World's third-largest toy museum opens in Turkey

Museum includes array of some 800 toys mainly produced in the 1900s-1920s

World's third-largest toy museum opens in Turkey

The world's third-largest toy museum, according to its founders, was inaugurated in Turkey's northern Samsun province on Tuesday.

The museum features an array of nearly 800 toys, most produced in the 1900s-1920s, worth some 2 million Turkish liras ($532,000), the local mayor told journalists at the grand opening.

Osman Genc, the mayor of Samsun’s Canik district, said that the museum is also the largest toy museum in Turkey, and spotlights vintage specimens crafted by German, French, Americans, Japanese, Polish, Chinese, and Turkish toymakers.

Calling toys vital for children’s education, Genc added: "The lack of a toy factory in Turkey has troubled us."

"If a nation wants to pass down its own culture, heroes, and life to future generations, it has to make its own toys. This is why we wanted to build a toy museum and encourage the private sector to build a toy factory," he added.

He said the museum not only exhibits toys but also gives children an opportunity to learn how to make toys in workshops.

"Our children will know our local toys and will be excited about them,” he said.

“So they will learn Turkish culture."

The museum also includes toys like miniature villages, Native American tents, airplanes and trains produced in Germany in the 1920s, as well as Ford's first toy car from 1920.