Mailing Address:
PO Box 619999
Dallas, TX 75261-6199
Street Address:
2801 W. Airport Freeway
Dallas, Texas 75261-4127
(Northwest corner of W. Airport Freeway [HWY-183] & Valley View Lane)

877-HERITAGE (437-4824)
(214) 528-3500
Fax: (214) 409-1425


Auction Name: 2026 March 15 Action Figures & Toys Showcase Extended Bidding Auction

Lot Number: 89018

Shortcut to Lot: HA.com/49186*89018

Deluxe Defender Dan Store Display (Deluxe Reading Corp., 1964). Produced by Deluxe Reading in 1964, the Defender Dan machine gun represents the company's distinctive approach to oversized, feature-driven toys during the mid-1960s. Designed to simulate the look and operation of a real machine gun without batteries, the toy featured a mechanically driven firing action with a moving plastic ammunition belt that fed through the gun and visibly ejected shells, a key part of its appeal. When fully assembled with its tripod, the piece measured approximately 29 inches in length, giving it an imposing presence that far exceeded most contemporaneous toy weapons. The inclusion of the tripod reinforced the military-playset aesthetic, turning the gun into a stationary "emplacement" rather than a handheld toy. This example is presented in its original store display format, a critical component of Deluxe Reading's unique grocery-store-based sales model. Unlike most toy companies of the era, Deluxe Reading relied on oversized, visually striking packaging to sell directly off supermarket floors rather than traditional toy stores. The clear plastic front allowed children to see the full scale of the gun and tripod, while bold graphics emphasized the mechanical action and the "No Batteries Needed" selling point for parents. The printed messaging along the bottom edge, including "Supply Limited - Place Deposit Now!" and the prominently displayed $11.98 price, underscores how these displays were designed to function as self-contained sales tools, encouraging layaway or deposit purchases in an environment where a clerk demonstration was unlikely. The display shows significant wear overall, with heavy scuffing, dents, and crushing along the edges and corners, and substantial scuffing, creasing, and crushing across the box faces. The thick plastic front window has torn away from the box in several areas. Despite the display wear, the contents remain unused within the display, and the display setup is accompanied by its original shipper. While Defender Dan machine guns themselves remain relatively obtainable, original store displays from this line are far less commonly encountered, having been routinely discarded by grocery stores once promotions ended. With its bold graphics, intact scale presentation, and unmistakable mid-century retail messaging, this display captures a moment when the box wasn't just packaging, it was the salesman, the spectacle, and the promise all at once.

Include Thumbnail(s)