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Longtime toy vendor Merle Johnson of Jackson shows off his antique toys, most of which are from the 1950s, ’60s and ’70s. His 25-year habit was kicked off when he encountered some old toys in a shed and threw them away, almost.
Matt Gorrie / The Free Press


Published January 26, 2008 11:47 pm -

“You never grow out of liking toys."
— Rick Miller, attended the Farm and Collectible Toy Show


Grown-ups get in on toy act
Pair of collectors’ shows attract 85 vendors to the area for the weekend

By Dan Linehan
The Free Press

MANKATO

For a toy show, there aren’t too many kids here. For every child under 10, there look to be 15 or so adults older than 30 wandering the floor at the Alltel Center.

But really, the people here are collectors and hobbyists who are just fine with leaving a prize miniature tractor in its box. The best, most expensive toys aren’t the ones with the most moving parts or glowing lasers or other kid-oriented stuff.

The most valuable piece on Dick Sonnek’s table is a young boy on a cart driving a pair of oxen, with an $800 price tag.

He’s been the promoter of the Farm and Collectible Toy Show for all 30 years of its history, and has written a price guide.

He said many farmers get into it by buying the miniature version of their real tractor, so that when the original is long gone they can “revive old memories” with the toy.

Still, you don’t have to be a farmer to be into farm toys.

Take Rick Miller, who lives in the country near Madison Lake but doesn’t farm.

“You never grow out of liking toys,” he said, adding, “I don’t have to play with ’em anymore.”

He’s the exception in another way, too, as he has 6-year-old son Logan in tow. Logan, who clings to his dad when strangers come too close, still can’t be convinced to leave toys in the box, though.

The show’s 59 vendors sell both new toys straight from their manufacturer, and antiques they acquire.

Merle Johnson, a large man with gray suspenders and wispy peach-blonde hair, is a vendor at 30 or so toy shows each year. He started collecting about 25 years ago when he almost, but not quite, threw out some old toys while cleaning out a shed.

He focuses on antique toys from the 1950s, ’60s and ’70s, most of them bought within the last year.

The Alltel Center show may have been the biggest toy show in Mankato this weekend, but not the only one.

Sonnek, this show’s organizer, doesn’t want to talk about that other show, the one with identical hours over in the Madison East Center. They just feed off of this show’s advertising dollars, he says with a grimace.

Over at the mall, the story is much the same, though there are only 26 vendors.



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