What You’ll See at the Museum
You don’t have to be a pilot to enjoy Top Fun Aviation Toy Museum. Whether you want to browse through the displays, test fly your own paper airplane or balsa glider, or relax and listen to an aviation-related film, Top Fun has something to interest everyone in the family.
This is the first and only toy museum in the world that’s completely devoted to aviation-related toys. The large airy rooms of the Old Murdock School are a wonderful venue for displaying some of the almost 2,000 toys in the collection.
 Included in the Museum’s collection are fine tin toys from Japan, Hungary, Germany, and the United States. Among toys created out of found materials€ť are a helicopter and an airplane made by children in Burkina Faso, which were fashioned from Dutch milk tins with the help of a Peace Corps worker; the wheels look very much like they were made from the soles of flip-flops.€ť
An early version of Bugs Bunny and aircraft in cast iron joins a rubber Mickey Mouse and plane, while Olive Oyl waves to her admirers from one of our older die-cast metal aircraft. Bart Simpson also makes an appearance in a newer plastic plane.
Perhaps the oldest item in the collection at the moment is a card came, “Lindy, the New Flying Game,” which came out just after Charles Lindbergh flew solo across the Atlantic in 1927. If you play your cards right in this games, you get to fly the Atlantic, too, all without leaving the kitchen table. The selection fo cards—gasoline, mileage, take-off, and weather cards, as well as cards that get you a new plane or allow you to jump from the plane with your parachute—says a lot about the state of aviation in those days!
 |
 |
If you collect enough miles, and don’t lose your plane, you win! |
This is a replica. Many of the originals were melted down to make real planes in World War II. |
Wooden and plastic toys, both contemporary and older, puzzles, and a variety of games round out the collection. And ride-on airplanes of various vintages, among them a reproduction of the type of pedal plane produced in the 1930s, wait in their chocks just as they would in any childâ€s dream airport.
Youâ€ll want to check out the activity at the Museumâ€s “On-the-Wall Airport,” which covers an entire wall in one room of the Museum. The runway, planes, people, and colorful buildings provide visitors with a feeling of what itâ€s like to be flying overhead and looking at the activities on the ground.
Whether you are an adult or a child, we hope the displays will help you understand better how aviation works and how it has transformed both the United States and the world.
There is a growing need for young people to move into aviation careers—and these go beyond the pilot and flight attendant careers that most people think of, to include engineering, design, information technology, maintenance, among others. Our goal is to help young men and women learn about these opportunities and how to pursue them.
|