Vintage Lunchboxes Anchor Museum Hub
At age 91, Allen Woodall Jr. continues to tend to The Lunchbox Museum in Columbus and its 5,000-plus pieces that include a Toppie the Elephant lunchbox valued at about $10,000.
Today, his wife Bonnie, granddaughter Kaitlynn Etheridge, and grandson Ryn Welch help continue the work as part of the expanded Columbus Collective Museums.
The eight-museum complex operates in a former warehouse and spotlights everything from pop culture to local history. “You can take 20 minutes, or we have people that spend 4 to 5 hours. And, you know, there’s just so much to see,” Etheridge said. Admission is $12.
Woodall bought his first themed lunchboxes—a Green Hornet and a Dick Tracy—around 1985. They “took me back to when I was probably 10 or 11 years old, lying on the floor in my grandparents’ home listening to the Green Hornet and Dick Tracy on the radio,” he said.
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