I'm 78 and I had a LOT of those toys. I recall almost burning the house down with the Gilbert Chemistry Set. And then of course there was the solvent bubbles in a tube and airplane glue which was highly toxic. Shooting at old 78rpm records with my Daisy bb gun. No adult supervision. Ahhh... The memories.
My dad had one that I used to sharpen a pencil once when I was 7.....dont let kids use sharp objects, I was under supervision when it happened but it still happened 😢
I still have my lawn dart set!...the very same set that I enjoyed as a kid in the late 70s. Still use them, too. Great game back in the late 70s...still great in 2023.
@@igorschmidlapp6987 Same here. My grandparents would let us play with their set. Not a single injury. Unfortunately it only takes one to change everything.
I think of Creepy Crawlers and Chatty Cathy together. I remember I had a doll that had these little white records that would insert in her back and so would expand on what the doll could say. I'm not sure if that was Chatty Cathy or not. Does anyone know about this doll?
My older brother had the eractor set and the chemistry set. He would go to the drug store to buy refills for the chemicals. The druggist would add a red sticker to some of the bottles. Danger Poison. He made the mother of all smoke bombs, one Sat. Nite. It was built on half of a pool ball. It filled the whole upstairs of the house with smoke. It was awesome!
I remember the "fun" of touching 9V batteries to kids tongues, or riding a bike with bellbottoms and they got stuck in the chain, or trying to go around the world with a Duncan Butterfly and hitting someone in the eye, among other things. Childhood was an adventure then.
The Clackers were the best, banged your arms or catch a friend in the face with them......those were the days,( and we didn't go crying to our parents,we just got even.) Miss em.
@@crunchytaco58 Oh wow! I had a set. They were so popular, kids were talking them to school, and teachers would take them. Got them back the last day of school.
@@floydthompson8668 Yep, we usually just stole ours back, cause it was an unlocked drawer the stuff was kept in, we weren't waiting till the end of school. I still remember the color they were light blue with a dark blue Starburst .
@@floydthompson8668 when times was more innocent, they didn't call the law on us, just got ragged by the teacher,trying to get us to break and narc.....never worked with me and my friends tho., but there was always 1 kid that woul narc, but that got taken care of on the playground or the bus.....memories they're always sweeter when we age huh? Good talking with you, stay breezy.
I'm 63 and I remember Lawn Darts! My grandfather LOVED to play them. Every single outdoor family gathering we would have a tournament! This was in the 60's and while I was younger I knew better than to run in front while someone was taking their turn. I guess we were either lucky or maybe just a smart enough family because nobody ever even came close to being hurt. I really miss playing that game with my family. 😢😢
My mom had a Dodge Dart. I totaled it in high school. She was so pissed off. My Dad didn't care. He never drove that thing. It had a great motor. Think it was called a slant six, or something like that
I`m 63 and grew up in Scotland and had had the clackers, chemistry set, pogo stick and lawn darts. Other than sore arms from the clackers and the odd tumble from the pogo stick, no major issues but a lot of fun.
I had two of those Gilbert Chemistry sets. Got the first one when I was 8 years old, and after finishing all the experiments in it, my parents got me the much larger set. I went through the experiments in the order they were in the manual, but got into serious trouble when I was about 12 years old, and the next experiment was called Kittie Gas. It required melting powdered sulfur and wax. It was, to my horror, a major stink bomb. My parents were trying to sell the house and had hired a bus to bring a bunch of real estate agents to tour the house. They arrived about an hour after my experiment. My parents never believed that I had no idea I was making a stink bomb. My best friend had been over helping me, and I was not allowed to play with her again after that. I remember they had gun powder, sulfur, cobalt, and other chemicals that you could use to make minor fireworks, lots of chemicals that even adults cannot buy easily anymore. I also got one of their microscope sets, and dissected a frog and some other small critters. I think one was a worm. My parents would make me go outside to play with that set. I would set up a card table on the back patio.
Despite some malfunctions, lol, sounds like you have a good childhood and I mean that sincerely. I couldn’t imagine owning these but after seeing this video they were definitely inventive for their times. Especially the early ones in the 1900s, wow! Thanks for sharing your story that was fun
And we rode our bicycles at speeds up to 50 MPH with no helmets or any other protective gear. I lived in a particularly hilly area, so we could really get up to speed even on a standard one-speed 20-inch bicycle.
@@arinerm1331 And I might add that defunct grain elevators were easy to climb on top of until you fell throught the roof and went crashing 50 feet down to your death. The good old days.
I have a modern dart gun that's basically a clone of the Zulu one. They can still be found in sporting good stores, but aren't marketed as kids toys. I also had a set of Jarts (the originals with the steel tips, not the fake Jarts with the beanbags). My sisters, my brother and I used to play a game of chicken with them and we never got hurt. My father kept guns over his bed when I was growing up, and we never got hurt from those either; mostly because we didn't play with them or even touch them without permission. It's the dumbing down of kids that causes so many of the injuries, and that's why we have to have warnings like "Suffocation Hazard: Don't let your child play with plastic bags." Stupidity and not following directions is a trait that some people never outgrow.
Wow the Gilbert Company had to be the most dangerous toy company of all time. Watching all these dangerous toys reminded me of the old SNL skit where Dan Akyroyd ran a dangerous toy company. One of his toys was a BAG OF BROKEN GLASS.
🤔lol even normal darts were dangerous too I suppose. Well only because me and my friend got bored playing normal darts...so I had a genius idea,I would face the wall (for safety reasons of course😂)...and asked him to see just how close to my head he could throw a dart,without actually hitting me. Needless to say I heard a thud as first dart he threw almost stuck in the back of my head😂then his mum stopped us playing darts that day.
I had several of these toys. In the old day we were more itellegent and were aware that there were some dangers in things. For example, I knew hot things were hot.
@@susannagaffney2208 If you really wanna be a grammar critic, the word in this instance would be "intelligent", not "intelligence" - Now go back to school & try not to bully the other kids 😂😂
I remember when my friend discovered that clackers thrown at a running friends ankles became a bolo. That effectively ended the fad at our school in 1969.
I'm a kid of the 1970's & out of all of these toys shown, the one that stands out are the Lawn Darts, because we still have a few of them remaining in our possession to this day in storage, but we haven't really played with them since the 70's. And we never had any issues with the darts. I was & still am a Battlestar Galactica fan but I did not have any of those toys, but instead I have one of the plastic scale model kits, that I glued together in the late 70's. I miss those times too.
I wouldn’t trust kids nowadays with things like this. If it doesn’t have an app to it then you might as well hand them a gas can and some matches and say”do a challenge”.
I'll never forget the smell of the Creepy Crawlers!!! Lol My brother got in trouble and we lost the Creepy Crawler toy for good after my brother tried to use it to cook bacon in our bedroom! 😳🤣 We had a candle making kit, Jarts, and a lot of other "dangerous toys". My personal favorite was my woodburning kit!!
I loved Creepy Crawlers, too! Your brother just needed an EASY BAKE OVEN! Can you imagine placing your baby outside the window!! 🤦🏼♀️ just the thought of it scares me!! 😁😁
I had the lawn darts when I was a child, I realized it was dangerous and never tossed them at people or pets. I guess only rich kids got the really dangerous cool toys. Awesome episode!
@@tadpetrie3464 I am not experienced in Jarts, but Lawn Darts is another thing. They had sharp heavy metal points and were fairly accurate if you threw them overhand. They were intended to be launched by the fins towards a target. Did you play horse shoes? Awesomely dangerous but fun!
@@dmann1209 You can't be too familiar with the game if you don't even realize & know that "lawn darts/yard darts" is the same game AKA "Jarts." Various companies made & sold knockoffs of the game. However, the brand name & inventor of the game was created by the "R.B. Jarts" company. Just saying & keeping it a buck! 🤘😉🤘
Yeah... Playing "DiveBomb" Wasn't Enough for Me to Find Out "TheHardWay", it Was When I *ALMOST* Sent a Sky-High-Thrown Lawn-Dart *Into* TheRoof of My Aunt's *Brand New Mini-Van* in TheLate 80's, That Finally Shown Me "Evaluating Risks"!
The erector set was the greatest toy kit ever! The things you could build were limitless. You could build a bridge, an actual working crane with a real motor. I remember making whirling blades of death and chasing my friends around with it.........oh OK I can see why it was on the list.😁
Who knows how many of those kids turned out to be civil or mechanical engineers? I became a bio-medical laser engineer because of Lost In Space and Johnny Quest. Both had laser guns! Just retired after 44 years working with lasers.
