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Welcome to the "Jack in the box "Article gallery...
No one knows
for certain where and when the first
jack-in-the-box toy was made, but the toy can be
reliably traced back to the Middle Ages. A brightly
painted box with a hinged lid and a crank, when the
crank is turned a melody plays, much like a music box.
Unlike a normal music box, this box holds a surprise--the
'jack' inside the box, popping out on a spring when the
melody ends and the lid is unlatched.
Read more: History of the Jack-in-the-Box Toy
1500s
One of the earliest documented jack-in-the-boxes was
made by a German clock maker in the early 1500s. It was
a gift for the son of a local Prince on the boy's fifth
birthday. A plain wooden box with metal edges and a crank handle, it played a simple tune and the 'jack' was a
comical devil with a 'leering smile'--according to a
pamphlet published by the Nuremburg Toy Museum. When
other nobles requested a "Devil-in-a box" for their own
children, a trend took off that continues to this day.
Read more: History of the Jack-in-the-Box Toy
1700s
Improved toy mechanisms in the 18th century allowed
the toy to be more easily produced. Not just for royalty
any longer, the toy became a common plaything. The image
of the jack/devil in a box became a popular cartoonists
image for poking fun at politicians. This caused
jack-in-the-boxes to be made for adults with the 'jack'
being a caricature of some politician of the day.
Read more: History of the Jack-in-the-Box Toy
Who knows?
No one knows for certain where and when the first
jack-in-the-box toy was made, but the toy can be
reliably traced back to the Middle Ages. A brightly
painted box with a hinged lid and a crank, when the
crank is turned a melody plays, much like a music box.
Unlike a normal music box, this box holds a surprise--the
'jack' inside the box, popping out on a spring when the
melody ends and the lid is unlatched.
Read more: History of the Jack-in-the-Box Toy
Origins
The most widely accepted theory about the origin of
the jack-in-the-box relates the toy to an English churchman
from the 13th century, Sir John Schorne. Folklore credits
Sir John with casting a devil into a boot to protect the
Buckinghamshire village of North Marston. There are
engravings from that era of Sir John holding a boot
with a devil peeking out the top, which may have
inspired the medieval toy makers.
Read more: History of the Jack-in-the-Box Toy
No one knows
for certain where and when the first
jack-in-the-box toy was made, but the toy can be
reliably traced back to the Middle Ages. A brightly
painted box with a hinged lid and a crank, when the
crank is turned a melody plays, much like a music box.
Unlike a normal music box, this box holds a surprise--the
'jack' inside the box, popping out on a spring when the
melody ends and the lid is unlatched.
Read more: History of the Jack-in-the-Box Toy
Jesters and More
Sometime during the Renaissance, Jesters began to
replace devils as the popular pop-up figure inside the box.
In the 1930s and 1940s, jack-in-the-box toys that had boxes
made from stamped tin became quite popular. They were lighter
weight and easier to mass-produce. Many boxes had nursery rhyme
themes, thus a box might play the tune "Mary Had a Little Lamb"
and the 'jack' would be a lamb. Clown-like figures still remain
very popular jack-in-the-box inhabitants, even though modern 'jacks'
can be anything form dragons or bears to pirates or ninjas.
Read more: History of the Jack-in-the-Box Toy
Surprising Popularity
The Encyclopedia of American Folk Art credits the element of
surprise for the enduring popularity of the jack-in-the-box.
For some reason, people continue to be amused and delighted
by the toy, even once they know what will happen when they
turn the crank. Perhaps the suspense of the randomly triggered
pop-up provides enough entertainment for the child in everyone.
Read more: History of the Jack-in-the-Box Toy
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