A few of my younger co-workers, upon seeing this image, remarked that he looked fairly creepy.
Humpty's double over in Don Hilton's Fairyland Forest in Conneaut Lake, Pennsylvania has the same insipid grin on the postcard below. (I love that the kids are all wearing the same pointed chapeau and standing in front of him as if in a hypnotic trance. "We will obey you, Grade A Farm Fresh Master.")
Anyway, all this talk about Humpty Dumpty reminded me of an article that I wrote for a house organ more than twenty years ago about famous Canadian advertising brands, which included Humpty Dumpty Potato Chips. I first encountered the popular salty snack when I started making semi-regular visits to Canada in the late 1980s."The Canadian company was purchased by Ohio-based Borden Inc. and by the 1980s, Humpty Dumpty was the No. 2 potato chip in Ontario. The company was returned to Canadian ownership in 1994 when Small Fry Snack Foods purchased it from Borden.
"The American company in Maine, however, scrambled to stay in business. Although its chips were a regional favorite, the company filed for bankruptcy in 2000. Fortunately, Small Fry Snack Foods purchased the company’s assets, putting Humpty Dumpty back together again!
"The Humpty Dumpty mascot has received several makeovers. While the American version remained largely the same through the years, the Canadian version was redesigned in 1999, after being absent from the packages for five years. The redesigned mascot was hatless, with a sleepy look and wry smile.
"The nursery rhyme icon was updated again in 2003, when he adopted his current “hats off” party-animal appearance.