Pogo Stick - Inventors

Inventors

A spring stilt utilizing compression springs on each foot was patented in 1891 by George H. Herrington of Wichita, Kansas "for leaping great distances and heights". This was an antecedent of the pogo stick as well as today's Spring stilts. A German patent was registered March 1920 to Max Pohlig and Ernst Gottschall in Hanover for a device they called a "spring end hopping stilt". It is thought that the beginning two letters in these men's last names is where the name Pogo comes from.

The two handle pogo stick design was patented by George B. Hansburg, in 1957. Hansburg described the origins of the Pogo name colloquially in a story of a young Burmese girl with the aforementioned name whose father had created a crude version of the device so that the daughter could travel to the local temple for prayers. An earlier design with a single upright vertical handle patented in 1955 posed something of a risk to the user's chin. Later improvements to the pogo stick have been made, including the Vurtego, Flybar, BowGo, and the Up Wing pogo stick, which allow operators to jump much higher than with a simple coil spring pogo stick. Back flips and other tricks are now possible on some of these newer sticks, which has contributed to the growth of the new sport of stunt pogo or extreme pogo. Yet no matter what improvements or different types are made, the basic design idea of man or woman riding on a spring remains the same.

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