The '50s and '60s were great fun! When the mosquito truck drove down the street spraying DDT, the kids would ride their bikes as close as possible behind in the cloud of toxic spray. In winter, hanging onto a car bumper driving down snow covered streets was exhilarating! ...especially when the driver tried to shake the kids off by flooring the gas pedal!
I’ve got a whole box of eyes that were put out by blowguns and darts. God bless Wham-O for making life interesting. Good video. Thank you for sharing. No fun getting hurt by toys.
That atomic energy kit reminds me of a joke advert in Mad Magazine . It read ........Build Your Own Atomic Bomb And Be The First Kid On Your Street To Rule The World .
I had a lot of these so-called "dangerous" toys, and so did many of my friends (maybe our parents were trying to kill us 🤔). We had a lot of fun, and none of us died or were seriously injured.
Yeah, same here. It only takes a few idiots to ruin good toys for the rest of us! I need to get another skin graft from my Thing Maker. But still, it was FUN!
@@ntvypr4820 What kid wouldn't want a Gilbert Nuclear Physics No. U--238 Atomic Energy Lab? Yes, they did make it, and it did contain U-238 (it also contained Po-210, Pb-210, Ru-106, and Zn-65). Unfortunately, it wasn't popular; they sold less than 5,000 units, it was quickly dropped, and they only sold it in 1950-51. A big plus is it's ranked as the second most dangerous toy in history. What could be #1? Lawn Darts. Lawn Darts? Are they kidding? Somebody thinks Lawn Darts are more hazardous than U-238? That must be why there was Lawn Dart Non-Proliferation Treaty with the USSR. 😃 I had Lawn Darts. How stupid do you have to be to get hurt with Lawn Darts?
I grew up in the 70's and early 80's. It was a great time to be a kid! I remember many of these "dangerous" toys, but survived. As a kid in this Era we came up with dangerous activities on our own , like when we decided one day to play firemen and lit the trash on fire in my friends metal trash cans and then put out the fire with a garden hose! We got in trouble, because the fire scorched the paint on the shed next to the cans, and my parents grounded me for a week!😂
@@jamesries5534 es ist halt alles eine frage des anspruchs. wenn man nicht viel anspruch hat, macht einen schon der warme furz im gesicht spaß. es ging hier zu dem nicht darum, ob du aktuell spaß hast. aber du machst nicht den eindruck intelligent genug zu sein dass überhaupt zu verstehen. whataboutism ist ein argument von extrem unterbelichteten.
Lmfao yeah bc we need to have kids play with a toy train that pisses fuel through the house or mind you is a cimbustion engine in a albeit clean burning form fwiw but.. still and for kids mind ya lmmfao
Yep, as kids we were told never to play with the wood chopping axe and later getting a telling off from dad for slicing my thumb open. Years later I watched in horror as my dad cut off his fore finger on his home made circular saw bench. His words to me were 'Don't tell your mother' He tied what was left of it back in place with a dirty rag and walked of to the local A&E. I don't think we were any tougher in those day's but we accepted responsibility for our own injuries.
I had many of these toys, and remember most of them. There was certainly a lax attitude toward safety in those days, but that also has to be considered in context. Parents were much more involved in their kids' lives then, and I can remember certain things (like Creepy Crawlers) where my dad would help set it up and use it the first time, and he would comment about things to be careful of. Today's parents would consider that far too inconvenient a chore. Also, many toys - including some of the best ever made - were simply adaptations of manufacturing byproducts or failures of another intended invention. Someone thinking outside the box would realize that this spring that can walk down staircases, or the plastic hoop or that odd putty that transfers ink and stretches are fun to play with. To be sure - most of these toys were too hazardous for the market, but I think we also have to give proper context and credit for a different culture. Great content - thanks!
The A.E. set might look cool, but the "uranium" materials & chemicals that came with set wasn't too cool, it was actually pretty hot! 🤣🤔😂 Just keeping it a buck, ya dig? +Peace & Rock n' Roll 4 Your Soul My Friends+ 🤘😉🤘
Wow! I’m 61 and thought we had dangerous toys in the 60s, but they were nothing compared to those early chemistry sets and the nuclear lab! I clearly remember the Thingmaker, Jarts, and Clickclacks. Great video.
We played with nearly every one of those, except the atomic kit lol. I think Hot Wheels tracks are still used in corporal punishment. We bought and made even bigger blow guns, using nails and cones of paper that went through denim jeans and impaled lizards on the back fence. My favorite was either the Slip And Slide and break your neck (with liquid soap) or the Wacky Wiggle death on a water hose toy. Plus we drank water from a garden hose. Ah such fond memories and GREAT time! 😍
I remember having spring loaded dart guns ....the darts had rubber suction cups on the end....but we would remove the suction cups to make them more fun....ahhhh, the good ol days... reminds me of " the Christmas story"...." You're going to put your eye out kid"
Oh how I fondly remember those Gilbert Chem sets. I had a few in the 60's and those could still do a bit of damage. We kids had a lot fun while learning back then but it is a wonder how we ever survived. I had just about all of the 60's toys mentioned in this video then progressed into electronics and computer logic later as the years rolled on 🙂
I had a few of these myself, somehow I managed to survive into my sixties. One of our family's favorites was lawn darts. The entire family enjoyed weekend lawn dart tournaments which often included alcoholic beverages for the adults. Still No one ever was ever injured by an errant spike . To this day when I go to a garage sale or an estate sale I am on the look out for an old set of lawn darts.
We had Jarts, the Click Clacks, and the Creepy Crawlers in the sixties when I was a kid. My two daughters had the Sky Dancers. Loved them all and never had a problem, I guess we were blessed not to have had so.Thanks again for the video, Rhetty.
I would imagine the sky dancers would be bad if they didn't have a firm grip on the base. That is how I could see them flying all over but I never played with them. I did play with the others you mentioned. Just have to be careful with them. THank you for watching Jeannine!
I recall the collateral damages from clackers. I was determined to master them. Bruised wrists and forearms for weeks. I ended up being quite good at it. 😎🤣
I got an Erector Set for Christmas in the 60's. I loved it and really learned a lot building with it. I did every project in the booklet that came with it. It also had rope and pulleys and an very strong electric motor to make different projects work. It had a gearing system on it for different speeds and directions and all the gears were exposed. I was very inquisitive as a kid and while playing with the motor I got my finger stuck in the gears and they torn a good chunk off the end of my finger. When my Dad saw it he called me an idiot and I never stuck my fingers in those gears again. I loved that motor the gears made it incredibly strong and I made it lift big heavy things that weren't in the book.😄
The fun of these toys, and most toys is using them for they were NOT intended for but getting creative! You can turn almost any toy into some kind of 3rd world weapon.
I am 67 and had yard jarts as a kid. Great family fun. Mom coould hardly throw them right. Most of the time they went straight up. When it was her turn to throw we all spread apart and watched which way it came down. Never got hurt and had great fun!!
My parents purchased the Creepy Crawler heat molding toy as a Christmas present for me. I remember having a ball using the thermal molds to create my own rubber insect monster toys. I never burned myself as I had the common sense not to misuse the toy at nine years old.
Happy to see my favorite Christmas present on the list, the Mattel belt buckle derringer. It came in a set with a 6 shooter and a buffalo gun rifle. We were all cowboys in the 50's.
After seeking a set of “Jarts” for years, finally found two in one flea market. The older advised “Fun for the whole family”, the newer set had “NOT FOR CHILDREN” in big, friendly red letters.
The problem with most toys now and back then were parents not watching their children closely enough. We had lawn darts and my parents' made rules. All children stand 15 feet to the side while 1 person threw the darts. If not, they were taken away for weeks. My mom or dad would watch or at least check on us often, No one ever got hurt. My parents did this with every toy we had if they thought one of us would get hurt. People need to watch their kids closer when they play.
Great video! Played with and had lots of those toys as hand-me-downs...I learned common sense, how to think on my own, and to seriously think before I did burn the house down or blow stuff up! All of those toys would not make it today because kids have almost no common sense, they dont know much...phone or computer gives them the answers, and they don't seriously think...they say "whatever" and we see the outcome on the news. Bring back real stuff like those toys and make real, hard working, people with common sense again!!
I absolutely loved the erector sets, and of course lincoln logs.!!! My erector set has started me out and at 61 yrs old a well seasoned auto technician and electronics tech. Those were great times, now kids don't know if they are a boy or a girl. SO VERY SAD FOR THESE POOR KIDS. Im so happy i grew up when i did. Thanks mom amd dad, you taught me so well. Rest in peace, i truly miss you both. GOD BLESS YOU BOTH ALWAYS. !!!!!! 😊❤
Hey Rhett! Man I remember so many of these toys. My oldest brother had a chemistry kit and Erectro kit. A few bad experiments in his bedroom smelt the house up. We had the lawn darts for our kids. A few times toes almost got done in. Had a friend that had the power tools and cut himself pretty bad on the hand with the power saw. These are great and you always amaze me when you come up with them. Thanks my friend for these wonderful videos.
