The lunch box, also referred to as a lunch pail or lunch kit, is a rigid container used for carrying food. The essential idea of a food container has been around for a very long time, but it wasn't until people began using tobacco tins to haul meals in the early 20th century, followed by the use of lithographed images on metal, that the containers became a staple of western youth, and in turn, a marketable product in the eyes of manufacturers.
The lunch box has historically most often been used by schoolchildren to carry a prepared meal to school. The most common modern form is a small case with a clasp and handle, often printed with a colorful image that can either be generic or based on children's television shows or films. Use of lithographed metal to produce lunch boxes in the 1950s, 1960s, 1970s and 1980s gave way in the 1990s to use of injection-molded plastic.
Lunch kits are comprised of the actual "box" and a matching vacuum bottle. However, pop culture has more often embraced the singular term lunch box.
In 1950, Aladdin Industries created the first children's lunch box based on a television show, Hopalong Cassidy. The Hopalong Cassidy lunch kit, or "Hoppy," as it is also called, was Aladdin's "box" of gold. Debuting in time for back-to-school 1950, Hoppy would go on to sell 600,000 units in its first year alone, each at a modest $2.39 USD. Aladdin Industries moved to Nashville, Tennessee from its home in Chicago, and literally built their new headquarters with the Hoppy profits.
Children's lunch boxes were around before, however. In 1935, Geuder, Paeschke and Frey produced the first licensed character lunch box, Mickey Mouse. This was not the lunch box that we came to know and recognize today, however. It was basically a lithographed oval tin, with a pull-out tray inside. It had no vacuum bottle, but did have a handle. No sales figures are available as to how many units were sold.
While television was growing leaps and bounds during the 1950s, lunch box manufacturers now had something to sell to kids. Other manufacturers include ADCO Liberty, American Thermos (later King Seeley Thermos, or KST), Kruger Manufacturing Company, Landers, Frary and Clark (Universal), Okay Industries, and host of other producers through the 1980s.
Over the years, the lunch box has been manufactured using various materials. Originally all steel, the lunch box migrated to plastics over time. The first use of plastics accounted for the lunch box handle, but later spread to the entire box, with the first molded plastic boxes produced during the 1960s. Vinyl lunch boxes debuted in 1959, which were geared more towards girls, with the "purse-like" feel to them, and with themes like Bobby Soxer, Ponytails, and Pen Pals.
During the 1960s, the lunch box basically stayed the same with few exceptions. The vacuum bottle steadily evolved during the course of the decade and into the 1970s. What was originally a steel vacuum bottle with glass liner, cork or rubber stopper, and bakelite cup became an all-plastic bottle, with insulated foam rather than glass. Aladdin did produce glass liners into the 1970s, but they were soon replaced with the basic plastic bottle that would endure until the demise of the lunch box at the end of the 1980s. 1950s bottles were works of art, but their 1980s distant cousins seemed nothing more than a required piece.
1972 is a key year in the history of American lunch boxes. This is an important year because this is the supposed year the steel lunch box died.
In 1971-72, a concerned group of parents, mostly mothers, decided that metal lunch boxes could actually be used as weapons in school-yard brawls. With petitions signed, they marched all the way to the Florida State Legislature, and demanded "safety legislation" be passed. It eventually was passed, and other counties in Florida, and even other states adopted this legislation.
The migration to plastic was probably nearing anyway, and probably was as much a factor in the stoppage of metal lunch boxes as any law could have been. This is not to say that plastic quickly killed metal production. From the early plastic boxes in 1972, they stood in the shadow of metal boxes until 1987. 39% of all lunch box production from 1972-1987 was steel.
By the time the 1980s came, lunch box sales were still stronger, but they were waning. Many popular licenses were around during this time, including Pac-Man, GI Joe, Dukes of Hazzard, The A-Team, Strawberry Shortcake, Knight Rider, and many others.
As the decade drew towards the end, lunch box manufacturers simply stopped producing new boxes for the back-to-school season. Generally, it is accepted that Rambo, produced by KST, was the last lunch box of the golden era (1950-1987) to be sold. Whether for financial or other reasons, the lunch box as we had grown to know and love was dead. Lunch box production did not stop, but companies now moved to plastic and vinyl as a means of feeding the public. These boxes were generally solid colored with a label on one side and no other decoration beyond the thermos.
Bionic Woman Lunchbox
Bobby Sherman Lunchbox
Bonanza Lunchbox
Brady Bunch Lunchbox
Brady Bunch Lunchbox
Brave Eagle Lunchbox
Bugaloos Lunchbox
Campbell's Kids Lunchbox
Captain Kangaroo Lunchbox
Casper Lunchbox
Casper Lunchbox
Chan Clan Lunchbox
Cracker Jack Lunchbox
Dark Crystal Lunchbox
Davy Crockett with Fess Parker
Disney School Bus Lunchbox
Disneyland Monorail Lunchbox
Dragon's Lair Lunchbox
Dudley Do Right Lunchbox
Emergency Lunchbox
ET Extra Terristrial Lunchbox
Fall Guy Lunchbox
Fat Albert Lunchbox
Flintstones Lunchbox
Flying Nun Lunchbox
Frontier Days
Gene Autry Lunchbox
Get Smart Lunchbox
Green Hornet Lunchbox
Grizzly Adams Lunchbox
Guns of Will Sonnett Lunchbox
Hector Heathcote Lunchbox
Holly Hobbie Lunchbox
Hong Kong Phooey Lunchbox
Hot Wheels Lunchbox
How The West Was Won
Howdy Doody Lunchbox
Huckleberry Hound & Friends
Incredible Hulk Lunchbox
It's About Time Lunchbox
It's About Time Lunchbox
James Bond Lunchbox
Jet Patrol Lunchbox
Jetson's Lunchbox
Jetsons Lunchbox
Julia Lunchbox
Jungle Book Lunchbox
Johnny Lightning Lunchbox
Junior Miss
Junior Nurse Lunchbox
Kellogg's Lunchbox
Kid Power Lunchbox
KISS Lunchbox
Knight in Armor Lunchbox
Korg Lunchbox
Lance Link Secret Chimp
Lidsville Lunchbox
Lost In Space Lunchbox
Man From U.N.C.L.E. Lunchbox
Mary Poppins Lunchbox
Mork & Mindy Lunchbox
Munsters Lunchbox
Our Friends Lunchbox
Paladin Lunchbox
Partridge Family Lunchbox
Pete's Dragon Lunchbox
Planet of the Apes Lunchbox
Porky's Lunch Wagon Lunchbox
Rifleman Lunchbox
Rifleman Lunchbox
Robin Hood Lunchbox
Rough Rider Lunchbox
Roy Rogers, Double R Bar Ranch
Scooby Doo Lunchbox
Smokey the Bear Lunchbox
Space 1999 Lunchbox
Star Trek Lunchbox
Star Wars Lunchbox
Steve Canyon Lunchbox
Strawberry Shortcake Lunchbox
Tom Corbett Space Cadet
Volkswagon Bus Lunchbox
Waltons Lunchbox
Wild Wild West Lunchbox
Wild Wild West Lunchbox
Winnie The Pooh Lunchbox
Yellow Submarine
Lunchbox
Yogi Bear Lunchbox