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An
Abbreviated History of Disc Golf, by "Steady" Ed Headrick, the father of Disc Golf and of the modern day Frisbee.
33 Years With The Frisbee
An
Abbreviated History of Disc Golf
1 million B.C.E. to Present Day
The Discoblus TOP
OF THE PAGE
Disc golf in one form or another has been with us since the beginning
of time. The early cavemen in their search for weapons to extend
their ability to slay food probably found rocks before clubs.
If they could kill something from a safe distance it would be
much safer than a club or a sharp stick. 
Test of skill where a
necessary pastime, closest to the target sounds familiar! Flat
rocks had a different flight and flew further than round objects,
skipping flat stones on the water, throwing shields, Eureka! Then
came the discus that Discoblus threw which certainly resembled
a Frisbee.
Scaling BACK
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In the early steel age sharpened rings where thrown with devastating
effect. They flew with accuracy, caused serious injury and looked
like the modern Aerobie. Then came the ancient word "scaling"
(to throw a thin flat object), so that it's edge cuts through
the air. Pie pans, film can lids and toy flying saucers where
the recent predecessors of the modern Frisbee which was invented
in 1964 by Ed Headrick, US Patent 3,359,678. He also formed the
International Frisbee Association which had over 112,000 members
by 1972.
Early targets BACK
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Since that time Disc Golf evolved from mans natural competitive
nature. Early games used targets of trees, trash cans, light poles,
chicken wire baskets, pipes, and coeds. The game was formalized
when Headrick invented the first Disc Pole Hole, catching devise,
consisting of 10 chains hanging in a parabolic shape over an upward
opening basket, US Patent 4,039,189, issued 1975.
The first course BACK
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The first formal Disc Golf Course was designed and installed that
same year in Oak Grove Park, (Pasadena, California), by Headrick
and was an instant success. He also founded the Professional Disc
Golf Association in 1975, which he turned over to the players
in 1983.
Currently, Ed has designed over 200 courses. There are almost
1000 Disc Golf Courses in the United States with around 3,000,000
regular players and over 20,000 professional members of the P.D.G.A.
There were over 390 sanctioned tournaments this year* culminating
in a Worlds Championship held in Charlotte, NC, with 350 participants
and a purse of $64,000.00.(*as of 2002. PDGA).
Evolution
of the Disc Pole Hole catching device
The first catching device TOP
OF THE PAGE
The Disc Pole Hole has evolved consistently since the first Mach
I. For the past two decades our products have been established
and accepted worldwide as the industry standard for the sport
of Disc Golf. All of our hardware is Hot-Dipped Galvanized from
head to toe and guaranteed for 20 years against rust and corrosion.
To protect your discs, all of our chains are Hot-Dipped Galvanized
and hand polished. Accept no copies or imitations. Let he who
is without stone, cast the first disc.
33
Years With The Frisbee
A retrospective of the past and future of disc golf by "Steady"
Ed Headrick - PDGA #001
Retrospective TOP
OF THE PAGE
Tom Schlueter from DISC GOLF JOURNAL has asked me to write
an editorial reflecting upon my 33rd anniversary with the Frisbee,
with the sport I love, with my worldwide family and some thoughts
about the future. I am both honored and humbled. Over the years
literally thousands of people have asked me for an interview and
they were freely given. With your indulgence, I'll take you back
33 years and allow you to look to the future from my prospective,
through my eyes which by the way border on 20/15.
1964, President Kennedy had been assassinated, I had a good job
as VP/GM of a water heater manufacturing company. Pioneer, a nice
home, a very understanding and loving wife, three handsome strong
boys and a beautiful daughter. I also had several patents and
a great desire to develop new products and new marketing techniques.
I brought new life to an industry that was still locked up with
the dark ages. Sears had blazed the way for what we used to call
DTU. Direct To You merchandising, also known as discount stores.
My DTU's helped create stores like Builders Emporium, a giant in
the LA market and in a way the forerunner to super stores like
Builders Emporium all over the country.