I wasn't quite sure if those power tools would do damage since it was meant for styrofoam and balsa wood. But that little circular saw looked like it had some pretty good teeth on there. To me it just seemed like a bad idea. It would be ok with parental supervision though. I had a lot of fun with lawn darts but I never stood on the receiving end. I treated them like I did with horseshoes. That is funny on the chemistry set that you all had. Did you get in trouble for stinking up the house? Thank you for watching!
@@RhettyforHistory My brother did. I was just watching. Luckily it was a good day and we opened the windows. I don't think he played with it again after the two experiments.
As kids we had the lawn darts and the clackers. You could always tell when somebody in the house was playing with the clackers you were here in the distance, clack clack clack ouch! clack clack clack ouch!
Yes, I think those would be a parents nightmare! I had those and drums and I'm not sure how my parents ever put up with it. I did both a lot and even at the same time. I really enjoyed lawn darts but I definitely didn't want to stand on the receiving end of those. Thank you for watching and sharing what you had.
HaHa this was great. The toys from this list I had: Gilbert chemistry set, pogo stick, lawn darts, thing maker and loved playing with every one of them.
I remember in the 80s when those kids died and everyone was saying lawn darts don’t kill kids! The people throwing them do. Oh wait. No. No one said that. That would be crazy.
Memories! Memories of things I have seen but never bought for the kids and my parents never bought those for us. This is probably a good thing ha. The one with the uranium is really scary. And the chemistry set! Great video.
Used the jarts, chemistry sets, hot melts, clackers, water powered rockets, all types of guns, pull type firecrackers, ah the stories….we made our own too…smoke bombs, Molotovs, high speed launchers…caught to many things on fire…but always managed to put them out!….the good old days!
It’s a wonder a lot of us are alive today! I remember having an erector set and the darts. My big brother threw one at me and it stuck in my thigh. Still have the scar. I also had the cracker balls, the creepy crawlers and a soldering kit. Burnt my hands several times and caught my bed on fire once. I believe that is why we grew up tough and had good common sense. We learned the hard way but we did learn! No whining babies and no participation trophies.
I don't think the erector set was bad at all and I think it helped kids to be creative. That jart in the thigh sounds painful. I never got hit by one. Thank you for watching and sharing your memories! Sounds like you had quite a bit!
I learned how to shoot a gun when I was 11. By age 13, I had moved up to big ones like .45 Auto and .357 Magnum. By age 15, .44 Magnums. Interestingly, .44 wasn't THAT hard to use. The 8" barrel on the revolver helped a lot in keeping the muzzle down. The .45 however, I hated it. It kicked back very sharply while the .44 would softly kick upwards. I could shoot that S&W revolver all day. On the other hand, just two magazines with that .45 was too much to take. My arms hurt and I'd quit for the day. It was the "snubby" version intended for detectives and spies. Basically they took a 1911 series and reduced capacity by one round. Then they cut the barrel down so it would be easier to stuff into a coat pocket. Unfortunately, that reduces the weight and makes it climb even higher when fired!
I had many of these toys as a kid. It was a lot more fun before the world was idiot proofed. I never lost any fingers or blew myself up. This stuff taught kids to be responsible, something lacking in today's world. I had pellet guns, cherry bombs, and an electric powered live steam engine. Not to mention all the gasoline powered goodies. It was a fun time for sure. We didn't need video games or smart phones.
Sounds like some toy manufacturers didn't like kids! I remember the jarts. We had a set,but never any injuries. Guess we had enough sense to know they'd hurt if they hit you.
I really wanted a Powermite set, but never got one. While I certainly realize some of these toys were legitimately dangerous, I fear we've become a society where we are now *too* cautious, and we're effectively teaching kids never to take *any* risks.
There's a sociology book called "for the children?" that has a chapter covering this. Basically they point out that a child would be fine if their father, for example, has a wood working shop and they did some woodworking with their father in there. No one would think that's weird and no one would be unsafe. And that's the environment that was assumed by toy manufacturers in the 1900s to 1960s. That these toys - the power tools, the chemistry sets, etc - would be used in an environment where the parent was taking part in the experience or very close by. So there was no need to police other people's children for safety as it was understood that there would always been a parent present. Then in the 70s, you have a recession that sends both parents into the workplace full time to make ends meet, you have social upheaval where more women are in the workplace, more day cares are in use, more single parent households are cropping up through either social changes towards marriage and children or divorce. And then in the 80s, there's a big movement towards the idea of work as a dignifying, essential thing. That hard work is the only thing that matters, so you find the benefits are made harder to attain, poor or unfit people are forced into long hours at minimum wage jobs and so on. So now you have parents who simply aren't around to see their kids because they're earning less money despite working more, so they have to make sacrifices to make the household work - and that's when "dangerous toys" become an issue for the state. Parents aren't around to look after their own kids like they used to, so the state has to fill in the gaps and pick up some to their slack. They have to make it so a parent can buy a you for their child and know it will be safe even if they're at work while they're playing. It's one of those things that no one expects but makes a ton of sense once you see the data.
I remember click clacks (mine had a chunk missing, not sure how that happened), creepy crawlers (yes it was hot), power mite (I would cut balsa wood into shapes). No injuries to report. I think click clacks were a bad idea, the other two really needed adult supervision under 10ish. There was no such supervision in my house.
We need a Gilbert toy company today along with the Mattel six shooters and the other wonder metal and steel guns, some actually propelling a projectile ... I grew up in the south Bronx and we had great toys! Kids today have crappy toys, boring junk!
This video is AWESOME. If I had one of each of these toys, I could sell them and be a million air !!! I am 67 years old and remember some of these toys from the 1950s thank YOU Frank from montana....
I tell kids these days about the wonder filled days of being a kid with all these GREAT toys! . . . AND no parental supervision! I also told them that we'd lose a one of our friends every now and then, but that's just the way things were in that golden era. This is for all those friends that are no longer with us who gave their lives in the name of FUN! We salute you comrades!
Lawn darts is the same as darts with a board seen in bars & even though drunks walk in front of those & get hit all the time, it's still around! A sad loss.
Omg . Thanks for the memories, especially the creeper crawler maker. I loved creating the bugs with different colors and was sad when all the goo was gone.
Yep the good old days 😂 The only toy I never liked and never asked mum and dad for was a barbie doll, any thing else I was down for. I wonder if there were any deaths from those horrifying baby cages. Never heard of those before this video. Yikes 😬 Just love👍it Rhett, more great memories. ❤️Jodie 🇦🇺
I expected to find some deaths or something horrible on those baby cages but I never could see anything. That doesn't mean that it didn't happen though. It sure sounds like a terrible idea. That is interesting that you never liked the Barbie Doll. Thank you for watching Jodie!
@@RhettyforHistory when I was little I did like bigger dolls that you could bath, feed, change nappies, pretend they were your baby. The barbie for me personally was one that I just thought 🤔 what do you do with it ? I know a lot of girls liked barbie, I just never did. Thanks for the cool video.
When I was younger, I liked the life-size baby dolls but as an 11 or 12 year old I loved Barbie dolls and the fashionable clothes that went along with it.
@@swansfan6944 As a horrid big brother, I remember the day when I put food colouring in the reservoir of one of those nappy filling dolls. The squeal from my sister and her tortured face were perfect for this boy's ego. Didn't put her off later on as she's had three real ones, non-optional smells and all.
Mattel made several spin-offs from Creepy Crawlers. Creepie People, Fighting Men (Which I owned), Fun Flowers and several others. I remember the "toxic" smell of the plastic "goop" as you basically created your figures by baking at 300 degrees! And I do remember burning myself once or twice on the hot molds. Dangerous by today's standards but loads of fun back then. 🙂
@billrobertson5895 Yeah that was called "vaccu-form." The hot plate had an attachment that heated thin plastic sheets then flipped over a mold and you had to pump the vacuum pump to draw the hot plastic sheet onto th mold, I remember it well. 😊
Aww! I was hoping to hear about the dangers of Mr Water Wiggle by the appearance in the beginning! I laugh every time I see one because ours never ever worked right due to the possibility that we had the water pressure too high on the hose! All it would do is dance and bobble briefly before tipping over and spraying the side of the house!! My parents didn't actually get rid of the thing and it stayed in the garage by the hoses! So of course we had to try it again and the same thing would happen - but this time we'd hear my mom screaming from inside to turn it off! Hahaha!
I’m certainly three years old and I’m glad I grew up during this year. I had to have common sense and these toys called me practical skills. At least you weren’t thumbs all the time.
