How ants made a broke GI rich

Posted 3/25/21

When Milton Levine returned from World War II, he had some very common, but very pressing, problems.

He didn’t have much money. Which was doubly urgent because he brought a lovely young war …

This item is available in full to subscribers.

Subscribe to continue reading. Already a subscriber? Sign in

Get 50% of all subscriptions for a limited time. Subscribe today.

You can cancel anytime.
 

Please log in to continue

Log in

How ants made a broke GI rich

Posted

When Milton Levine returned from World War II, he had some very common, but very pressing, problems.

He didn’t have much money. Which was doubly urgent because he brought a lovely young war bride from France home with him.

Second, he didn’t have a job. With 15 million service members returning to civilian ranks and the economy shifting from wartime to peacetime footing, there just weren’t enough jobs for everyone.

Rather than wasting time searching for a non-existent position, Milton went into business for himself. He read the best fields for ex-GIs were toys or bobby pins.

I’m not sure how bobby pins turned out, but toys was a brilliant suggestion. Millions of veterans were marrying and starting families. Overnight, America had a Baby Boom. As kids grew, they wanted toys.

Milton partnered with his brother-in-law and started a mail-order plastic toy business. They placed ads in comic books offering “100 Toy Soldiers for $1.” They sold imitation shrunken heads to hang on car rear-view mirrors. And they also sold the Spud Gun. You stuck its barrel into a raw potato, then fired the chunk as a projectile. (Remember, this was the time before lawyers filed lawsuits at the drop of a hat.) It turned out there was a post-war potato glut, and the partners sold 2 million guns in 6 months.

Milton was doing ok. He wasn’t getting rich, but he was paying the bills.

Then a pool party changed everything.

Inspiration often strikes at the most unlikely times. This was one of them. When Milton’s sister threw a 4th of July picnic at her southern California home in 1956, she had no way of knowing it would revolutionize the toy industry.

Families were relaxing poolside. Milton spotted a mound of ants and bent over to watch them. He remembered visiting his uncle’s farm as a boy where he dug up ant colonies, put them in Mason jars and stared in fascination as they built tunnels and crawled around.

Then it hit him: why not build an ant observation toy? With that, he suddenly had a new product unlike anything else. He was already sketching ideas when the fireworks started.

Milton realized buying the ant farm would be a 2-step process. He designed a 6-by-9-inch plastic display. It came with a coupon for 25-30 ants, which would then be sent to the buyer. He also discovered permission was needed from each state to send ants via mail. (Hawaii still bans shipping them, by the way.)

The next problem: where do you get ants? It turned out to be surprisingly simple. Ads were placed in local newspapers saying, “Ants Wanted!” and offering a penny per. Soon Milton was deluged by jars full of the insects. One guy showed up with an enormous container and demanded $50. When Milton asked how he knew there were 5,000 ants inside, the man dumped them on Milton’s desk and shouted, “You count them!” as he stomped out.

The ant farm went on sale for $1.98. And Baby Boomers immediately went crazy for it, Parents and teachers gave it their blessing for being “educational.”

The fad coincided with the Golden Age of 1950s television. Milton took full advantage of the new medium. He showed his ant farm on Merv Griffin’s and Johnny Carson’s shows, made a fancy executive ant farm for American Bandstand’s Dick Clark, and explained ants’ daily routine to Shari Lewis and her popular puppet Lamb Chop.

Milton was now buying 1 million ants every week to keep up with demand. Incredibly, the fad never died out. As Milton said in 1991, “Most novelties, if they last 1 season, it’s a lot. If they last 2 seasons, it’s a phenomenon. To last 35 years is unheard of.”

Milton also said, “I found out ants’ most amazing feat. They put 3 kids through college.”

Those plastic ant farms made Milton Levine very rich. He bought out his brother-in-law in 1965 and changed the company’s name to Uncle Milton’s Industries, featuring Uncle Milton’s Ant Farm. For years people joked, “If you’ve got all these ants, where’s the uncle?” So, he gave himself that title.

When he sold his business in 1997 (for a reported $40 million), more than 20 million ant farms had been purchased.

Uncle Milton died in 2011 at age 97. World War II veteran, loving family man, self-made millionaire—I challenge you to find a better example of an American Success Story.

Have comments, questions or suggestions you’d like to share with Mark? Message him at jmp.press@gmail.com.

Comments

No comments on this item Please log in to comment by clicking here