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Top holiday toys from the year you were born
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Top holiday toys from the year you were born

  • Jacob Osborn and Peter Richman, Stacker
  • Nov 19, 2021
  • Nov 19, 2021 Updated Jan 13, 2026
  • 0
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If you’re looking to avoid tech this year, you could always go with one of those historic classics that never go out of style — like yo-yos, Tonka Trucks or teddy bears. 

Podcast: What are the ethical pitfalls of Halloween, Thanksgiving and Christmas?

1920: Raggedy Ann doll

1920: Raggedy Ann doll

Original estimated retail price: $1

Originally a book character, Raggedy Ann was created by a prolific political cartoonist named Johnny Gruelle. By 1920, two signature handmade dolls—Raggedy Ann and her brother, Raggedy Andy—were sold alongside the book. The result was a meteoric success on all fronts. Many myths surround the conception of Raggedy Ann, which is quite fitting given the character’s storybook origins.

Randen Pederson // Flickr

1923: A. C. Gilbert chemistry sets

1923: A. C. Gilbert chemistry sets

Original estimated retail price: $1.50 to $10

In a rather stunning example of how times have changed, magician A. C. Gilbert’s wildly popular chemistry sets that were introduced this year included flammables and explosives, among their components. The 1923 version exclusively targeted young boys, and decades would pass before unisex sets were introduced to the market.

The Strong - National Museum of Play

1929: Pop-up book

1929: Pop-up book

Original estimated retail price: not available

Believe it or not, the first pop-up book dates back to a 14th-century Catalan mystic who employed a series of moving discs to visually demonstrate his philosophical treatises. Today’s pop-up books are more directly tied to 1929’s “Daily Express Children’s Annual No. 1,” published by Louis Giraud and Theodore Brown. Known at the time as a “movable,” Giraud and Brown’s book introduced a handy flap that, when pulled, prompted cardboard models to spring up.

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Kim Viljanen // Wikimedia Commons

1934: Buck Rogers Disintegrator Pistol

1934: Buck Rogers Disintegrator Pistol

Original estimated retail price: 50 cents

Straight out of an Amazing Stories comic book, the Buck Rogers Disintegrator Pistol was the first toy ray gun ever made. Touted as the 25th-century weapon of choice for Rogers himself, the gun made an unmistakable zapping sound when you pulled the trigger.

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CGP Grey // Wikimedia Commons

1938: Microscope Set

1938: Microscope Set

Original estimated retail price: Not available

As a toy company that had already mastered the home kit experience, A. C. Gilbert started selling its Microscope Set for kids in the 1930s. Each surprisingly functional microscope offered three levels of magnification, while the set itself came with bees and flies for kids to inspect up close.

Ryan Somma // Flickr

1944: Soap bubbles and bubble blowers

1944: Soap bubbles and bubble blowers

Original estimated retail price: 10 cents

Nowadays, we might be wary of a company named Chemtoy. But parents in the early 1940s had no problem purchasing bottles of the company’s soapy solution to give children a new favorite pastime: blowing bubbles. Just like today, most of the kids back then used bubble wands for the activity.

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The Strong - National Museum of Play

1983: Cabbage Patch Kids

1983: Cabbage Patch Kids

Defined by their doughy bodies and large, round heads, Cabbage Patch Kids took the world by storm after appearing on a TV show called “Real People” in 1980. 

The Strong - National Museum of Play
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