys depicting their occupiers. Towards the 1950s, as interest in the military moved on, the Japanese companies adapted the templates of their tin toys, printing them with space-age designs instead.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | Combat Jeep (manufacturer's title) |
Materials and techniques | Offset lithograph on tinplate, stamped and hand assembled, with electronic circuitry, motors and rubber tyres and plastic windscreen. |
Brief description | Battery powered tinplate US Army jeep, Nomura, Japan, 1940s |
Physical description | Tinplate US Army 1st Division Jeep in military green with gun to bonnet, radio set and antenna to rear, with two soldiers in battle-dress. Battery operated |
Dimensions |
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Production type | Mass produced |
Marks and inscriptions |
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Subjects depicted | |
Summary | This battery-powered mechanical military truck was manufactured by Toys Nomura, just after World War II. Nomura was a company borne out of the Allied occupation of Japan, immediately after the end of the war. The development of manufacturing businesses was a key concern of the allies and they helped establish the toy manufacturers that produced most of the tin toys globally around this time. Ironically, it was American and British military themed toys that were the biggest selling in the post war period, and so the Japanese manufacturers had to make toys depicting their occupiers. Towards the 1950s, as interest in the military moved on, the Japanese companies adapted the templates of their tin toys, printing them with space-age designs instead. |
Collection | |
Accession number | B.213-2011 |
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Record created | March 8, 2012 |
Record URL |
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