We had the lawn darts, pogo sticks,klackers and chemistry set. I almost fell off the pogo stick numerous times but never got injured. With lawn darts we knew the dangers so my cousins and I would stand back when someone was playing with them.
@@RhettyforHistory well common sense ain't gonna help you when you throw the darts in the air there unpredictable in were they go . And I have the Scar to prove that
Nice trip down Memory Lane, Rhett! My parents never bought me any of these early 60's toys. I do remember my brother's having chemistry kits. I wasn't allowed to touch it. But, that wasn't unusual by my brothers and their stuff. But hey! My brothers and I jousted by wrapping wooden broom handles with old rags, then turning metal trashcan lids upside down so they'd wobble. I'm sure there was nothing dangerous with that. 😄
It's interesting that you bring up the story of your brothers playing with the chemistry set and you weren't allowed to play with it. Was that because of age? When these chemistry sets first came out and for many decades they were marketed towards boys only. It even said so on the box. At some point they had ones for girls and then it was just for everyone. I wonder if your parents had that old school thought about the sets? That jousting actually sounds sort of fun. Until you get poked by the broomstick anyway. It's funny what we used to make into toys back then. I fully expected to have things like that happen with my kids but I haven't seen any of it. I guess times have changed. Thank you for watching!
My parents really didn't have a girl toy/boy toy attitude. I played with my Dad's O-scale Lionel and still have them. It was my brother's who were just being brothers. There is an age gap of 5 & 7 years older than me. I loved getting out their erector set and building things that moved. Of, course that was while they were away. 😄
@@RhettyforHistory, I had a chemistry set too. One of the contents of that set was magnesium ribbon. Guess how hot magnesium gets when it burns? Oh, and try and extinguish a magnesium fire with water and see what happens.
True. We did however have real power tools, knives, axes, solvents, incendiary, propellants, explosives, reactive metal( sodium, carbide, etc), small engines and actual firearms. None of these toys were more dangerous than what you'd get into looking to make your own fun. Most of us managed to survive childhood. It's not that far behind us I was born in 1971
We had the Creepy Crawlers. It was a lot of fun, and neighbors, friends, and cousins would come over to create some colorful bugs. We were supervised by a parent or much older teenager when using. No one ever got hurt.
I'm 78 and I had a LOT of those toys. I recall almost burning the house down with the Gilbert Chemistry Set. And then of course there was the solvent bubbles in a tube and airplane glue which was highly toxic. Shooting at old 78rpm records with my Daisy bb gun. No adult supervision. Ahhh... The memories.
😂😂😂😂👍
What is this "adult supervision" of which you speak???
Go outside and play is what we were told !!!
@@robertmiller2633 Yeah, I got that too...
I'm 63 and that was back when being a kid was FUN, and our toys ran mostly on IMAGINATION... If you survived them.😳
@@robertmiller2633 Don't let me see you till dinnertime!!!
They took away all the fun when they recalled these games and toys. Great memories of a childhood long gone, but still remembered.
Don't forget the good ole' pocket knife: Throwing it at trees, trying to stick it in the ground, making each other "dance".
My dad had one that I used to sharpen a pencil once when I was 7.....dont let kids use sharp objects,
I was under supervision when it happened but it still happened 😢
I remember most of these toys, and yet, here I am 60 years later.
Never got hurt once!
@@James-yg6em if you did get hurt, ya got over it 🤦♀️🤦♀️🤦♀️
I still have my lawn dart set!...the very same set that I enjoyed as a kid in the late 70s. Still use them, too. Great game back in the late 70s...still great in 2023.
Jarts were NOT dangerous. You just had to PAY ATTENTION. Had them for years, not one "incident".
@@igorschmidlapp6987 Same here. My grandparents would let us play with their set. Not a single injury. Unfortunately it only takes one to change everything.
In the 70’s, a guy got a Jart in the ankle at one of our family reunions. They took him to the hospital and everybody kept playing.
And just as dangerous! I got hit by one
I found a vintage set of lawndarts in my basement, good times are back!
My brother and I had the Creepy Crawlers set and i can still remember the smell from the heating element it came with! Good times!
I love mine especially making the lizards. I will have to look around and see if I have a rubber lizard.
I got creative and would mix the goops made some crazy crawlers!
I'd play all day with mine. I was always looking for new molds.
I still remember the commercial that had a man's voice whispering "CREEPY CRAWLERS! CREEPY CRAWLERS!
I think of Creepy Crawlers and Chatty Cathy together. I remember I had a doll that had these little white records that would insert in her back and so would expand on what the doll could say. I'm not sure if that was Chatty Cathy or not. Does anyone know about this doll?
My older brother had the eractor set and the chemistry set. He would go to the drug store to buy refills for the chemicals. The druggist would add a red sticker to some of the bottles. Danger Poison. He made the mother of all smoke bombs, one Sat. Nite. It was built on half of a pool ball. It filled the whole upstairs of the house with smoke. It was awesome!
Hahaha… nice one.
Lol..
@@richarderion4611 glad ya's lived through your fun 😂
I remember the "fun" of touching 9V batteries to kids tongues, or riding a bike with bellbottoms and they got stuck in the chain, or trying to go around the world with a Duncan Butterfly and hitting someone in the eye, among other things. Childhood was an adventure then.
The Clackers were the best, banged your arms or catch a friend in the face with them......those were the days,( and we didn't go crying to our parents,we just got even.) Miss em.
@@crunchytaco58 Oh wow! I had a set. They were so popular, kids were talking them to school, and teachers would take them. Got them back the last day of school.
@@floydthompson8668 Yep, we usually just stole ours back, cause it was an unlocked drawer the stuff was kept in, we weren't waiting till the end of school. I still remember the color they were light blue with a dark blue Starburst .
@@crunchytaco58 LOL.. I know that's right!
@@floydthompson8668 when times was more innocent, they didn't call the law on us, just got ragged by the teacher,trying to get us to break and narc.....never worked with me and my friends tho., but there was always 1 kid that woul narc, but that got taken care of on the playground or the bus.....memories they're always sweeter when we age huh? Good talking with you, stay breezy.
I'm 63 and I remember Lawn Darts! My grandfather LOVED to play them. Every single outdoor family gathering we would have a tournament! This was in the 60's and while I was younger I knew better than to run in front while someone was taking their turn. I guess we were either lucky or maybe just a smart enough family because nobody ever even came close to being hurt. I really miss playing that game with my family. 😢😢
Any of youall drive a...Dodge Dart...??
My mom had a Dodge Dart. I totaled it in high school. She was so pissed off. My Dad didn't care. He never drove that thing. It had a great motor. Think it was called a slant six, or something like that
Think that was 1979
A Dodge Dart was one of the best cars in those days.@@JTA1961
Speaking of Dodge Dart my dad had one and that was one of my favorite cars my dad had.
"Silly Puddy" and "Play Dough" never tasted that good coming out of my sister's "Easy Bake Oven" 😧
Yikes, lol!
😲 ewww 😅
I`m 63 and grew up in Scotland and had had the clackers, chemistry set, pogo stick and lawn darts. Other than sore arms from the clackers and the odd tumble from the pogo stick, no major issues but a lot of fun.
I'm 62 years old. I had some of those toys. Brings back a lot of memories. Thank you Rhetty have a Blessed day 🔥
You're welcome and thank you for watching Tommy!
im 61 and im just like you.. remember abt most of them, love playing the lawn darts... LOL..
@@greatfullded I`m 63 and remember all these too. I especially remember pogo sticks and clackers. They were a lot of fun.
How did we possibly live through all of these toys?
When I first read that you were 62 my initial thought was "man, you're old!" but then I realized that I'm 61! 😆🤣
I had two of those Gilbert Chemistry sets. Got the first one when I was 8 years old, and after finishing all the experiments in it, my parents got me the much larger set. I went through the experiments in the order they were in the manual, but got into serious trouble when I was about 12 years old, and the next experiment was called Kittie Gas. It required melting powdered sulfur and wax. It was, to my horror, a major stink bomb. My parents were trying to sell the house and had hired a bus to bring a bunch of real estate agents to tour the house. They arrived about an hour after my experiment. My parents never believed that I had no idea I was making a stink bomb. My best friend had been over helping me, and I was not allowed to play with her again after that. I remember they had gun powder, sulfur, cobalt, and other chemicals that you could use to make minor fireworks, lots of chemicals that even adults cannot buy easily anymore. I also got one of their microscope sets, and dissected a frog and some other small critters. I think one was a worm. My parents would make me go outside to play with that set. I would set up a card table on the back patio.
