Wednesday July 14, 1976. In the small village of Exminster, around 5 miles outside of Devon’s capital city Exeter, a young boy wakes up to his 11th birthday. Britain was deep into one of its hottest and driest summers with water restrictions already in place as reservoirs ran dry. Elton John’s and Kiki Dee’s ‘don’t go breaking my heart’ blasted out of transistor radios as the Bionic Woman premiered on early Saturday night TV.
It was in my last week at school as the long-awaited summer holidays arrived on Friday. But first up it was time for those birthday presents before I scooted off to school.
Even by the age of 11 I was fascinated by military history, avidly reading anything I could on the subject and watching every war movie that came on the TV. Top of the list then was anything on WWII and for the one and only time it was the perfect birthday treat for this young historian. A book on tanks of WWII was supported by an integrated approach to my presents that Rommel himself would have been proud of. Parents, grandparents and aunties and uncles combined to gift me Airfix 1:32 scale Afrika Korps and British 8th Army plastic figures, Desert Outpost building, Rommel’s half truck Greif kit and six painted William Britain Detail Afrika Korps figures. This was the best birthday ever. It still makes me excited now to think back to all those years ago and the pure joy of unwrapping such delights.
There was something exotic about the desert theatre of war. That long hot summer brought hours of fun as I recreated battles for Tobruk, El Alamein or Kasserine Pass. Pocket money and a trip to Exeter enabled me to purchase Airfix 1:72 plastic Afrika Korps and 8th army troops to refight battles on a smaller scale. But it was those 1:32 scale figures that I treasured the most.
This story is from the August - September 2020 edition of Toy Soldier Collector International.
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This story is from the August - September 2020 edition of Toy Soldier Collector International.
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