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Pogo Stick History
As legend has it, an American traveler named
George Hansburg was making his way through Burma when he
made the acquaintance of a poor farmer. The farmer’s
daughter was named Pogo, and Pogo—devout little girl that
she was—wanted to go to temple every day to pray, but
couldn’t because she had no shoes to wear for the long
walk through the mud and rocks. So the poor farmer built a
jumping stick for her, and Pogo’s daily temple
bounce-trips through the mud and over the rocks ensued. When
the impressed traveler returned home, he made a jumping
stick of his own, attaching a spring to the wooden stick
contraption that the farmer had introduced him to.
Sure it’s far-fetched, but it’s nice, isn’t it?
Wherever the idea for the jumping stick really came from,
Hansburg patented his “Pogo Stick” in 1919. The Gimble
Brothers Department Store in the U.S. imported a boatload of
them, but unfortunately, the sticks rotted on the wet ship
ride over. The folks at Gimble asked Hansburg to produce
something more resilient, and Hansburg eventually did just
that—from his own factory called SBI Enterprises. And
those sticks, called “Master Pogos,” were the bouncing
wonders that we know and love today.
The Pogos were incredibly popular in the 1920’s—because
if you had two left feet and couldn’t jitterbug, at least
you could jump. Hansburg taught the Ziegfeld Follies how to
bounce, and from there on out, showmanship and the Pogo just
sort of went hand in hand. The New York Hippodrome chorus
girls performed entire shows on them, marriage vows were
exchanged on them, jumping contests were held, and world
records for most consecutive jumps were set, and then re-set
again.
In the early 1970’s, Hansburg sold his company to a local
Ellenville, New York businessman named Irwin Arginisky.
Though sales have never been as brisk as they were in those
roaring 20’s, Pogos never stopped being made, and today,
like a lot of old-school toys, they’re enjoying a bit of a
renaissance. Though there’s the brightly colored “Go-Go
Pogo” from competing toy company Pierce, sticks with
plastic super-hero torsos for handlebars (Spider Man and
Wonder Woman, for example), and gimmicky accessories like
‘bounce-ometers’ and plastic ornaments, the classic
no-logo models from SBI are the sticks that bounce best with
consumers over the long haul.
Whatever model you choose, a bouncer perfects balance and
burns calories, though he’s probably unaware of both
phenomena. Today, Pogos are exported all over the world, and
in Burma, maybe that little farm girl Pogo (if she indeed
was real) watches her kids and grandkids jump around on the
new metal gizmos and tells them about how easy they’ve got
it—compared to the old splintery days.
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