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This dollhouse was produced by The South Bend Toy Company during the early 1970s, dating by the interior modern wallpaper designs and colors. It is almost an exact copy of the last dollhouse Keystone Wood Toys made in 1955.
Plastic insert windows are on one side of the house with graphic windows on the opposite side.
This ad appeared in Keystone Wood Toys 1955 catalog. Keystone Manufacturing Co of Boston, Massachusetts, started production of motion picture projectors in 1919. By the late 1920s they were producing Masonite and wood toys. They produced dollhouses made of Masonite from 1935 through 1955. In 1958 The South Bend Toy Company, of South Bend, Indiana, acquired the Keystone Wood Toy brand name. Playschool eventually acquired South Bend toys.
This dollhouse came to me new in the box several years ago. It measures 21½" tall, 24½" wide and 16½" deep. The depth of the house makes it perfect for using the larger German Bodo Hennig dollhouse furniture.
I added an extra wall divider to make room for both a nursery and bath. Odd pieces found on Ebay from Keystone houses often come in handy. The wall divider between the nursery and bath is from an original 1955 edition of this 1970s dollhouse. I added wallpaper to each side of the divider to cover the original 1950s era wallpaper.
This dollhouse is filled with Bodo Hennig furniture in 1:10 scale, and is the perfect size for this house.
The dining room was not large enough for the hutch, so the back of it provides a wall for the lady of the house to hang her utensil and spice racks.
Bedroom space is rather limited, but just large enough for this set.
The white changing table is not identified as Bodo Hennig, but is marked Made in Germany.
Pretty in yellow, this bath set is just the right size for smaller hands to handle.
Hmmn, maybe I should have put dishes in the hutch instead of books.
The three necessary appliances for the kitchen, plus a broom closet.
I added wallpaper to the back of the dining room hutch.
The sofas and chair set were sold as Bodo Henning but I haven't been able to verify authenticity. The sofa/chair/ottoman combo on the right is from a different production period. There is a slight difference in the fabric, the pieces are filled with polyester fiber and have metal feet. The sofa on the left is filled with rubber foam and is without feet.
The TV, fireplace and end tables are Bodo Henning products.
All drawers open on the chest and dresser.
The three room dividers.
I like the fancy wooden pulls on the nursery chest.
The four piece bath suite is a lovely shade of yellow.
I have the 1955 edition of this dollhouse and hope to post about it soon. It is currently in line to be refurbished.