Kids Loved This Toy the Year You Were Born

1

1950: Fisher Price’s Little People

most popular toy the year you were born 1950 fisher price little people
Hill Street Studios//Getty Images

Fisher-Price’s Little People first appeared in 1950 as part of the Looky Fire Truck. These small, peg-shaped characters became a staple in toddler toys and helped children develop imagination and storytelling through simple, durable play.

2

1951: Mr. Potato Head

most popular toy the year you were born 1951 mr potato head
skodonnell//Getty Images

Mr. Potato Head has the distinction of being the first toy ever advertised on TV. Kids originally used real potatoes to create goofy characters using the included plastic parts, making it a wildly novel and customizable toy when it debuted.

Advertisement – Continue Reading Below

3

1952: Slinky Dog

this is the most popular toy the year you were born
Aykut67//Getty Images

Building on the original Slinky craze, Slinky Dog debuted in 1952 as a pull toy with a coiled metal body. It charmed kids with its springy, bouncing motion and wagging tail as it rolled across the floor.

4

1953: Chatty Cathy (prototype)

most popular toy the year you were born 1953 mattel chatty cathy
Gary Friedman//Getty Images

Though not widely sold until later, early development of Chatty Cathy began around 1953. The talking doll amazed kids by saying recorded phrases when you pulled a string, a pioneering feature that made it one of the first interactive toys.

Advertisement – Continue Reading Below

5

1954: Play-Doh

most popular toy the year you were born 1954 playdoh
NoDerog//Getty Images

Originally marketed and sold as a wallpaper cleaner, Play-Doh later sold as a colorful modeling compound in the ’50s. Its fun texture and bright colors made it a hit with kids for creative play.

RELATED: Retro Toys From the ‘80s Are Back

6

1955: Silly Putty

most popular toy the year you were born 1955 silly putty
Universal History Archive//Getty Images

Silly Putty was actually invented during World War II, and became a favorite toy by the mid-1950s. It could bounce, stretch, break, and even lift comic strips off newspaper pages, captivating kids with its oddball, hands-on appeal.

Advertisement – Continue Reading Below

7

1956: Gumby

most popular toy the year you were born 1956 gumby
BrendanHunter//Getty Images

Gumby started out as a stop-motion TV character before he became a bendable green toy figure. Along with his horse Pokey, Gumby became a 1950s icon that encouraged imaginative play.

8

1957: Colorforms

most popular toy the year you were born 1957 colorforms
NNehring//Getty Images

With their reusable vinyl stick-ons and bold, colorful backgrounds, Colorforms let kids create endless scenes and stories… with no mess. From basic shapes to licensed characters, these peel-and-stick sets sparked imagination and became a staple in mid-century playrooms.

Advertisement – Continue Reading Below

9

1958: Hula Hoop

most popular toy the year you were born 1958 hula hoop
FPG//Getty Images

A simple plastic ring became a full-blown national obsession in 1958. The Hula Hoop, popularized by Wham-O, had kids spinning, twirling, and competing in backyard battles across the country. At its peak, millions were sold each month, proof that the best toys don’t need batteries.

10

1959: Barbie

most popular toy the year you were born 1959 barbie
GABRIEL BOUYS//Getty Images

When the iconic Barbie made her debut in 1959, it was nothing short of a revolution in the doll world. With her glamorous outfits, high heels, and grown-up lifestyle, Barbie offered a new kind of imaginative play — one where kids could dream big about grown-up life. She wasn’t just a doll; she was a fashion model, astronaut, doctor and more paving the way for decades of role play and reinvention (not to mention a blockbuster movie decades down the road).

Advertisement – Continue Reading Below

11

1960: Etch A Sketch

most popular toy the year you were born 1960 etch a sketch
KAREN BLEIER//Getty Images

Part toy, part drawing tool, Etch A Sketch let kids create art with just two knobs — no pencils or paper needed. The red-framed screen felt like magic, erasing instantly with a quick shake. It became an instant classic and a must-have for budding artists or everyday doodlers.

