Memories of Duane’s Toyland

I’ve seen the truck on numerous occasions.  A white panel truck motoring around the Capital District, the truck’s side panels advertising a store from an era long, long ago.  I didn’t know who owned the truck.  I didn’t even know why the truck was still on the roads, or why the logo of a clown pounding a drum, a festive rendition of I Pagliacci, was still emblazoned on the truck’s panels.

But every time I saw that truck, I wanted to get a photo of it.  But the Fates all conspired to thwart my goal – my camera wasn’t in the car, or I was driving one way and the truck was passing me, or by the time I grabbed my camera to photograph the truck, it was gone.

Was it a mirage?  Was it a ghost?  Was it the Capital District’s version of the Flying Dutchman?

Then someone clued me in to its location.

“Go to the church of St. Sophia,” I was told.  “You will see it there.”

On Saturday morning, I put the Nikon D700 in the car.  Let’s Go, Cardachrome – next stop, the Church of St. Sophia on Whitehall Road in Albany.

I looked around the parking lot.  The vehicle wasn’t there.  Maybe that comment, too, was a red herring.

And then – behind the house of worship –

There it was.  Oh my Lord in holy heaven.

A white 1993 Chevrolet box truck.  Bright as day.  Duane’s Toyland.

Oh, the memories.

Duane's Toyland box truck - processed in HDR
Duane's Toyland box truck. Photograph processed in HDR. Photo by Chuck Miller.

If you grew up in the Capital District, a trip to Duane’s Toyland was like a trip to paradise.  Duane’s Toyland began in 1953 when Leon Hatkoff converted an old firehouse in Niskayuna into a discount toy store, and in the process he created the first discount toy retailer in the country.

I recall Duane’s Toyland in at least two locations – one on 3901 State Street, at the top of the hill between Mohawk Mall and the Lisha Kill area, I believe that location is now used by an indoor flea market.  As kids, we would walk over from Fine’s Mobile Home and Trailer Park to Duane’s on our way to Mohawk Mall; we would buy toys and games and books and action figures in the store’s two shopping levels.

The other location for Duane’s was in the Westgate Shopping Center, in an area where I believe a fitness center is now located.  If you got past the apparent petrochemical smell upon entering the Westgate Duane’s location, you could see rows of board games and action figures from floor to ceiling.  It was as if Santa Claus had a factory outlet on Central Avenue.

There was a third Duane’s Toyland, I believe it was in Amsterdam at the Alpin Haus Plaza, and it operated in the early 1990’s.  But that unit closed in 1994.  At the time of the Amsterdam store’s closing, the hot-ticket “must have” Christmas item were the Power Rangers, and manufacturers were more likely to ship the toys to the big chain outlets like K-Mart and Wal-Mart than they were to a regional chain like Duane’s.  Parents went to the big discount retailers for those hard-to-find holiday toys, and Duane’s wasn’t able to keep up with the demand.

Duane’s tried to change with the times – during the early 1990’s, Duane’s opened The Computer Cellar, an electronics and hobby outlet in its Westgate Plaza location; the Commodore Users Group held regular meetings in that locale.  That’s right, kids, at one time in our nation’s history, people lusted after a home computer with a whopping 64 kilobytes of memory.

In March 1995, Duane’s restructured their business operations; but after the Christmas 1995 sales season, Duane’s finally ceased operations.  The Westgate Plaza store was the last to close, in January 1996.

Fifteen years later, the only visible reminder of Duane’s Toyland and the joy it brought to millions of Capital District kids is a small, rusty box truck in the parking lot of the Church of St. Sophia.

A truck loaded with generations of wonderful memories; a truck still able to deliver a smile and an “I remember that store!” to Capital District motorists who happen to catch a fleeting glimpse of it.