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History Of The Frisbee
Where the Frisbee First
Flew - The Untold Story of the Flying Disc's Origin
By Jeff McMahon
Two men held a circle
of plastic over a heater in a San Luis Obispo garage
in 1948, trying to mold a lip onto the disc's down-turned
edge. One of those men would be hailed as the inventor
of the Frisbee. The other would die unknown, just
as he began to fight for a share of the credit and
millions in royalties the Frisbee generated.
The First to Fly
Walter Frederick Morrison
came to Warren Franscioni in 1947, looking for work.
Both men had been Army Air Corps pilots in World War
II. Maj. Franscioni served with the Air Transport
Service in India and China; Lt. Morrison flew a fighter
in 58 missions over Italy before being shot down and
held in Stalag 13, Germany's infamous prison camp.
Franscioni's parents
lived in Paso Robles, where his father had been mayor,
so he settled after the war in San Luis Obispo. He
founded a butane company as his father had done in
Paso. He built a home on Conejo Avenue, in a neighborhood
developing near San Luis High School, and he opened
the Franscioni and Davis Butane Co. office at 884
Broad St., across Broad from Mission College Prep.
"I first met Fred
Morrison in late 1947," Franscioni wrote in a
1973 letter. "He was a struggling World War II
veteran trying to build a home for his family at Baywood
Park, a developing residential area just outside San
Luis Obispo, California.
"At that time,
I was attempting to establish a bottle gas business
with a partner, George Davis, in San Luis Obispo.
We needed someone to assist in the installation of
home heating appliances, and Fred went to work for
us."
The bottled gas business
moved too slowly in postwar SLO to sustain three men
and their families. So Franscioni and Morrison dreamed
up an enterprise on the side.
For decades kids had
played catch with metal pie tins. The sport grew in
popularity during the Depression, and soldiers spread
it across the country during the war.
The game had a few drawbacks.
The tins made a shrill noise, and if you didn't catch
them just right, they stung. After a few crash landings
they could crack or develop sharp edges that cut fingers.
Morrison and Franscioni
thought of casting them in plastic, a material proliferated
by wartime industry. Morrison took credit for the
idea in later interviews, but Franscioni said they
thought of it together.
"I do know that
when we compared some of our past experiences at sailing
things, it came out plastics," Franscioni wrote.
It seems like a simple
idea today, but Morrison and Franscioni broke new
ground. And after 49 years of improvements, the Frisbee
has diverged little from their first plastic interpretation
of a pie tin.
"People were throwing
paint can lids and paper plates and pie pans throughout
history, since they were invented," said Victor
Malafronte, a Frisbee historian in Alameda. "The
first plastic disc was that Flyin' Saucer in 1948."
Morrison and Franscioni
used a lathe to carve their first model out of Tenite,
a hard cellulose material now used in toothbrush handles
and eyeglass frames. That disc confirmed the aerodynamics
of the toy, but it shattered on landing.
"I tackled the
job of working up a design that would transform the
pie-tin shape into what we believed would be the best
configuration of an injection-molded Flyin' Saucer,"
Franscioni wrote.
Franscioni's daughter,
Coszette Eneix, remembers her father and Morrison
working in the basement of their Conejo Avenue home.
"I remember one
time--I was like 5--I remember standing in the basement
downstairs, and I remember over the water heater they
were trying to mold this plastic thing to try to get
a lip on it," Eneix said.
Newspapers had coined
the term "flying saucer" less than a year
earlier when a pilot reported seeing disc-shaped objects
skipping through the air above the Cascade Mountains
in the Pacific Northwest. The Roswell incident in
June 1947 fueled the flying saucer craze. Witnesses
in Roswell, N.M., reported seeing the bodies of aliens
at a UFO crash site.
Franscioni and Morrison
named the new toy to capitalize on the publicity.
"Hundreds of flying
saucers are scheduled to invade San Luis Obispo in
the near future," the Telegram-Tribune reported
in 1948. "Two local men, pooling resources after
the words 'flying saucers' shocked the world a year
ago, have invented a new, patented plastic toy shaped
like the originally reported saucer."
