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| History Of The Yo-Yo
Compiled by Valerie Oliver
1996 |
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It is believed that the yo-yo most likely originated in China. The first historical mention of the yo-yo, however, was from Greece in the year 500 B.C. These ancient toys were made out of wood, metal, or painted terra cotta disks and called just that, a disc. It was customary, when a child turned of age, to offer toys of their youth to certain gods. Due to the fragile nature of the material, it is presumed that the disks made of terra cotta (clay) were used for this purpose rather than for actual play. A vase painting from this time period shows a Greek youth playing with a yo-yo. Such vases, as well as an actual terra cotta disk can be found in the National Museum of Athens, Greece.
Even in ancient Egyptian
temples, drawings of objects have been seen in the shape of yo-yos.
Historical records indicate that 16th century hunters in the Philippines
hid up in trees and used a rock tied to a long cord, up to 20 feet in
length, to throw at wild animals beneath them. The weapon was able to be
pulled up and thrown back down for multiple attempts at the prey. This
gave rise to the widespread idea that the practice was the true forerunner
of the yo-yo, but this is a stretch of imagination and has no real basis
in fact. It is extremely likely, however, that the yo-yo did travel from
China not only to Greece, but also to the Philippines, where the yo-yo is
known to have been a popular toy for children over a very long period of
time.
The next historically dated mention of the yo-yo is a box from India made
in the year 1765. This miniature box was hand-painted with the picture of
a girl in a red dress playing with her yo-yo. Within the next 25 years,
the yo-yo traveled from the Orient to Europe, specifically to the
aristocracy (upper class) of Scotland and France and on to England. As it
traveled, it became known by a variety of names.
In France, a painting dated to 1789 shows the 4 year-old, future King
Louis XVII holding his l’emigrette. It was during this time of the
French Revolution and the “Reign of Terror,” that many of the French
aristocracy were forced to flee to Paris, Germany and across other borders
when their style of life was threatened by the peasant uprisings, taking
their popular yo-yos made of glass and ivory with them. L’emigrette is a
French term meaning to ‘leave the country.’ Another nickname for the
yo-yo at this time was de Coblenz, which was a city to which many French
fled. These names reflect an important historical connection between the
toy and the French Revolution.
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The
yo-yo’s value as a stress reliever is also seen through history.
While being a fashionable toy for the French nobility, those less
fortunate are said to have played with their emigrettes to reduce
the understandable tension of their one-way trip to the guillotine.
Dating through the 1780’s, there are drawings of General Lafayette
and others with their troops flinging their yo-yos. The yo-yo
arrived in Paris in 1791 as it spread through France and was called
the “joujou de Normandie.” Some believe that this term may
reflect possible roots for the modern American name of “yo-yo.”
High interest in the toy continued as evidenced by the famous French
playwright, Beaumarchais, in his treatment of “The Marriage of
Figaro” in 1792. There is a scene where the nervous Figaro enters
and conveys his tension, not by the conventional |
| wringing
of his hands, but playing with his emigrette! When asked what the
emigrette is good for, Figaro responds, “It is a noble toy, which
dispels the fatigue of thinking.” Even on June 18, 1815, at the
famous Battle of Waterloo, Napoleon and his army are known to have
been seen relaxing with their yo-yos before battle.
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| The
yo-yo craze traveled throughout Europe to England by way of Scotland
and France. The English used the French word bandalore and the term
quiz to identify the toy. In 1791, a print was circulated of the
Prince of Wales, future George IV, whirling his bandalore. Because
of the toy’s popularity as well as the prince’s power to sell,
the toy also became known as the Prince of Wales’ toy and soon
became a toy that any person of fashion had to own. The toy’s
ongoing popularity in England is shown as late as 1862 when an
illustration appeared showing two young lads terrifying an older
woman with their quizzes. |
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The first recorded reference to
any type of yo-yo in the United States was in 1866 when two men from Ohio
received a patent for an invention called “an improved bandalore,” in
that it was rim weighted. One year later, a German immigrant named Charles
Kirchof patented and manufactured the return wheel. From then until 1911,
although various patents were awarded in the United States related to the
yo-yo, nothing notable occurred. In 1916, the Scientific American
Supplement published an article titled “Filipino Toys” which showed it
and named it a yo-yo. This was explained by some as the Filipino word for
“come-come” or “to return.” Significant events were soon to happen
in the United States.
Meanwhile, back in the Philippines, the natives were becoming experts at
making and using the toy. They became excellent wood carvers of the yo-yo
and playing with a yo-yo, beginning early in childhood, became a national
pastime. Not surprisingly, it was from here that the yo-yo as we know it
today was truly introduced into the United States. In the 1920s, a man
named Pedro Flores brought the first Filipino yo-yo to the U.S. and in
1928, began a yo-yo company by the same name in California.
| These
yo-yos were hand-carved from a single piece of wood. The yo-yo was
unique because it was the first yo-yo that did not have the string
tied to the axle. Instead, the string was looped around the axle,
allowing the yo-yo to spin or “sleep” at the end of the string.
This concept is at the heart of yo-yoing today. Rather than being
able to only go up and down, the yo-yo was now capable of doing an
infinite number of tricks. |
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In 1928 or 1929, a businessman
named Donald F. Duncan Sr. saw his first Flores yo-yo while he was in San
Francisco. He saw the potential of the toy as he witnessed the crowd that
Pedro was able to draw by doing a few tricks. He purchased not only the
idea of the yo-yo, but the Pedro Flores company itself. And, as they say,
“the rest is history.”