Sears and water heaters BACK
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My plan was to tap the vast water heater replacement market.
Pioneer already had 45% of the new construction business, but
that was almost a non profit bidding for jobs. Sears had the cream
with the profitable replacement market. Every water heater ever
built was built to die in five years, 10 years, or even longer,
but die they did, and still do. I built an organization of putty
truck plumbers in southern California that could install a water
heater within 24 hours and sold the service and my top-of-the-line
product to every retail outlet in town and soon sold more product
than Sears plus over a million dollars in profitable sales for
my company the first year.
Wham-O BACK
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Flush with my accomplishments and restless for a new challenge,
I took one of my inventions, a hydrofoil water ski to Wham-O,
who was not just a toy company but sold sling shots, blow guns,
cross bows and throwing knives. Sporting Goods, Right?Wham-O had
a large warehouse full of Hula Hoop tubing they were stuck with
and they were spending thousands of dollars per month trying to
develop a product to use the tubing. It was like a millstone around
their neck. I offered to quit my job and take over R & D (marketing)
for them for a little more money than the water heater company
paid. They said they couldn't afford that much, and I offered
to work for free for three months, and if they wanted me after
that time they would have to pay me what I required retroactively
to the start (creative marketing?) They accepted and my first
marketing/R & D project was to haul a warehouse full of useless
tubing to a meltdown company.
The Frisbee BACK
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Now they were ready to listen to my ideas. In the first three
months I developed and filed a mechanical patent (the first by
the way) on my version of what a flying saucer ought to look like.
During the same period, I formulated the marketing plan and made
the first test mold out of an old disc mold that Wham-O had acquired.
The greatness of my invention was simplicity, and I quickly learned
that there was a hard core of people in their 20's perhaps 100
people in the world, A CULT that were playing with a child's toy,
a flying saucer, and loving it. All I did was offer them a "Pro" model, white with a black flame painted ring, a gold foil label
that said 108 grams, as if anyone cared, and the Olympic rings
upside down. It looked like an early night football, with class,
and the saucer cult loved it. Hence my claim to have invented
the modern Frisbee.
IFA - International Frisbee Association BACK
TO THE TOP OF THE PAGE
I also formed the International Frisbee Association during that
time period and started shooting the first real television commercial
called "What's a Frisbee."In my spare time, I took a blob of synthetic
rubber developed by the tire industry to dissipate the heat generated
by the flexing of a tire. This blob had an amazing coefficient
of friction and restitution but was not practical for a tire in
that it lost all of its friction when the surface was wet. It
was difficult to mold, sometimes shattered upon impact, but magically
bounced forever. In that first three months, the Modern Frisbee
and the Super Ball were both born and became two of the top ten
fads in the world. I got the job plus $10 for valuable consideration
and licensed my patent on the Modern Frisbee to Wham-O as required
by my contract.
The best $10 ever earned BACK
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Since that time the Frisbee, made under the teachings of my patent
with the "Lines of Headrick", has sold over 200,000,000 a stack
to New York and back to California 6.3 times (with end to end).
Super Bowl was named after Super Ball and the rest is history,
my history. The IFA had over 112,000 members who all shared one
thing: the love, the companionship, and the camaraderie of a piece
of plastic. I am wealthy beyond my dreams with a family of millions.
It was the best $10 I ever earned. I was CEO and sales exceeded
18 million with earnings in the millions. It was with a heavy
heart and empty wallet that I left Wham-O.
The first Masters Competition BACK
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I rented the Rose Bowl in Pasadena to shoot a television commercial
(The first Masters competition), hung the bunting all over the
field, bought referee shirts for the football coaches of La Canada
High, invited all my Frisbee friends from Hollywood through Goldy
Norton and Irv Landers and never shot a picture of the stands,
which were of course empty! This event eventually became the Worlds
Frisbee Championships held at the Rose Bowl for many years with
a max. audience of 50,000 people (estimated by Pasadena Police
Department) a marketing mans dream, but beneath it all, a desire
to find a game that would become the future of Frisbee when the
glamour wore out. I failed. Ultimate, 30 or 40 people playing
catch with one Frisbee! Fun, but a ridiculous market. Guts, ten
crazy people trying to kill each other again with one disc. Distance,
Freestyle, MTA, TRC, nothing worked.