😅 😂 🤣 🥲
Despite some malfunctions, lol, sounds like you have a good childhood and I mean that sincerely. I couldn’t imagine owning these but after seeing this video they were definitely inventive for their times. Especially the early ones in the 1900s, wow! Thanks for sharing your story that was fun
Gena Taylor, 👍 yeah, those early chemistry sets were great fun. Did your eyebrows ever grow back?
At the Oregon Museum of Science and Industry in the 60s you used to be able to buy all those elements over the counter in the museum gift shop.
That's quite a funny story especially the part where your parents were trying to sell your stink bomb filled house
I'm glad I grew up in the "Dangerous Toys" era. I had no incidents.
Not today’s geniuses 🤣
@@1922Skidoolol ..
Same. We were just thinning the herd 😂
I can hear my mother..."Put that down, you're going to put somebody's eye out"
Yep...all the time 😅
Great video! I had several of these things. Played with the lawn darts a lot! It was survival of the fittest back then!! LOL!
Those lawn darts were fun as long as you didn't have anyone fooling around with them. Thank you for watching!
And we rode our bicycles at speeds up to 50 MPH with no helmets or any other protective gear. I lived in a particularly hilly area, so we could really get up to speed even on a standard one-speed 20-inch bicycle.
@@arinerm1331 And I might add that defunct grain elevators were easy to climb on top of until you fell throught the roof and went crashing 50 feet down to your death. The good old days.
When I was a kid we didn't have fancy toys. If you wanted to play you just found a long stick and bang on a garbage can.
We went from kids playing lawn Darts to adults playing with bean bags.
When those toys were popular, owners manual for new cars included how to adjust valves while new cars warn about drinking the radiator fluid.
[Drinking the radiator fluid]
A tik tok challenge to today's youth
@@riverraisin1 I use it to wash down Tide balls.
I love how quickly this video got going. No drawn out intro and and endless lead-in. Thanks for the great content!
Don't you wish every YT video was this way? Just get to it, we're here for the content.
I have a modern dart gun that's basically a clone of the Zulu one. They can still be found in sporting good stores, but aren't marketed as kids toys. I also had a set of Jarts (the originals with the steel tips, not the fake Jarts with the beanbags). My sisters, my brother and I used to play a game of chicken with them and we never got hurt. My father kept guns over his bed when I was growing up, and we never got hurt from those either; mostly because we didn't play with them or even touch them without permission. It's the dumbing down of kids that causes so many of the injuries, and that's why we have to have warnings like "Suffocation Hazard: Don't let your child play with plastic bags." Stupidity and not following directions is a trait that some people never outgrow.
Wow the Gilbert Company had to be the most dangerous toy company of all time. Watching all these dangerous toys reminded me of the old SNL skit where Dan Akyroyd ran a dangerous toy company. One of his toys was a BAG OF BROKEN GLASS.
Maimeway Toys IIRC
From the days when SNL was funny.
Their was also invisible pedestrian and the Johnny switchblade action toy.
@@johnlyngdal8601 Yes. Whatever happened to SNL? It is certainly no longer funny...mot like it used to be!!
Those lawn darts would stick in trees and fences 😆 pointed tips and all. How did we survive childhood 🤣
That is a good question but they sure were fun! We never stood on the receiving end of those or horse shoes. Thank you for watching Stacee!
😂😂😂
Because we weren't stupid and would never eat Tide Pods even if they existed back then.
🤔lol even normal darts were dangerous too I suppose. Well only because me and my friend got bored playing normal darts...so I had a genius idea,I would face the wall (for safety reasons of course😂)...and asked him to see just how close to my head he could throw a dart,without actually hitting me. Needless to say I heard a thud as first dart he threw almost stuck in the back of my head😂then his mum stopped us playing darts that day.
@@CarsandCats we weren't stupid? You obviously grew up in a much more enlightened neighborhood than me and my childhood friends 😉
I had several of these toys. In the old day we were more itellegent and were aware that there were some dangers in things. For example, I knew hot things were hot.
@@susannagaffney2208 Learn how to be a decent human being...
You knew about gamma radiation?
@@susannagaffney2208 If you really wanna be a grammar critic, the word in this instance would be "intelligent", not "intelligence" - Now go back to school & try not to bully the other kids 😂😂
I never ate any radioactive materials.
@@Skin-ve2tt Wanna?? Isn't a word! Mr. Know all.😁😁
I remember when my friend discovered that clackers thrown at a running friends ankles became a bolo. That effectively ended the fad at our school in 1969.
They came back for a short time in the early 90's.
Clackers we’re all the rage at our school and we had the bruises to prove it!
I remember playing with BB guns when I was 7. Pretty sure someone would call cps on my parents today. Life used to be so much more fun
I'm a kid of the 1970's & out of all of these toys shown, the one that stands out are the Lawn Darts, because we still have a few of them remaining in our possession to this day in storage, but we haven't really played with them since the 70's. And we never had any issues with the darts. I was & still am a Battlestar Galactica fan but I did not have any of those toys, but instead I have one of the plastic scale model kits, that I glued together in the late 70's. I miss those times too.
When toys taught children responsibility.
You are sure right about that, I have survived to a still young age of 66 in part to those toys and the lessons learned from playing with them 🙂
I wouldn’t trust kids nowadays with things like this. If it doesn’t have an app to it then you might as well hand them a gas can and some matches and say”do a challenge”.
@@venom74799 How sadly true and a frightening thought.
The hard way.
@Maya Eaton IDK about that. For me at age 66, If these came back to the shelves I would give them a go a second time 🙂
Grew up in a large family , we had the marts, pogo sticks, and most of the dangerous items listed, no injuries, love the trip down memory lane
I'll never forget the smell of the Creepy Crawlers!!! Lol My brother got in trouble and we lost the Creepy Crawler toy for good after my brother tried to use it to cook bacon in our bedroom! 😳🤣
We had a candle making kit, Jarts, and a lot of other "dangerous toys". My personal favorite was my woodburning kit!!
That is funny trying to use it to make bacon! Thank you for watching and sharing your memories!
Your brother sounds like me. LoL
I loved Creepy Crawlers, too! Your brother just needed an EASY BAKE OVEN!
Can you imagine placing your baby outside the window!! 🤦🏼♀️ just the thought of it scares me!! 😁😁
@@Nan-59 Those baby pens scare the heck out of me!! I wonder how many people actually bought them?!?
Cook bacon in the bedroom on a Creepy Crawlers plate? Sounds like something I’d have tried! Did you eat the bacon?
I had the lawn darts when I was a child, I realized it was dangerous and never tossed them at people or pets. I guess only rich kids got the really dangerous cool toys. Awesome episode!
I played with Jarts for years. I never once saw anyone injured by them!
@@tadpetrie3464 I am not experienced in Jarts, but Lawn Darts is another thing. They had sharp heavy metal points and were fairly accurate if you threw them overhand. They were intended to be launched by the fins towards a target. Did you play horse shoes? Awesomely dangerous but fun!
@@dmann1209 You can't be too familiar with the game if you don't even realize & know that "lawn darts/yard darts" is the same game AKA "Jarts." Various companies made & sold knockoffs of the game. However, the brand name & inventor of the game was created by the "R.B. Jarts" company. Just saying & keeping it a buck! 🤘😉🤘
Lawn darts were a very good educational toy. They taught you about evaluating risks. And to keep drunks away from the dangerous toys.
Haha! Very true! Thanks for the laugh and I appreciate you watching.
Yeah
I think my sister still has my set to this day !
It definitely was a game that taught you "alert" skills ! 🤣🤣
Yeah...
Playing "DiveBomb" Wasn't Enough for Me to Find Out "TheHardWay", it Was When I *ALMOST* Sent a Sky-High-Thrown Lawn-Dart *Into* TheRoof of My Aunt's *Brand New Mini-Van* in TheLate 80's, That Finally Shown Me "Evaluating Risks"!
TheLawnDart Landed in TheDriveWay *BETWEEN* Two Parked Vehicles!
That Was My First Taste of "Luck"!
& It's Been Nothing But *IRONIC* Luck, Ever Since That Day.
Wh0reAble
The erector set was the greatest toy kit ever! The things you could build were limitless. You could build a bridge, an actual working crane with a real motor. I remember making whirling blades of death and chasing my friends around with it.........oh OK I can see why it was on the list.😁
Sounds fun though! 😇
Who knows how many of those kids turned out to be civil or mechanical engineers? I became a bio-medical laser engineer because of Lost In Space and Johnny Quest. Both had laser guns! Just retired after 44 years working with lasers.
The '50s and '60s were great fun!
When the mosquito truck drove down the street spraying DDT, the kids would ride their bikes as close as possible behind in the cloud of toxic spray.