The Saucer Crash
People have purchased
more than 200 million Frisbees in the last 50 years,
Malafronte estimates, more than baseballs, footballs,
and basketballs combined. Those booming sales, however,
began with a whimper. In 1948, people didn't know
what to make of the Flyin' Saucer.
Morrison and Franscioni
formed a company called Partners in Plastic, or Pipco,
based in SLO. They contracted with Southern California
Plastic Co. in Glendale to manufacture Flyin' Saucers
for about 25 cents each. They sold them for $1 through
outlets like Woolworth and Disneyland.
"We soon found
the item was a dead issue on the counter," Franscioni
wrote, "which prompted our offer to demonstrate
in the store. Woolworth put Fred and me in a cage
to protect the customers. It worked, but not for long.
We soon realized the only place to demonstrate was
outdoors."
Morrison and his wife
traveled to county fairs to hawk the flying disc.
Franscioni sometimes joined them, Eneix said, but
he usually remained in SLO, handling national sales
and keeping Pipco's books.
The demonstrations won
people's attention. They hadn't seen anything fly
like the disc, which remained aloft long after gravity
would have pulled a ball back to earth.
Some observers thought
the disc followed an invisible wire, and Morrison
capitalized on that notion. He offered the disc for
free if customers paid $1 for the invisible wire.
Teaching people how
to throw the disc became another challenge. Americans
seem born to the art of Frisbee throwing today, but
it required a new skill in 1948.
"By running through
the instructions you will see that we repeatedly point
out that an easy smooth snap of the wrist is all that
is necessary," Franscioni wrote.
Flyin' Saucers came
with directions urging people not to throw the discs
too hard or hold them too tight, and to launch them
"in exactly the same manner as sailing your hat
onto a hook."
Franscioni and Morrison's
early marketing efforts occasionally backfired. A
Disneyland employee demonstrating the Flyin' Saucer
accidentally overshot a fence and hit a woman in the
head. She sued, and Disney halted its demonstrations.
Then Morrison and Franscioni
struck a deal with Al Capp, who agreed to include
the Flyin' Saucer in his "Li'l Abner" cartoon
strip. That strip appeared in national newspapers
sometime around 1950. Franscioni and Morrison printed
"Li'l Abner" inserts and packaged them with
their Flyin' Saucers to capitalize on the publicity.
The inserts infuriated
Capp, who felt they exceeded the terms of their agreement.
Capp threatened to sue and demanded $5,000 in compensation.
"I was really hurt.
How could Li'l Abner do this to my daddy?" Eneix
said. "That was a hunk of change that put them
down. That was quite a bit of money back then."
Franscioni and Morrison
were already struggling to meet the cost of casting
the original dies for the Flyin' Saucer. The Capp
payoff devastated Pipco.
Franscioni borrowed
$2,500 from his mother and $2,500 from his mother-in-law,
Eneix said, and the demise of the Flyin' Saucer began.
Eneix and her sister went door to door in SLO selling
the discs for 25 cents. Today, collectors will pay
$500 for an original Pipco Flyin' Saucer.
The Plot Thickens
The Franscioni and Davis
Butane Co. crashed at about the same time as Pipco.
In 1950, Walter Franscioni had to sell the Conejo
Avenue home where the Frisbee was born. He moved to
Greenville, worked as a trucker, and applied for reactivation
in the Air Force.
"I remember us
losing our home and how hard that was," Eneix
said. "Korea was happening then, and my father
then applied for being recalled back into the service,
but he continued trying to get the Flyin' Saucer thing
to go."
The Air Force moved
the Franscionis to South Dakota in 1952. Morrison
moved to Los Angeles, where he worked as a building
inspector, and the inventors of the Flyin' Saucer
drifted apart. Southern California Plastic Co. continued
to produce the discs, and Morrison continued to sell
them.
Eneix keeps folders
full of yellowing letters and old business records
to document what happened next. Some of those records
show that Morrison began manufacturing his own flying
disc on the side.