A Revelation, "Frisbee Golf" BACK
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Then an amazing revelation, all my buddies, all my staff at Wham-O,
and most of my cult members and I were playing the game I was
looking for. Frisbee Golf was right under my nose! Great marketing
man right? A game where people would throw an expensive Frisbee
into the ground every throw on purpose? Wow! What a market potential!It
seems so easy, but what could possibly be better than walking
through a beautiful park and throwing at trees, drinking fountains,
open car windows and an occasional coed? Back to the drawing boards
and 56 models later a contraption was born. Shazam! Chain! Like
Moses and his cracked rules, chains without black leather and
a whip. Chain, indestructible, flexible, a pleasant sound. I wish
I had invented it, but chain was my answer. Hence the MACH I,
II, III and twenty years of blood, sweat and tears.
On the Eve of the future BACK
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Millions of people are now having fun destroying discs playing
our game Disc Golf. If you think it was fun recruiting the new
members of the PDGA, you're right. I did it by sheer willpower,
an understanding wife and secretary, and establishing a personal
relationship to 10,000 members. In 1983 I felt that I had done
enough for the sport to make it permanent, and I turned it over
to the players to run. Great marketing man, Right? Wrong, I missed
the point! ALL DISC GOLFERS WANT TO DO IS PLAY GOLF! NOT BE DIRECTORS
OF A NEW WORLDWIDE ORGANIZATION. We still have that problem. The
Board of Directors at our recent meeting would have much preferred
to be playing Disc Golf than listening to this old man pontificate
about the future and so would I. So perhaps now you are beginning
to see the world through my eyes. We are on the eve of an exponential
growth in our sport. As with Super Ball and Frisbee, we have to
think big or we won't get big. We need to get some sophisticated
management with business ideas and capabilities. They don't need
to know our sport, only their job. Then we can all go play. Perhaps
the world can find peace through the communication of a piece
of plastic and chains, my dream. I wonder what Moses would have
thought?
The
Chakram BACK
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From A Glossary of the Construction,
Decoration and Use of Arms and Armor. By George Cameron Stone
Jack Brussel, Publisher.

Chakram, India, 18th ÷ 19th centuries.
1. Iron inlaid with silver. 2. Outside diameter 6.375 inches,
inside 4.625. Unusually thin. 3. Plain steel. 4. Inlaid with gold,
on one side a scroll pattern, and on the other a Sanskrit inscription.
5. Outside diameter 11.125 inches, inside 9.75. 6. Very finely
inlaid with three Sanskrit inscriptions in gold. 7. Very rough.
8. Unusually heavy. Outside diameter 8.75 inches, inside 6.
BACK TO THE TOP OF THE PAGE
CHAKRAM,
CHACRA, CHAKAR, CHAKRA. The steel quoits of the Sikhs, especially
the Aklies. It is a flat steel ring from five to twelve inches
in diameter and from half an inch to an inch and a half wide,
the outer edge is sharp, fig. 212. It is usually plain but sometimes
elaborately inlaid. Several of different sizes were often carried
on a pointed turban, the dastar bungga. Egerton says, p. 128,
that it is whirled around the finger and thrown with a great accuracy
and force as much as 60 paces. A friend of mine who saw them thrown
at the military games at Rawal Pindi gives quite a different description
of how it is done. He says that the thrower stands squarely facing
his objective, takes the chakram between the thumb and first finger
of the right hand, holding it low to his left side. He then turns
his body so as to bring the right shoulder as far forward as possible
and throws underhand with the full swing of his body. He also
says that is thrown with sufficient force and accuracy to cut
off a green bamboo three-quarters of an inch in diameter at a
distance of thirty yards.
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