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Do
You Know The History Of Trampolines As
Exercise Equipment ? |
by:
Jeb
Taylor |
The
manufactured trampoline, as we know it today,
was
created by two men, George Nissen and Larry
Griswold.
Around 1935, Griswold, then the assistant
gymnastics coach
at the University of Iowa, and Nissen, a
tumbler on the University of Iowa gymnastics
team, "made regular jaunts to Bloomington,
Illinois where numerous circus people had
their winter homes.
Among them were the "Flying Wards", some
of the finest
trapeze performers in the world. Griswold
and Nissen worked
out with them at the local YMCA, and frequently
helped them make or mend their large trapeze
nets. Nissen remembers the hours they spent
in the basement of the YMCA, threading the
long cords of the nets, using large javelin-head
needles. This experience was one of several
that led them to the idea of creating a
trampoline.
One day, with the help of the wrestling
coach at the
University of Iowa, Griswold and Nissen
bolted together an angle iron frame. A piece
of canvas, in which they had inserted grommets
along each side, was then attached to the
frame by using springs. This was the first
trampoline.
Since Nissen was still training for tumbling,
they decided
to move the trampoline to a YMCA camp where
he was an instructor. There, during his
free time, Nissen used it for his tumbling
training. Immediately, he found that the
children loved it. This was the first realization
that the trampoline could be more than a
piece of equipment to use when performing,
or seriously training. It was something
that many others could enjoy.
In 1942, Griswold and Nissen decided to
formalize their
small operation of making trampolines. They
created the Griswold-Nissen Trampoline &
Tumbling Company, and history was made.
But where does the name "Trampoline" come
from? "El
trampolin" means diving board, in Spanish.
George Nissen,
the co-creator of the competitive style
trampoline, heard
the word on a performance tour in Mexico
in the late
1930's. He liked the sound of it, and decided
to Anglicize
the spelling and call his bouncing rig a
Trampoline, a term
he later registered as a trademark.
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