- John Hill & Company
John Hill & Company or Johillco were a British toy company specialising in the manufacture of
hollowcast metal and later plastictoy soldiers becoming second toW. Britain in popularity. No one knows where the name of John Hill came from.History
John Hill & Co was started in1898 by a former employee ofW. Britain named Mr F. H Wood. [p.134 Joplin, Norman "The Great Book of Hollow-Cast Figures" 1993 New Cavendish Books] In contrast to Britains, Johillco was the first British hollowcast figure company to sell their figures individually [ Garratt, John G. "Model Soldiers-A Collectors Guide" Seeley Service & Co London] leading to competition from Britains who later began to sell individual figures and figures painted less ornately to be sold invariety store s like theF. W. Woolworth Company .Johillco also manufactured
Coronation and other souvenir items.The firm's original factory was located at 2-22 Britannia Row,
Islington , London but the factory was bombed during World War II. In August 1946 the company reopened under new management in Plumbe StreetBurnley . Also after World War II, Johillco's chief figure designer Wilfred Cherrington in conjunction with a Mr Leaver started his own company called Cherilea whose name is an amalgamation of their surnames.In their book "The Art of the Toy Soldier", the authors note that due to the cheapness of the figures and the individuality of their poses, Johillco figues were found more in working class homes than the expensive Britiains that came in boxes of rigid identical poses. The authors also noted the company probably used a variety of sculptors leading to various grades of quality of Johillco figures, that the authors call "the good, the bad, and the ugly". [ Ehrlich, Burtt R & Kurtz, Henry I "The Art of the Toy Soldier" 1990 Abbeville Press]
In addition to toy soldiers and cowboys and Indians, Johillco made many figures of knights and a
movie tie-in set of figures fromMGM 's "Quo Vadis (1951 film) " as well asspacemen .Johillco was slow to realise the effect of production in plastic. From 1956 they began making plastic figures in their hollowcast moulds under the name of
Hilco [Garrett] but the company ceased in the early 1960s.ee also
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Hollow casting
*Toy soldier References
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