In winter, hanging onto a car bumper driving down snow covered streets was exhilarating! ...especially when the driver tried to shake the kids off by flooring the gas pedal!
That bumper skating was great fun...until the ice ended LOL
Did it every summer on my Evil Knievel bike.
I’ve got a whole box of eyes that were put out by blowguns and darts. God bless Wham-O for making life interesting. Good video. Thank you for sharing. No fun getting hurt by toys.
That atomic energy kit reminds me of a joke advert in Mad Magazine . It read ........Build Your Own Atomic Bomb And Be The First Kid On Your Street To Rule The World .
Wow, the Gilbert company really was one giant liability. Fun for the whole family!
And Mattel wasn't much better in the 60s and 70s.
New haven Conn they let us kids buy whatever we wanted. I am still alieve.
@@bartschwartz9233 wow, weird logic. Its like hearing a Hiroshima survivor saying "meh, atomic bombs/radiation aren't that bad: Im still alive"
I really loved my erector set.
@@totenkopf30 Yet these were toys not weapons of war. People today are sue happy and get butt hurt t the drop of a hat.
I had a lot of these so-called "dangerous" toys, and so did many of my friends (maybe our parents were trying to kill us 🤔). We had a lot of fun, and none of us died or were seriously injured.
Yeah, same here. It only takes a few idiots to ruin good toys for the rest of us!
I need to get another skin graft from my Thing Maker. But still, it was FUN!
@@ntvypr4820 exactly. I love the thing maker
Seriously being the key word
@@ntvypr4820 What kid wouldn't want a Gilbert Nuclear Physics No. U--238 Atomic Energy Lab? Yes, they did make it, and it did contain U-238 (it also contained Po-210, Pb-210, Ru-106, and Zn-65). Unfortunately, it wasn't popular; they sold less than 5,000 units, it was quickly dropped, and they only sold it in 1950-51. A big plus is it's ranked as the second most dangerous toy in history. What could be #1? Lawn Darts. Lawn Darts? Are they kidding? Somebody thinks Lawn Darts are more hazardous than U-238? That must be why there was Lawn Dart Non-Proliferation Treaty with the USSR. 😃 I had Lawn Darts. How stupid do you have to be to get hurt with Lawn Darts?
Yes, we only hear from the survivors 😂
Glad you survived broski
The good ole days when toys weren't boring
You should stop playing with toys then
@@americand0lphin IMO, playing with these toys were better than kids today laying around playing with video games on their phone or XBOX or Nintendo.
Yeah right, lol
Exactly. I loved my 1970s toys. I'd die of boredom with the toys nowadays.
Because video games are more fun at least for an GenZ like me.
I grew up in the 70's and early 80's. It was a great time to be a kid! I remember many of these "dangerous" toys, but survived.
As a kid in this Era we came up with dangerous activities on our own , like when we decided one day to play firemen and lit the trash on fire in my friends metal trash cans and then put out the fire with a garden hose! We got in trouble, because the fire scorched the paint on the shed next to the cans, and my parents grounded me for a week!😂
Just a week.. You got off easily!
These are an example of my kinda toys! Not the crap we have today! I had some of these toys as a kid and I'm here today! Too many whiny people today!
Man they"ve taken all the fun out of being a kid
The kid in me had fun though, how about you?
@@jamesries5534 es ist halt alles eine frage des anspruchs. wenn man nicht viel anspruch hat, macht einen schon der warme furz im gesicht spaß. es ging hier zu dem nicht darum, ob du aktuell spaß hast. aber du machst nicht den eindruck intelligent genug zu sein dass überhaupt zu verstehen. whataboutism ist ein argument von extrem unterbelichteten.
😂😂😂😂😂
Lmfao yeah bc we need to have kids play with a toy train that pisses fuel through the house or mind you is a cimbustion engine in a albeit clean burning form fwiw but.. still and for kids mind ya lmmfao
Yep, as kids we were told never to play with the wood chopping axe and later getting a telling off from dad for slicing my thumb open. Years later I watched in horror as my dad cut off his fore finger on his home made circular saw bench. His words to me were 'Don't tell your mother' He tied what was left of it back in place with a dirty rag and walked of to the local A&E. I don't think we were any tougher in those day's but we accepted responsibility for our own injuries.
I had many of these toys, and remember most of them. There was certainly a lax attitude toward safety in those days, but that also has to be considered in context. Parents were much more involved in their kids' lives then, and I can remember certain things (like Creepy Crawlers) where my dad would help set it up and use it the first time, and he would comment about things to be careful of. Today's parents would consider that far too inconvenient a chore. Also, many toys - including some of the best ever made - were simply adaptations of manufacturing byproducts or failures of another intended invention. Someone thinking outside the box would realize that this spring that can walk down staircases, or the plastic hoop or that odd putty that transfers ink and stretches are fun to play with. To be sure - most of these toys were too hazardous for the market, but I think we also have to give proper context and credit for a different culture. Great content - thanks!
that's why y'all's generation is so much tougher than us. the weak ones died off.
There is no proof of this at all
@@Daimoth1no, that is not what you should take from that.
@@americand0lphin Turn on your humor detector
Creepy Crawlers were great! Even had Creeple People!
I remember the water wiggle. That toy was insane, but alot of fun 😄!!!
Me too...seems like it would always whack you in a "sensitive area" 😱
That atomic energy set looks pretty cool .
Makes me think of Young Sheldon.
The A.E. set might look cool, but the "uranium" materials & chemicals that came with set wasn't too cool, it was actually pretty hot! 🤣🤔😂 Just keeping it a buck, ya dig? +Peace & Rock n' Roll 4 Your Soul My Friends+ 🤘😉🤘
I loved the smell when your new creepy crawler was cooking, the glow in the dark plastigoop smelled the best.
"Highly explosive or corrosive" sounds like my kind of toy
Wow! I’m 61 and thought we had dangerous toys in the 60s, but they were nothing compared to those early chemistry sets and the nuclear lab! I clearly remember the Thingmaker, Jarts, and Clickclacks. Great video.
We played with nearly every one of those, except the atomic kit lol. I think Hot Wheels tracks are still used in corporal punishment. We bought and made even bigger blow guns, using nails and cones of paper that went through denim jeans and impaled lizards on the back fence. My favorite was either the Slip And Slide and break your neck (with liquid soap) or the Wacky Wiggle death on a water hose toy. Plus we drank water from a garden hose. Ah such fond memories and GREAT time! 😍
I remember having spring loaded dart guns ....the darts had rubber suction cups on the end....but we would remove the suction cups to make them more fun....ahhhh, the good ol days... reminds me of " the Christmas story"...." You're going to put your eye out kid"
Oh how I fondly remember those Gilbert Chem sets. I had a few in the 60's and those could still do a bit of damage. We kids had a lot fun while learning back then but it is a wonder how we ever survived. I had just about all of the 60's toys mentioned in this video then progressed into electronics and computer logic later as the years rolled on 🙂
I had a few of these myself, somehow I managed to survive into my sixties. One of our family's favorites was lawn darts. The entire family enjoyed weekend lawn dart tournaments which often included alcoholic beverages for the adults. Still No one ever was ever injured by an errant spike . To this day when I go to a garage sale or an estate sale I am on the look out for an old set of lawn darts.
I have some. They are illegal to sell. Most people sell the box with "free" darts
We had Jarts, the Click Clacks, and the Creepy Crawlers in the sixties when I was a kid. My two daughters had the Sky Dancers. Loved them all and never had a problem, I guess we were blessed not to have had so.Thanks again for the video, Rhetty.
I would imagine the sky dancers would be bad if they didn't have a firm grip on the base. That is how I could see them flying all over but I never played with them. I did play with the others you mentioned. Just have to be careful with them. THank you for watching Jeannine!
Wow your like way older in my parents and your kids are older then me and my sister
I recall the collateral damages from clackers. I was determined to master them. Bruised wrists and forearms for weeks. I ended up being quite good at it. 😎🤣
I used the hotplate for years from creepy crawlies
@Mike Oxlong being with your friends and throwing a jart as high as you can and yelling “run”
I got an Erector Set for Christmas in the 60's. I loved it and really learned a lot building with it. I did every project in the booklet that came with it. It also had rope and pulleys and an very strong electric motor to make different projects work. It had a gearing system on it for different speeds and directions and all the gears were exposed. I was very inquisitive as a kid and while playing with the motor I got my finger stuck in the gears and they torn a good chunk off the end of my finger. When my Dad saw it he called me an idiot and I never stuck my fingers in those gears again. I loved that motor the gears made it incredibly strong and I made it lift big heavy things that weren't in the book.😄
The fun of these toys, and most toys is using them for they were NOT intended for but getting creative! You can turn almost any toy into some kind of 3rd world weapon.
