One of the great things about Halloween is all the goodies you can get (even if you don’t hand any out) and since this is a vintage blog I thought we could browse some of the vintage ads of all the yummy candies that would have landed in kids bags during the 1940s and 1950s.
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Vintage Halloween Candy Ads-1940s and 1950s
First up-WOWE-E. 1940s vintage ad for the chewing gum whistle.
I have never heard of this candy before, but the fact that it whistles fills my heart with joy.
Source: Flickr-Val
1952 Brach’s Candy and chocolate ad featuring square dancers and trick or treaters in halloween costumes.
Mmmmmm Cracker Jacks. I’m positive you would have been the favorite on the block if you handed this treat out. -1950s vintage ad.
FULL Candy bars! Nothing teeny tiny here. Wow can you imagine the sugar high these kids would have been on after eating multiples of those?
I will take the Butterfinger please…and maybe the Baby Ruth too while we are at it. -1940s vintage ad.
Souce: Flickr-Christian Montone
Woolworth’s, your one stop shop for all things Halloween (not just candy). -1940s vintage ad
Source: retroist.com
Milky Way Candy Bars are still a favorite of mine today. -1940s vintage ad
Source: Flickr-Val
I have heard of Snickers, and Milky Way but never the “Forever Yours”. Have you?
This ad makes me giggle that a tree is eating a chocolate bar. -1940s vintage ad
Source: Flickr-Val
Curtiss Treats! Another candy I have not heard of “Saf-T-Pops”. They look really interesting though, don’t you think?
I was not a 1950’s child but I remember in the 1980s getting small boxed cereal in my treat bag and loving it! Cereal for dessert?? Yes I will thank you. -1955 vintage ad
1950s Kellogg’s ad – Source: http://www.grayflannelsuit.net/
I was actually craving Dubble Bubble just yesterday, and now after seeing this adorable 1952 ad I really want some. -1950s vintage ad
Source-Layla Jones
Really cute Halloween party patties advertisement from a Woman’s Day magazine from the 1950s.
Source: Etsy
So my friends, if you were able to go out on Halloween what was your favorite treat? What did your home pass out to kids?
This Sunday I am going for High Tea at the Beautiful and Historic Royal York Hotel in Toronto.
I have been to this hotel many times in my life (staying there a couple of times with my family before I moved to Toronto) and every time I’m blown away by its grandeur. It truly is a sight to see when visiting Toronto, a vintage lovers dream.
Source: Wikipedia
History
The Royal York opened it’s doors on June 11, 1929. It was the tallest building in the British Commonwealth and quickly set the hospitality standard of the day. The magnificent hotel became known as a city within a city, rising in 28 floors of architectural splendor and replete with mechanical genius and opulence never before seen in Toronto.
It boasted 1,048 rooms – each with radios, private showers and bathtubs. The 1.5 acres of public rooms included a 12-bed hospital, 12,000-book library and ten ornate passenger elevators. The Concert Hall featured a full stage and mammoth pipe organ weighing 50 tons, which surpassed anything else in Canada with 300 miles of copper wire. There was a glass-enclosed roof garden, the largest hotel kitchen in Canada with a bakery that could produce over 15,000 French rolls a day, a 66-ft.long switchboard manned by 35 telephone operators, its own bank and golf course (now known as St. George Golf & Country) (Source).
1929 Ad for the opening of the hotel.
Source: AdClassix.com
The Hotel on Front Street, 1930s.
Source: Toronto Archives
Thank you to the Fairmont Royal York for finding this AMAZING sketch of the fashions wore during the opening Gala Ball on June 11, 1929.
I will take…all the outfits!
Source: Fairmont Royal York Hotel
Vintage Image of the Lobby.
The Lobby Today (AKA at time of this post). They did a renovation in 2019. See the next picture for a more recent photo.
Urban Toronto
Below is a sketch of the Royal York Hotel ballroom, clearly in the year that it opened from the outfits I see.
When the Royal York hotel opened its doors on June 11, 1929, it brought about a new social era, attracting a true “who’s who” list of royalty, celebrities, dignitaries and leisure travellers to the city of Toronto. On opening night, the Royal York hosted four grand balls where guests dined and danced until the wee hours of the morning. It set a new standard in luxury, elegance and entertainment.
Source: Fairmont Royal York Hotel
The Ballroom looks exactly like it did when it first opened-Stunning!
Royal York Ballroom Toronto
The Hotel did everything top-notch. Look how stylish the Bartenders look in the 1940s?
I wonder what they are making, it looks delightful whatever it is.
Source: Toronto Archives
What a Buffet! Can you see the Ice Sculpture Deer in the background? I love fun details like that.
Source: Toronto Archives
Image of the 66 foot long telephone switchboard that required 35 operators to run it.
Source: Fairmont Royal York Hotel
Of course a hotel on this grand of scale also had to have amazing entertainment.
Quote from the Fairmont Royal York Pinterest Page:
The Imperial Room was once the most sought after show room in North America, when it opened in the hotel in 1929 it was the city’s newest and most elegant dining and dancing establishment. It defined the Toronto social scene as the meeting site of high society functions and big band shows. The stage of the Imperial Room has seen headlining acts such as Peggy Lee, Ella Fitzgerald and Bob Hope.
Source: Fairmont Royal York Hotel
The early bands often were employed by hotels, and many bore their employers’ names, eg, in Montreal, the Windsor Hotel Orchestra and Andy Tipaldi and his Ritz-Carlton Orchestra. The largest hotels in Canada had successions of orchestras which, by the 1950s and 1960s, also came to be used as showbands to accompany individual performers. Leaders at the Royal York Hotel (Toronto) have included Charles Bodley, Fred Culley, Rex Battle, Don Romanelli, Billy Bissett, Horace Lapp, Stanley St. John,Moxie Whitney, and Howard Cable (Source).
The band below is clearly the house band of the Royal York as the signs say “RY”. What kind of music do you think they are playing if the first row is all Violins?
Source: Fairmont Royal York Hotel
Guests from all walks of life stayed at the hotel, like Bob Hope, Cary Grant, Frank Sinatra, Gene Kelly (swoon) and even….Queen Elizabeth II (seen below).
Source: Fairmont Royal York Hotel
Here is an adorable image of an Ice Follies performer in the 1940s who was staying there. How cute is that outfit??
Source: Toronto Archives
Royal York also had various advertising campaigns over the years. Here are some great vintage ads.
I adore this cute early 1960s ad (I think) for their meeting rooms. Reminds me of a Mad Men episode.
Source: Fairmont Royal York Hotel
Looking to get married? The Royal York I will do the job nicely.
This ad is clearly from the same illustrator as above, love it.
Source: The Fairmont Royal York
The Royal York has even hosted fun events like this Direct Broadcast party of the Grey Cup (superbowl of Canada) in November 1956.
Source: Toronto Archives
Complete with Marching Girls.
Source; Toronto Archives
Many clubs and companies hosted events at the Hotel over the years, like The Electric Club from the 1930s-50s. Who apparently liked their menus to have pretty girls in swimsuits on the front (and lassie).
Source: Fairmont Royal York
After looking thru all these photos, reading stories on the Royal York I’m thrilled the Fairmont and Toronto has seen value in keeping it standing after all these years because this truly is a fantastic piece of Toronto History.
Source: Fairmont Royal York Hotel
So Friends..have you been to the Royal York? Or do you have a favorite vintage hotel? Do Tell!