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5 Toys that Got Their Start in New York CIty

December 23, 2016 2:40pm | Updated December 23, 2016 2:40pm

Santa's workshop may be a lot closer to home than you think.

It's New York City — not the North Pole — that hosts the Western Hemisphere's largest toy tradeshow every year.

The next North American International Toy Fair is set to take place in February 2017 at the Jacob Javits Center, but it used to convene in two buildings at the intersection of Fifth Avenue and 23rd Street.

The International Toy Center, as the buildings came to be called, first opened in the Flatiron District in 1909. Toy manufacturers began opening sales rooms and offices in the center as early as 1910. The buildings served as a focal point for the toy industry after World War I, when it shifted production from Germany to the U.S., through the end of the 20th century. Developers converted one building into office space in 2008, the other into condos in 2011.

Still, "most companies really do think of New York City as an unofficial home no matter where they’re based at this point, because for so many years they had their showrooms and they all came together — and still do — at Toy Fair," said Adrienne Appell, a toy trend specialist for the Toy Industry Association

Here are five other entertaining facts Appell taught us about the history of toys in New York City:

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