I am 67 and had yard jarts as a kid. Great family fun. Mom coould hardly throw them right. Most of the time they went straight up. When it was her turn to throw we all spread apart and watched which way it came down. Never got hurt and had great fun!!
My parents purchased the Creepy Crawler heat molding toy as a Christmas present for me. I remember having a ball using the thermal molds to create my own rubber insect monster toys. I never burned myself as I had the common sense not to misuse the toy at nine years old.
Happy to see my favorite Christmas present on the list, the Mattel belt buckle derringer. It came in a set with a 6 shooter and a buffalo gun rifle. We were all cowboys in the 50's.
Oh He'll yeah! That sounds bad ass!
I had one. The toy was just a cap gun, so I don't see anything dangerous about it.
Now I have the real thing. Lol..
After seeking a set of “Jarts” for years, finally found two in one flea market. The older advised “Fun for the whole family”, the newer set had “NOT FOR CHILDREN” in big, friendly red letters.
I have a set of Jarts still in the box😬
I don't understand why they didn't ban dart boards. They have darts
The problem with most toys now and back then were parents not watching their children closely enough. We had lawn darts and my parents' made rules. All children stand 15 feet to the side while 1 person threw the darts. If not, they were taken away for weeks. My mom or dad would watch or at least check on us often, No one ever got hurt. My parents did this with every toy we had if they thought one of us would get hurt. People need to watch their kids closer when they play.
That's EXACTLY the problem. Many parents were not nearly that smart...
It also helps with bonding
Great video! Played with and had lots of those toys as hand-me-downs...I learned common sense, how to think on my own, and to seriously think before I did burn the house down or blow stuff up!
All of those toys would not make it today because kids have almost no common sense, they dont know much...phone or computer gives them the answers, and they don't seriously think...they say "whatever" and we see the outcome on the news.
Bring back real stuff like those toys and make real, hard working, people with common sense again!!
I absolutely loved the erector sets, and of course lincoln logs.!!! My erector set has started me out and at 61 yrs old a well seasoned auto technician and electronics tech. Those were great times, now kids don't know if they are a boy or a girl. SO VERY SAD FOR THESE POOR KIDS. Im so happy i grew up when i did. Thanks mom amd dad, you taught me so well. Rest in peace, i truly miss you both. GOD BLESS YOU BOTH ALWAYS. !!!!!! 😊❤
This is great!! I was a very young kid in the 60's & am enjoying this very much, thank you!!!
Hey Rhett! Man I remember so many of these toys.
My oldest brother had a chemistry kit and Erectro kit. A few bad experiments in his bedroom smelt the house up.
We had the lawn darts for our kids. A few times toes almost got done in.
Had a friend that had the power tools and cut himself pretty bad on the hand with the power saw.
These are great and you always amaze me when you come up with them.
Thanks my friend for these wonderful videos.
I wasn't quite sure if those power tools would do damage since it was meant for styrofoam and balsa wood. But that little circular saw looked like it had some pretty good teeth on there. To me it just seemed like a bad idea. It would be ok with parental supervision though. I had a lot of fun with lawn darts but I never stood on the receiving end. I treated them like I did with horseshoes. That is funny on the chemistry set that you all had. Did you get in trouble for stinking up the house? Thank you for watching!
@@RhettyforHistory
My brother did. I was just watching. Luckily it was a good day and we opened the windows.
I don't think he played with it again after the two experiments.
That's kind of funny on those experiments. Good thing you both didn't burn the house down!
We had so many of these things as kids, loved em all!
As kids we had the lawn darts and the clackers. You could always tell when somebody in the house was playing with the clackers you were here in the distance, clack clack clack ouch! clack clack clack ouch!
Yes, I think those would be a parents nightmare! I had those and drums and I'm not sure how my parents ever put up with it. I did both a lot and even at the same time. I really enjoyed lawn darts but I definitely didn't want to stand on the receiving end of those. Thank you for watching and sharing what you had.
@@RhettyforHistory 😁👍
HaHa this was great. The toys from this list I had: Gilbert chemistry set, pogo stick, lawn darts, thing maker and loved playing with every one of them.
Loved Creepy Crawlers and Clackers!!
I remember in the 80s when those kids died and everyone was saying lawn darts don’t kill kids! The people throwing them do. Oh wait. No. No one said that. That would be crazy.
I grew up playing with a lot of these toys. I guess I’m lucky to still be around :) Thanks for posting. 👍🏻
Memories! Memories of things I have seen but never bought for the kids and my parents never bought those for us. This is probably a good thing ha. The one with the uranium is really scary. And the chemistry set! Great video.
Yes, I can't believe that nuclear one was ever a kids toy. It just seems like a bad idea. Thank you for watching Tricia!
Used the jarts, chemistry sets, hot melts, clackers, water powered rockets, all types of guns, pull type firecrackers, ah the stories….we made our own too…smoke bombs, Molotovs, high speed launchers…caught to many things on fire…but always managed to put them out!….the good old days!
"Bag Of Glass" sold by Dan Akroyd on Saturday Night Live 😅
We had a lot of fun with bb and pellet guns.
Those have been popular since they first came out in the 1800s. Thank you for watching!
Yep! BB gun wars in the field behind our house!
It was all fun and games playing army with my bro using our bb guns until I got shot in the face. After that I didn't want to play anymore. 😂
"You'll shoot your eye out"
@@foxtrot312 The Crossman 788 BB Scout with 10 pumps at close range in the leg. It'll be screaming, hospital, a scalpel and stitches.
It’s a wonder a lot of us are alive today! I remember having an erector set and the darts. My big brother threw one at me and it stuck in my thigh. Still have the scar. I also had the cracker balls, the creepy crawlers and a soldering kit. Burnt my hands several times and caught my bed on fire once. I believe that is why we grew up tough and had good common sense. We learned the hard way but we did learn! No whining babies and no participation trophies.
I don't think the erector set was bad at all and I think it helped kids to be creative. That jart in the thigh sounds painful. I never got hit by one. Thank you for watching and sharing your memories! Sounds like you had quite a bit!
My friend now in her sixties like myself still has her clackers and we both had pogo sticks and best of all wooden stilts
I learned how to shoot a gun when I was 11. By age 13, I had moved up to big ones like .45 Auto and .357 Magnum. By age 15, .44 Magnums. Interestingly, .44 wasn't THAT hard to use. The 8" barrel on the revolver helped a lot in keeping the muzzle down. The .45 however, I hated it. It kicked back very sharply while the .44 would softly kick upwards. I could shoot that S&W revolver all day. On the other hand, just two magazines with that .45 was too much to take. My arms hurt and I'd quit for the day. It was the "snubby" version intended for detectives and spies. Basically they took a 1911 series and reduced capacity by one round. Then they cut the barrel down so it would be easier to stuff into a coat pocket. Unfortunately, that reduces the weight and makes it climb even higher when fired!
@@kymclinton3140I used my dads band saw and made my own stilts!
I did get whacked in the face by those clackers. It hurt, but so did a lot of other things.
I remember some of the toys. Interesting video, thanks for sharing 🙂
Some of them were quite fun. Thank you for watching Monika!
I had many of these toys as a kid. It was a lot more fun before the world was idiot proofed. I never lost any fingers or blew myself up. This stuff taught kids to be responsible, something lacking in today's world. I had pellet guns, cherry bombs, and an electric powered live steam engine. Not to mention all the gasoline powered goodies. It was a fun time for sure. We didn't need video games or smart phones.
Sounds like some toy manufacturers didn't like kids! I remember the jarts. We had a set,but never any injuries. Guess we had enough sense to know they'd hurt if they hit you.
My family had frequent outdoor barbeques in our large back yard. Two games we had were the Jarts and badmitton sets.
Those were both fun! I really enjoyed the badmitton. Thank you for watching and sharing your memories!
I really wanted a Powermite set, but never got one. While I certainly realize some of these toys were legitimately dangerous, I fear we've become a society where we are now *too* cautious, and we're effectively teaching kids never to take *any* risks.
There's a sociology book called "for the children?" that has a chapter covering this.
Basically they point out that a child would be fine if their father, for example, has a wood working shop and they did some woodworking with their father in there. No one would think that's weird and no one would be unsafe.
And that's the environment that was assumed by toy manufacturers in the 1900s to 1960s. That these toys - the power tools, the chemistry sets, etc - would be used in an environment where the parent was taking part in the experience or very close by. So there was no need to police other people's children for safety as it was understood that there would always been a parent present.