12

1961: Chatter Telephone

most popular toy the year you were born 1961 chatter telephone
Sjöberg Bildbyrå//Getty Images

With its smiling face, spinning dial, and wobbly wheels, the Chatter Telephone made talking on the “phone” endlessly fun for toddlers. It encouraged pretend play and early communication skills. Plus, pulling it around by its string made it feel like a friendly little companion.

Advertisement – Continue Reading Below

13

1962: Trolls

most popular toy the year you were born 1962 troll dolls
The Washington Post//Getty Images

With their wild hair and wide-eyed grins, Troll dolls were weird, whimsical and wildly popular. Originally created by a Danish woodcutter, these quirky little figures became a surprise hit in the U.S., sparking a full-blown craze that would return again and again over the decades (eventually as a huge movie franchise).

14

1963: Easy-Bake Oven

most popular toy the year you were born 1963 easybake oven
Albany Times Union/Hearst Newspapers//Getty Images

Baking got kid-sized with the Easy-Bake Oven, which used a simple lightbulb to “cook” mini cakes and cookies. It gave kids a taste of independence in the kitchen… and a warm, sweet treat to show for it. The nostalgia factor to this day? Still piping hot.

Advertisement – Continue Reading Below

15

1964: G.I. Joe

most popular toy the year you were born 1964 gi joe
STEPHEN JAFFE//Getty Images

Billed as the first “action figure,” G.I. Joe marched onto the scene in 1964 and redefined toys marketed to boys in that era. With movable joints, military gear, and a backstory for every figure, G.I. Joe sparked a new kind of imaginative play centered around adventure, bravery, and heroism.

16

1965: Operation

most popular toy the year you were born 1965 operation
The Sydney Morning Herald//Getty Images

This buzzy board game turned the seriousness of surgery into silly fun. Players used tweezers to remove tiny “ailments” from Cavity Sam without touching the edges, or risk setting off that iconic red nose and startling buzzer. Operation combined laughter and anticipation with a steady-hand challenge that kids loved.

RELATED: Best Ms. Rachel Toys for Little Superfans

Advertisement – Continue Reading Below

17

1966: Spirograph

most popular toy the year you were born 1966 spirograph
Photo by Kosei Saito//Getty Images

Spirograph turned math concepts (boring for kids!) into mesmerizing art (super fun for kids!). Using gears, rings, and colored pens, kids could draw endless looping patterns and intricate designs. It was part creativity, part precision and totally captivating once you started spinning.

18

1967: Lite Brite

most popular toy the year you were born 1967 lite brite
Smith Collection/Gado//Getty Images

Lite-Brite let kids create glowing masterpieces by plugging colorful pegs into a backlit screen. Whether following a template or freestyling, the result was pure magic, especially when the lights dimmed. It was creative, calming and just the right amount of retro-futuristic fun.

Advertisement – Continue Reading Below

19

1968: Hot Wheels

most popular toy the year you were born 1968 hot wheels
Mirrorpix//Getty Images

These sleek, die-cast vehicles from Mattel featured flashy designs and ultra-fast wheels, turning any floor or track into a high-speed racetrack. Kids raced, collected and customized them — fueling a craze that’s still going strong today.

20

1969: Snoopy Astronaut

most popular toy the year you were born 1969 snoopy astronaut
Alain BENAINOUS//Getty Images

As the Apollo 11 mission captured the world’s imagination, Snoopy suited up in his own space gear. Released to celebrate the moon landing, the Snoopy Astronaut doll let kids bring home a piece of history with their favorite beagle leading the mission.

Headshot of Alesandra Dubin

Alesandra is a digital travel and lifestyle journalist based in Los Angeles whose work has appeared in Good Housekeeping, Woman’s Day, Prevention, Insider, Glamour, Shondaland, AFAR, Parents, TODAY and countless other online and print outlets. Alesandra has a masters degree in journalism with an emphasis on cultural reporting and criticism from NYU, and a bachelor’s degree from UC Berkeley. An avid traveler, she trots the globe with her husband and their twins.

Advertisement – Continue Reading Below

Advertisement – Continue Reading Below

Advertisement – Continue Reading Below


评论

发表回复

您的邮箱地址不会被公开。 必填项已用 * 标注