[3] The company also began licensing media properties, manufacturing the likes of a Little Orphan Annie set of clothes pins.
[3] In 1960, Transogram was one of seven toy-makers, including Ideal and Parker Brothers, that the Federal Trade Commission accused of violating antitrust law by allegedly soliciting discriminatory advertising allowances from suppliers.
[11] In May 1962, Transogram made an initial public offering of 196,000 shares of common stock from Charles Raizen's private account.
[citation needed] In 2019, American Classic Toys entered into an exclusive license agreement with The Juna Group to represent the Transogram brands in all categories, worldwide.
[citation needed] In 2023, the Transogram exclusive license agreement was acquired from The Juna Group by CSN Press LLC., publishers of the weekly newspaper, Comic Shop News.
Al Capp, prior to his success as the cartoonist creator of the comic strip Li'l Abner, was a graphic designer for Transogram.
A graduate of the Salisbury School in Connecticut and of Lafayette College, and a U.S. Army first lieutenant who had been stationed in Europe, Roy Raizen was a vice president of Transogram at the time.
[25] Charles Raizen, who served a stint as president of the Toy Manufacturers of the US, was residing at 309 Beechmont Drive in New Rochelle when he died on May 13, 1967, age 74, at the Plaza Hotel in Manhattan while attending a charity dinner.