Then in the 70s, you have a recession that sends both parents into the workplace full time to make ends meet, you have social upheaval where more women are in the workplace, more day cares are in use, more single parent households are cropping up through either social changes towards marriage and children or divorce. And then in the 80s, there's a big movement towards the idea of work as a dignifying, essential thing. That hard work is the only thing that matters, so you find the benefits are made harder to attain, poor or unfit people are forced into long hours at minimum wage jobs and so on. So now you have parents who simply aren't around to see their kids because they're earning less money despite working more, so they have to make sacrifices to make the household work - and that's when "dangerous toys" become an issue for the state. Parents aren't around to look after their own kids like they used to, so the state has to fill in the gaps and pick up some to their slack. They have to make it so a parent can buy a you for their child and know it will be safe even if they're at work while they're playing.
It's one of those things that no one expects but makes a ton of sense once you see the data.
I remember click clacks (mine had a chunk missing, not sure how that happened), creepy crawlers (yes it was hot), power mite (I would cut balsa wood into shapes). No injuries to report. I think click clacks were a bad idea, the other two really needed adult supervision under 10ish. There was no such supervision in my house.
My klackers are in the attic. The chemistry kit is at my grandparents house. We used to have the creep crawlers.
We need a Gilbert toy company today along with the Mattel six shooters and the other wonder metal and steel guns, some actually propelling a projectile ... I grew up in the south Bronx and we had great toys! Kids today have crappy toys, boring junk!
This video is AWESOME. If I had one of each of these toys, I could sell them and be a million air !!! I am 67 years old and remember some of these toys from the 1950s thank YOU Frank from montana....
There would be worth some money now. Many of them were super fun if you used them correctly and used common sense. Thank you for watching Frank!
I tell kids these days about the wonder filled days of being a kid with all these GREAT toys! . . . AND no parental supervision!
I also told them that we'd lose a one of our friends every now and then, but that's just the way things were in that golden era.
This is for all those friends that are no longer with us who gave their lives in the name of FUN! We salute you comrades!
We played lawn darts, but throwing pocket knives was just as much fun.
Lawn darts is the same as darts with a board seen in bars & even though drunks walk in front of those & get hit all the time, it's still around! A sad loss.
@@apfelbasket Lawn Darts are MUCH safer, they aren't even sharp! Yet you made a great point.
@@CarsandCats "You made a great point" ... I see what you did there..🙂
Or indeed ordinary darts!
Man the good old days. I remember when I had lawn darts. It was dangerous but so much fun.😂
Omg . Thanks for the memories, especially the creeper crawler maker. I loved creating the bugs with different colors and was sad when all the goo was gone.
Yep the good old days 😂
The only toy I never liked and never asked mum and dad for was a barbie doll, any thing else I was down for. I wonder if there were any deaths from those horrifying baby cages. Never heard of those before this video. Yikes 😬
Just love👍it Rhett, more great memories. ❤️Jodie 🇦🇺
I expected to find some deaths or something horrible on those baby cages but I never could see anything. That doesn't mean that it didn't happen though. It sure sounds like a terrible idea. That is interesting that you never liked the Barbie Doll. Thank you for watching Jodie!
@@RhettyforHistory when I was little I did like bigger dolls that you could bath, feed, change nappies, pretend they were your baby. The barbie for me personally was one that I just thought 🤔 what do you do with it ? I know a lot of girls liked barbie, I just never did. Thanks for the cool video.
The realistic babies dolls seem better in my opinion. Those are what my youngest enjoyed the most. Didn't even have to be expensive.
When I was younger, I liked the life-size baby dolls but as an 11 or 12 year old I loved Barbie dolls and the fashionable clothes that went along with it.
@@swansfan6944 As a horrid big brother, I remember the day when I put food colouring in the reservoir of one of those nappy filling dolls. The squeal from my sister and her tortured face were perfect for this boy's ego. Didn't put her off later on as she's had three real ones, non-optional smells and all.
Mattel made several spin-offs from Creepy Crawlers. Creepie People, Fighting Men (Which I owned), Fun Flowers and several others. I remember the "toxic" smell of the plastic "goop" as you basically created your figures by baking at 300 degrees! And I do remember burning myself once or twice on the hot molds. Dangerous by today's standards but loads of fun back then. 🙂
I remember one where you would make the body of a car and you could put it on chassis This was over 50+ years ago so I don’t recall the name
@billrobertson5895 Yeah that was called "vaccu-form." The hot plate had an attachment that heated thin plastic sheets then flipped over a mold and you had to pump the vacuum pump to draw the hot plastic sheet onto th mold, I remember it well. 😊
The cooker was a hot plate, you could cook on it. Likewise wood burning kits were soldering irons. Both of these could easily burn down the house!🧯🔥
Aww! I was hoping to hear about the dangers of Mr Water Wiggle by the appearance in the beginning! I laugh every time I see one because ours never ever worked right due to the possibility that we had the water pressure too high on the hose! All it would do is dance and bobble briefly before tipping over and spraying the side of the house!! My parents didn't actually get rid of the thing and it stayed in the garage by the hoses! So of course we had to try it again and the same thing would happen - but this time we'd hear my mom screaming from inside to turn it off! Hahaha!
Water Wiggle was another one that showed no mercy! Thank you for watching and helping us to remember another crazy product!
What doesn't extinguishes you, only makes you stronger.... My model paints from Revell and Testor had Radium paint !
Loved Revell car models! Mostly dragsters.
I love this video and its contents. The narration is brilliant...got me laughing!
Tim Hawkins does a funny bit on lawn darts and glow in the dark frisbees 😆
Thank you for watching and telling me about that.
It's quite funny if you haven't seen it👍
Loving this channel ! Takes me back to the day.
I'm happy to know you are enjoying the content. Thank you for watching!
Can you imagine what these toys are worth today!
I saw that atomic energy lab on Ebay for $5,000.
I’m certainly three years old and I’m glad I grew up during this year. I had to have common sense and these toys called me practical skills. At least you weren’t thumbs all the time.
Recall back in the day as kids we could play all day in the woods unsupervised
We had the lawn darts, pogo sticks,klackers and chemistry set. I almost fell off the pogo stick numerous times but never got injured. With lawn darts we knew the dangers so my cousins and I would stand back when someone was playing with them.
We never stood on the receiving end of lawn darts. Same thing with horseshoes. Some of those were great with common sense. Thank you for watching!
Anyone with an iq over 50 wouldn’t get hurt with most of these toys. It’s unreal how stupid ppl are
@@RhettyforHistory well common sense ain't gonna help you when you throw the darts in the air there unpredictable in were they go . And I have the Scar to prove that
I remember jarts. Never had them but they still look scary.😬
I had them and they were super fun. We never stood on the receiving end. I feel the same way about horse shoes. Thank you for watching Cynthia!
Harmless unless you aim for the face.
Nice trip down Memory Lane, Rhett! My parents never bought me any of these early 60's toys. I do remember my brother's having chemistry kits. I wasn't allowed to touch it. But, that wasn't unusual by my brothers and their stuff. But hey! My brothers and I jousted by wrapping wooden broom handles with old rags, then turning metal trashcan lids upside down so they'd wobble. I'm sure there was nothing dangerous with that. 😄
It's interesting that you bring up the story of your brothers playing with the chemistry set and you weren't allowed to play with it. Was that because of age? When these chemistry sets first came out and for many decades they were marketed towards boys only. It even said so on the box. At some point they had ones for girls and then it was just for everyone. I wonder if your parents had that old school thought about the sets? That jousting actually sounds sort of fun. Until you get poked by the broomstick anyway. It's funny what we used to make into toys back then. I fully expected to have things like that happen with my kids but I haven't seen any of it. I guess times have changed. Thank you for watching!
My parents really didn't have a girl toy/boy toy attitude. I played with my Dad's O-scale Lionel and still have them. It was my brother's who were just being brothers. There is an age gap of 5 & 7 years older than me. I loved getting out their erector set and building things that moved. Of, course that was while they were away. 😄
I remember I would mess with my older brothers things when they were away too! Otherwise they would kill me.
Me too. Big brother had the cool stuff!
@@RhettyforHistory, I had a chemistry set too. One of the contents of that set was magnesium ribbon. Guess how hot magnesium gets when it burns? Oh, and try and extinguish a magnesium fire with water and see what happens.
Amazing how we lived through all this. Most of us didn’t have money for any except lawn darts.
True. We did however have real power tools, knives, axes, solvents, incendiary, propellants, explosives, reactive metal( sodium, carbide, etc), small engines and actual firearms.
None of these toys were more dangerous than what you'd get into looking to make your own fun.
Most of us managed to survive childhood.
It's not that far behind us
I was born in 1971
We had the Creepy Crawlers. It was a lot of fun, and neighbors, friends, and cousins would come over to create some colorful bugs. We were supervised by a parent or much older teenager when using. No one ever got hurt.