Donald Duncan was an excellent businessman. He developed advertising
campaigns and had demonstrators working for him in the U.S., as well as
Western Europe. “Duncan Yo-Yo Professionals” traveled throughout the
United States teaching and demonstrating yo-yo tricks and conducting
contests in an effort to promote sales. Competition grew as other
companies began to see the toy’s potential. In 1932, in an effort to
protect his interest, Duncan filed for and was assigned a trademark for
the word “yo-yo.” Not able to use the term “yo-yo,” competitors
were forced to use terms like “come-back”, “return”, “returning
top”, “whirl-a-gig”, and “twirler” for their versions of the
toy.
In 1946, the Duncan Company moved to Luck, Wisconsin, which quickly became
known as the “Yo-Yo Capital of the World” producing 3,600 yo-yos per
hour. They produced the original maple wooden yo-yos using 1,000,000 board
feet per year. In 1960, plastic yo-yos that we still see today began to be
manufactured. Sales grew and grew. By 1962, the Duncan Company alone sold
a record 45 million yo-yos in a country with only 40 million kids, and
still could not keep up with the demand. High television advertising
expenses and excessive expenses in overtime wages and materials to keep up
with the demand hurt profits. There was also the continual legal expense
in trying to hold onto the trademarked word “yo-yo.” Competitors
fought hard to use it in describing their products. Finally, in 1965, the
Federal Court of Appeals ruled that Duncan’s trademark for the word “yo-yo”
was no good. The term yo-yo had become so widespread that it was now a
permanent part of the language and it no longer only described the toy.
It, in fact, WAS the toy.
Tragically, in November of 1965, the Duncan Company could hold on no
longer and was forced into bankruptcy. Although pieces of equipment were
auctioned off to various buyers, Flambeau Plastics Company purchased the
most valuable asset, the “Duncan” name and the goodwill that came
along with it. It is the Flambeau Plastics Company that manufactures and
sells the eleven different models of Duncan yo-yos today. June 6 has been
deemed National Yo-Yo Day in honor of Donald Duncan Sr.’s birthday and
the phenomenal influence he had in the world of yo.
Trivia enthusiasts will enjoy noting that in 1968, Abbie Hoffman was cited
for contempt of Congress for “walking the dog” in an effort to
entertain the House Subcommittee on Un-American Activities that was
investigating him and Richard Nixon made headlines when he yo-yoed on
stage at the opening of the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville in 1974. The yo-yo
is, indeed, universal.
In recent years, technology has affected a multitude of the products we
use, and the seemingly simple yo-yo has been no exception. Beginning in
the 1970s, yo-yo manufacturers, seeing the benefit of periphery weight
distribution, began rim-weighting their products for a longer spin. In
1978, Tom Kuhn patented the “No Jive 3-in-1” yo-yo, the first
take-apart by hand yo-yo and the first having a replaceable axle. In 1980,
Michael Caffrey patented “The yo-yo with a Brain.” In addition to a
free-spinning sleeve bearing for long spin times, “The Brain” has a
centrifugal spring loaded clutch mechanism that causes an automatic return
of the yo-yo to the hand when the rotational spin slows to a
pre-determined rate. And by the 1990s, transaxle yo-yos were available
with ball-bearing axles, increasing spin times once again.
But this is not quite the end of the story. On April 12, 1985, the yo-yo
was first taken into space by NASA on the Space Shuttle Discovery as part
of the Toys in Space project. A basic spinning yo-yo was used to see what
effect microgravity would have on it. What they discovered was that a
yo-yo could be released at slow speeds and gracefully move along the
string. However, the yo-yo refused to “sleep.” Without the downward
force of gravity, the yo-yo could not spin against the loop at the end of
the string and so, rebounded up the string. It was also found that the
yo-yo must be thrown, not dropped, as there was no gravity to pull it
down. And on July 31, 1992, the yo-yo (an SB-2) again made its way into
space, on the Space Shuttle Atlantis, this time for an educational video
including slow-motion yo-ing.
Whether the yo-yo was a Chinese, Greek or Filipino invention or some
combination is difficult to prove. By the same token, it is also difficult
to say with certainty whether the toy spread from country to country or
whether the same basic pattern for the toy appeared in completely
different parts of the world for no obvious reason. We do know that its
use as a toy around the world and throughout history is unmatched. And,
although the yo-yo has gone through periods of hibernation in its trek
through the ages, its popularity, just like the toy itself, always comes
back.
References:
1. World on a String, Helane Zeiger, 1989
2. The One and Only Yo-Yo Book, George Malko, 1978
3. The Mature Person’s Guide to Kites, Yo-Yos, Frisbees and other
Childlike Diversions, Paul Dickson, 1977
4. The Klutz Yo-Yo Book, John Cassidy, 1987
5. Toys in Space, Dr. Carolyn Sumners, 1992
6. Daily Life in Greece at the Time of Pericles, Robert Flaceliere
7. American Scientist, “The Yo-Yo: A Toy Flywheel”, March-April 1984,
Wolfgang Burger
8. American Yo-Yo Association Newsletter, December 1994, “Pre-Duncan
Yo-Yo Time Line”, Lucky Meisenheimer, MD
| Photo
Credits: |
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| 1. Greek vase painting |
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Staatliche Museen Preussischer Kulturbesitz
Antikenmuseum, Berlin |
2. Greek terra cotta disk
(3 views) |
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Metropolitan Museum of Art, Fletcher Fund, 1928 |
| 3.
Frenchman Andre’ Boniface |
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Louis Mirabeau Library of Congress |
| 4. English woman with boys |
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New York Public Library Photo Room |
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