Investigating Marx’s Warriors of the World

When I was a kid we would go to Massapequa (home town of Jerry Seinfeld and Jessica Hahn) to buy shoes and maybe get a haircut.  We would stop at a nearby store (your typical 5 and dime store) to buy a toy.  In my case, it was the chance to purchase another Civil War toy soldier, namely one of Marx’s “Warriors of the World.”  Each hard (and somewhat brittle) plastic figure, just a tad larger than my army of 54mm soldiers, came in a box with a card that told the history of the enclosed figure.  That’s right, each figure had a name and a history.  I also have Revolutionary War soldiers and cowboys from the set, and I recall one of the World War II figures in another set in simple unpainted plastic (this web site is of tremendous assistance, although I was taken aback to see that Louis Marx also cast a private line of semi-clad women for private distribution to friends.  Another childhood memory bruised).

Recently I saw three of these soldiers on sale on eBay.  Although I was momentarily tempted to buy them, the price seemed to me to be a little high, and besides I still have all three figures (although I believe the rifleman’s weapon has been shortened due to the ravages of play war decades ago).  What made this trio special was that the cards accompanied the figures. Then I started reading the cards, and a thought crossed my mind.  Did these soldiers really exist?  After all, they all fought at Gettysburg.

Take, for example, the card describing the service of pistol-wielding Harry Dugan (one of my favorite figures).  Somehow he managed to see action at Shiloh and Gettysburg, where he helped Gouverneur K. Warren save Little Round Top.  I’d never heard of Harry, and I could not readily come across him when I consulted the Soldiers and Sailors online database.  What about Vermont bugler Bill Mason, who fought alongside “Dan Dickles” at Gettysburg?  Well, there were three Vermonters named William Mason, but only one was with an infantry unit at Gettysburg, and that unit was with the Sixth Corps.  I simply didn’t have the heart to check on Tennessean Mike Burns, because he would have had to join a regiment from another state.  I even followed the hint about the three brothers who fought in a Tennessee regiment, and, since there were only three Tennessee units at Gettysburg, perhaps I could find what I wanted.  For a moment, I thought I had struck pay dirt, for there were four soldiers named Burns in the 14th Tennessee.  Two of the entries turned out to be the same person, with a surname spelled in different ways: no luck yet on whether there were two or three men named Burns, or whether they were related.  Stay tuned.

Some of the Marx figures represented real people.  The Confederate collection included James Longstreet, and there were figures representing Grant and Lee, each on a base.  Additional internet research led me to this site, which covers even more figures, and includes the information that most of the figures were fictional.  The text on other cards showed that a rather high percentage of these soldiers fought at Gettysburg … supposedly.

These soldiers (and, yes, I owned one of each, Union and Confederate) augmented my set, which was a mixed force derived from Lido, Britains, and a few other sets.  I was fairly protective of these toys, and so that force still survives, although it has been some time since it engaged in action.  There’s another sesquicentennial marketing opportunity here.

10 thoughts on “Investigating Marx’s Warriors of the World

  1. James F. Epperson December 6, 2010 / 5:36 am

    Jessica Hahn? That’s a name I haven’t heard or seen in a long while!

  2. M. Hannah December 6, 2010 / 10:39 pm

    At first glance of the pics in this post, I started to get angry. My toy presents were mostly Barbie, so I’m bitter. The more I read it reminded me of the American Girl series of toys that are marketed now. Mixing fact with fiction.

    I prefer the real old days, allegory rocks.

  3. Matt McKeon December 8, 2010 / 12:20 pm

    Dan Dickles?

    • brooksdsimpson December 8, 2010 / 12:25 pm

      That’s what the card says. It also says that General Grant congratulated him for his service at Gettysburg. Maybe it was General Lewis Grant, who was in VI Corps, after all.

      • Matt McKeon December 8, 2010 / 1:06 pm

        Considering Sickles’s personal life, “Dickles” is pretty good.

  4. Matt McKeon December 8, 2010 / 12:25 pm

    I looked at some of the images: I had the Union and Confederate guys when I was a kid.

  5. Tom Tuerff March 2, 2012 / 3:50 pm

    I had a bunch of these when I was a kid (from all eras; including a Roman Soldier named “Marcus Gaius”) and I always figured that if I hadn’t actually heard of the person, then the guy was probably made up. I seem to recall owning a “Stonewall Jackson,” but that could be my brain playing tricks after 45 years. I do remember they cost 25 cents at the Woolworth’s near my house, so what I didn’t spend on baseball cards usually went to buying one of these guys.

  6. Bob June 26, 2013 / 8:51 am

    They came in a couple of sizes. I had a couple of Vikings (I come from Norwegian stock in Minnesota) and some Civil War guys. The smaller WoW were sold in these sharp little boxes that fit perfectly into Christmas stockings. I have a vivid memory circa 1964 of grabbing my stocking and seeing the outline of little boxes! Yessss! Warriors of the World!

  7. Robin Reid March 4, 2019 / 3:22 pm

    Marx warriors of the world are great to collect.i especially liked the ancient Romans.

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