Morrison set up a new
company, American Trends, redesigned the disc to make
it look more like a flying saucer, and called it the
Pluto Platter. Morrison began selling the Pluto Platter
while still accepting sales commissions on the Flyin'
Saucer, according to Ed Kennedy, the president of
Southern California Plastic Co.
"We had just found
out that Fred Morrison had another die built on the
Flyin' Saucer and was merchandising the product under
the name of Pluto's Platter," Kennedy wrote in
a 1957 letter to Franscioni. "During the time
that he was having the saucer made, he was also accepting
sales commissions from the company here."
Kennedy accused Morrison
of trying to steal Flyin' Saucer accounts by offering
Pluto Platters at a lower cost.
"In my opinion,
Fred acted completely unfairly on this entire thing,"
Kennedy wrote, "and we certainly will never do
business with him again."
Southern California
Plastic Co. severed its relationship with Morrison
and contacted a patent attorney. The question of patent
violations never went to court, however, and has never
been resolved.
The Wham-O Frisbee
Morrison was demonstrating
his Pluto Platter in a Los Angeles parking lot in
1955 when Rich Knerr and Spud Melin spotted the unusual
flying object.
Knerr and Melin had
founded their own toy company back in 1948, the year
Franscioni and Morrison were developing the Flyin'
Saucer. Knerr and Melin had one product, a wooden
slingshot. They named their company for the sound
the slingshot's pellets made on impact--Wham-O.
Morrison signed a contract
with Wham-O, and Knerr and Melin sold the Pluto Platter
with a marketing expertise Morrison and Franscioni
never showed. Knerr came up with the new name for
the disc.
Knerr was visiting East
Coast college campuses in the mid-1950s, giving away
Pluto Platters to seed market demand. At Yale he encountered
students tossing metal pie tins and yelling "Frisbie!"
the way golfers yell "Fore!"
Historians have traced
that tradition to a Bridgeport, Conn., baker named
William Russell Frisbie. In 1871 Frisbie moved to
Bridgeport to manage the local branch of the Olds
Baking Co. He eventually bought the bakery and renamed
it Frisbie Pie Co.
Frisbee historian Malafronte
believes truck drivers for the company were the first
to toss Frisbie Pie tins on the loading docks during
idle times. The tins bore the words "Frisbie's
Pies" and had six small holes in the center,
in a star pattern, that hummed when the tin flew.
The sport moved to Eastern
colleges, where students shouted "Frisbie!"
to warn people of incoming pie tins. A sport developed
and took on the name "Frisbie-ing." Knerr
took the word home to Wham-O, misspelled it "Frisbee,"
and registered it as a trademark. In 1958, Morrison's
Pluto Platter became the Wham-O Frisbee.
Southern California
Plastic Co. continued to make Flyin' Saucers for Disneyland
and a few other outlets. It handled sales and mailed
royalty checks to Franscioni until the mid-1960s,
when he headed to Vietnam.
The Bitter Toy
Many American homes
have housed a Frisbee, but Coszette Eneix's home is
not among them.
"Every time I see
a Frisbee I just want to cringe," she said. "I
get angry inside. It shouldn't be called Frisbee.
It isn't Frisbee. How come they're calling it Frisbee?
That's not right. It's Flyin' Saucer."
Eneix hasn't decided
whether to use her files of yellowing papers in a
lawsuit or in a book, but she wants justice for her
father.
"I want it in the
history books, as it comes down, that my father was
there, not Fred Morrison alone," she said.
"When you read
about the history of the Frisbee, you always hear
Fred Morrison. Fred Morrison did this. Fred Morrison
did that. Bullshit. Excuse my language. Bullshit.
It was Warren Franscioni and Fred Morrison. It was
a partnership. I think they should have equal billing."
The International Frisbee
Hall of Fame in Lake Linden, Mich., reserves its primary
listing for Morrison.
"Fred Morrison,
Inventor of the Frisbee," it says. "Walter
F. (Fred) Morrison has provided pleasure to millions
of people throughout the world. He was the first person
to envision the creation of a plastic disc to be used
as a substitute for a ball in a game of catch."
