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There might not be a toy that says "boy" more! Boys
love their Tonka Trucks. Love to hold them, love to smash them into
other Tonkas, love to take chips out of the wall plaster with them,
love to personalize them with "vroom vroom" sound effects.
Tonkas are an inside and an outside toy - they're sturdy and
virtually unbreakable.
There are plenty of moving parts, but not a lot of separable
parts, so there's no need to worry about things getting lost. There
are enough models in the product line to make a complete collection
seem just barely attainable - instilling the Truck aficionado with a
yen for more and more Truck acquisitions (in toy company land, this
consumer's sense of quest means a promotion for everyone in the
marketing department).
In 1947, a small fleet of Minnesota teachers set out to make and
sell gardening tools from a schoolhouse basement. Their green thumb
equipment didn't produce much green though unfortunately, and so
they decided to start a little toy venture with their leftover
building materials. They named their product ater the nearby Lake
Minnetonka, which means "great" in Sioux. The earliest
trucks were the No. 100 steam shovel and the No. 150 crane.
Later years saw many other truck and Jeep models, based on
designs from the US Army, from the Air Force, and from commercial
lines like John Deere and Humvee. In 1965, the Tonka Mighty Dump
Truck roared onto the scene in all its bright yellow glory, and it
remains the best-selling truck today.
There are trucks for building, for transporting and for just
plain old cruising around. Whatever a kid has in mind, whatever
mini-city he's erected with Star Wars figures and Lego
bricks, whatever ramp, whatever obstacle course - a Tonka Truck can
navigate right through it or smash it to kingdom come - it just
depends on the truck driver's mood that day.
Tonka was purchased by Hasbro in 1991. They're still heartily
manufactured and sold, still a staple for any little boy's toy
compilation. Their collectors are many, by the way, and if you
happen to stumble upon these grown-up boys in an unguarded moment,
you just may catch them making "vroom" noises across the
carpet with bright yellow dump truck in hand.

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