Item Reference: 001586
Category: Toys and Games
Format: Artefact
Description: Metal milk churner styled money tin with removable lid.
Date: c. 1920s
Further Information:
Links:


Item Reference: 001584
Category: Toys and Games
Format: Artefact
Description: Cup and ball game in original packaging, made by John Millman’s Traditional Toys and Games.
Date: c. 1980s
Further Information: Cup and ball is a traditional children’s game that has existed for centuries, around the globe. It achieved great popularity in early nineteenth century England.
Links:



Item Reference: 001582
Category: Toys and Games
Format: Artefact
Description: A wooden figure of a town crier wearing a grey coat with red and yellow details, carrying a handbell and a script with the words “Oyez, oyez, oyez!”
Date: c. 1970s
Further Information: The word ‘oyez’ derives from Anglo-Norman linguistics and translates to ‘hear ye’, commonly utilised by town criers, especially in medieval England and France. The term continued to enjoy heavy use in English courts until the eighteenth-century. Oyez is still utilised in the opening patter of sessions of the U.S. Supreme Court, amongst various federal courts.
Links:


Item Reference: 001880
Category: Toys and Games
Format: Artefact
Description: One set of plastic red travelling dominoes in original packaging.
Date: c. 1930s
Further Information:
Links: A story written by a U.S. veteran with details on a set of these pocket dominoes recorded as one of his most treasured possessions during the Second World War in 1944.


Item Reference: 001574
Category: Toys and Games
Format: Artefact
Description: One set of miniature playing cards with galleon ship design backing, without packaging.
Date: c. 1930s
Further Information: Bears a strong visual resemblance to Item 001573, sans packaging.
Links:


Item Reference: 001573
Category: Toys and Games
Format: Artefact
Description: One set of linen finished miniature patience cards in original brown paper packaging, with galleon ship design backing, from Goodall & Son.
Date: c. 1930s
Further Information:
Links: More about Goodall & Son.