Wham-O went on to market
the Hula-Hoop, the Super Ball, the Water Wiggle, and
other toys, but Frisbee remained its most profitable
product. In 1977, 20 years after Wham-O began selling
Frisbees, it generated up to 50 percent of the company's
annual sales. At the time, Wham-O estimated it had
sold 100 million flying discs.
Morrison told the Los
Angeles Times in 1977 he had made about $1 million
in royalties.
Nearly all written histories
of the Frisbee attribute its invention to Morrison.
Stancil E.D. Johnson, a Pacific Grove psychiatrist,
may have been the first to mention Warren Franscioni
in a footnote in his 1975 book, "Frisbee."
Johnson heard about
Franscioni from Ed Kennedy, the president of the Southern
California Plastic Co. In 1973, Johnson contacted
Franscioni, who was then an Air Force colonel stationed
in Oslo, Norway. He asked Franscioni to write down
his memories of the flying disc's origin.
Franscioni sent Johnson
one letter in August 1973.
"I have had time
to evaluate my initial concern about whether your
book might interfere in any future legal proceedings
about the subject," Franscioni wrote. "I
have come to the conclusion that your book, if based
upon the facts, would not."
Franscioni argues that
he designed the first Flyin' Saucer, not Morrison,
that he paid for the initial mold with his own money,
and that the two men jointly developed the idea of
casting it in plastic.
Franscioni began a second
letter to Johnson in 1974, but he never completed
it. He died of a heart attack at age 57.
"Fred Morrison
never wanted to admit this," Johnson said. "Franscioni
died and never was able to come back and get his share
of the profits."
Franscioni might have
acted earlier. Ed Kennedy urged him to take legal
action against Morrison as early as 1957.
"Other people were
asking my father to do something--stop him, sue him,
stop him," Eneix said, "but we were in South
Dakota. My father was getting his career going again
as an officer in the Air Force, and that was taking
a lot of his time. And I think my mom was leery of
putting more money into this thing."
In 1957, the Frisbee
had not yet made its millions. The rights to the toy
hardly seemed worth the cost of a lawsuit.
"There was a lot
of disappointment in the '50s, and they were hurt,
really hurt," Eneix said.
"So we all started
quieting down and not talking about it. That's what
we do in my family. We don't talk about it. Then we
didn't fly the Flyin' Saucer much anymore on picnics.
It was too painful to keep remembering it because
we were losing it."
The Silent Inventor
Morrison, 77, now calls
himself "Walt" and lives near Monroe, Utah,
a town of 1,700 people in the Sevier River valley.
He owned a motel there and operated it with his third
wife until he retired three years ago. Morrison has
an old pickup truck, but he rarely drives it into
town.
"He lives in a
house in the country and seems to enjoy life,"
said Mark Fullenbaugh, publisher of the Richfield
Reaper. "I haven't seen him in person in about
six months. You don't see him out much, so I can't
tell you much more than that about him."
Morrison declined to
be interviewed for this story.
"Well, I'd like
to be a nice guy and say yes, but I'm so tired of
this shit," Morrison said.
"It's been done
so many times, so many ways, that I just don't do
it anymore. I'm an old man now and I just haven't
got time for this. I want to just sit back in my chair
and sleep."
Morrison has always
been "cagey" about the facts of the Frisbee's
birth, according to Malafronte, who met Morrison at
Frisbee tournaments.
"I had asked Fred
about his partner, and he owns up to it," Malafronte
said. "The problem is, I think Fred has a lot
of stuff he can lose and nothing to gain by talking."
Meanwhile, Mattel Corp.
is celebrating the 40th anniversary of the Frisbee
this year, even though the plastic flying disc turns
50 next year.
Mattel, the world's
largest toy company, bought Wham-O in 1994. It dates
the Frisbee's official birth as 1957, when Wham-O
first marketed Morrison's Pluto Platter.
Mattel has no knowledge
of plastic flying discs that may have existed before
1957, said Mattel spokeswoman Sara Rosales, nor of
their inventors.
Jeff McMahon hurls amazing
whirling adjectives for New Times.
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