Pupils step back in time with their own toy museum

Robbie Meredith
BBC News NI education and arts correspondent
BBC Two girls in school uniform. Annabelle on the left has long curly brown hair and is wearing a blazer over a maroon jumper and red and white striped blouse. Aimee on the right is wearing a maroon v-neck sweater over a white shirt and striped black, red and silver tieBBC
Annabelle and Aimee enjoyed the comparison with toys of the past and modern versions

Pupils at a west Belfast school have been stepping back in time to a world long before screens and smartphones by collecting vintage toys.

Girls from St Dominic's on the Falls Road collected and displayed the toys as part of a school history project.

But their work was so impressive it has now gone on display in the Ulster Museum.

One student, Annabelle, said it made her think that children today have lost something.

Dolls' houses and scrapbooks

"Just playing with other people, out in the streets with your toys or in the house with your sisters or brothers, there is something lost because it's all on screens and you're all looking down and there's no interaction any more," the 18-year-old told BBC News NI.

The pupils collected old dolls, dolls' houses, scrapbooks, annuals like the Beano and Bunty, 19th century embroidery kits and even a letter written to Santa in 1945.

They looked in attics and collected from parents, grandparents, teachers and classroom assistants and they raided their own history too.

"I brought in things from my childhood, like wee toys and we compared them to see how different they could be, or how similar as well," Annabelle said.

Two girls wearing school uniform of maroon v-neck sweater over a white shirt and striped black, red and silver tie. Aoife on the left has long brown hair and Olivia on the right has an auburn bob and round glasses.
Aoife and Olivia took part in the project

Beano and Bunty

Aimee said she found the books like the Beano and Bunty and other earlier annuals "most interesting".

"It shows how different the children would have been back then because the stories that they read, we would never had those type of stories," the 14-year-old said.

"A lot of the toys are similar, but it's the material they were made out of and how they would have been played with.

"Theirs were a lot more delicate and you can see from years ago that they're still intact so it shows how much the children took care of their toys, as they only had a few."

A cardboard cut-out doll is held in the hands of a girl. The doll has blonde pigtails and is wearing a red coat, black skirt and black shoes with white socks.
The toys are from a variety of eras

Get a free doll

Olivia, 14, said the vintage toys had originally gone on display in the school library and had attracted a lot of interest from other pupils.

"We thought it would be a good idea to put up a museum of childhood for the school," she said.

"Once we'd put it up loads of people in the school liked it, so we kept it up for open day.

"One of my favourite things was a Palmolive fairy doll.

"You didn't buy it, you sent back some soap wrappers and you were able to get a doll for free."

A Dennis the Menace annual from 1961 - text at the top of the double page spread in the annual reads "Dennis by the Dozen". Below it is a Dennis the Menace cartoon of a football match.
This Dennis the Menace annual from 1961 has gone on display

For 14-year-old Aoife, finding everything was the most interesting part.

"From the 1970s to 80s a lot of the teachers brought in some of their old toys," she said.

"We also got them to do surveys on what some of their favourite toys were.

"I enjoyed looking at the scrapbook because there were really pretty designs in it.

"It's nice to see how, even back then, there was still some similarities to what we would collect now.

"Some people still do scrapbooking and journaling."

The St Dominic's vintage toy exhibition was soon noticed by experts from the Ulster Museum and is now on display in the museum's history discovery centre.

Jacqui Barker from the museum said what the girls had collected showed their "passion and enthusiasm" for history.

"One object can have so many different connections to many people and mean something different to so many people," she said.

"And I think this display really reflects that.

"It may inspire people to want to know more, inspire their curiosity."