In 1965, the Tonka Toys manufacturing plant in Mound, Minnesota, was a bustling center of American craftsmanship and imagination.
Known for producing rugged, all-steel toy trucks, Tonka had earned a trusted place in households across the country. These toys weren’t just playthings—they were miniature machines built to withstand years of rough-and-tumble adventure.
This photo captures a moment inside that very plant during its golden era.

Rows of dedicated workers, many of them women, stand along an endless assembly line, each performing a specialized task as parts of toy trucks glide by on a conveyor belt.
Painted beds, steel frames, and rubber wheels slowly came together, forming the iconic construction vehicles that generations of children would come to treasure.
The Tonka factory in Mound was more than just a production floor—it was a symbol of mid-century American manufacturing. Precision and pride were built into every toy, a testament to the era’s belief in durability and quality.

‘Tonka’ is an
American Indian word for bison. The Tonkawa language was spoken in Oklahoma, Texas, and New Mexico by the Tonkawa people.
Founded in 1946, Tonka had, by the 1960s, become a global leader in toy manufacturing, with products that reflected not only the spirit of play, but the values of hard work and reliability.

Today, images like this serve as a nostalgic reminder of when toys were made by hand, built to last, and carried the fingerprints of real people behind every weld and wheel.

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By award-winning Texas author Cynthia Leal Massey.

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Another company in same ilk was Ertle. Now made exclusively in China
Tonka took its name from the neighboring community Minnetonka Minnesota I believe
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Another company in same ilk was Ertle. Now made exclusively in China
Tonka took its name from the neighboring community Minnetonka Minnesota I believe
LikeLiked by 2 people
Another company in same ilk was Ertle. Now made exclusively in China
Tonka took its name from the neighboring community Minnetonka Minnesota I believe
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Wow, wouldja just look at those pictures! Those are gorgeous pieces of workmanship, and to think, 60’s ladies were largely making them. Don’t you think we have been slightly duped all these years with tales of our terrible oppression as women? Besides the economic rights that were finally levelled up, a lot of America’s history has included women doing pretty cool things, and increasing as we went. I bet those ladies were very proud of what they were doing, and didn’t go around with a victim mentality.
I hope we can restore this kind of craftsmanship in America on a very broad scale. I don’t think that kind of thing should be looked upon as impossible to revive. It’s beautiful.
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Yes, I recall my Grandma Dennis talking about how she worked on building airplane parts at Kelly Air Force base during WWII while men were overseas. It made me proud.
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Cool, My mother worked as a journalist for a paper in Boston while Dad was in the Korean war, before they got married. I’ve got to ask her about it; I only have a vague idea of it, and I think I’ll start recording her memories. She wants to tell them.
Lots of women like your grandmother were doing the grit work like that which kept everything humming. “The hand that rocks the cradle…”
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💚💚💙🩵
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The toy vehicles they manufacture now aren’t nearly as durable as the old Tonkas. My husband has to regularly fix our grandson’s cars and trucks. He makes wooden wheels and installs makeshift axles. 🙂
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here is something that might be of interest, there was i guy i knew who had a Toyota Land Cruiser all decked out and painted a bright blue, his plates said TONKA. Unfortunately they don’t much make things like they use to. its peoples fault, everyone wants inexpensive cheap stuff from china. started with Japan and went to china
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How cute that is!
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yep he was so proud of his tonka, until he met my Bronco with limited slip differential front and rear, he just could not keep up with me, that really pissed him off, i am sure being beat by a girl did not help
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Roaring at this!
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[…] Tonka Was a Strong Example […]
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