Fred Morrison, 90, a pilot and carpenter most often credited with inventing that most ubiquitous of backyard toys, the Frisbee, died Feb. 9 at his home in Monroe, Utah. He had lung cancer.

People have been tossing flat, round objects for millennia, and the origins of the Frisbee have been shrouded in conflicting claims and legend. But it was Mr. Morrison who created the flying disc that was eventually marketed to the world, giving rise to a beloved form of egalitarian picnic entertainment and spin-off sports including Ultimate Frisbee, canine Frisbee, freestyle Frisbee and professional disc golf, a sport that’s grown large enough that its champions can now make a living on prize money and sponsorships.

Inspiration for Mr. Morrison’s flying-saucer toy came in 1937 at a Thanksgiving feast in Southern California. He and his girlfriend, Lucile “Lu” Nay, entertained themselves by tossing a popcorn-tin lid in the backyard. The lid eventually became dented, ruining its aerodynamic potential, and the resourceful couple snatched a cake pan from Mr. Morrison’s mother’s kitchen.

Cake pans, it turned out, were sturdier and flew better — so much so that one day, when the two were flinging a pan back and forth on the beach, an impressed passerby offered to buy it. The pan had originally cost a nickel, the stranger offered a quarter — and that exchange was enough to whet Mr. Morrison’s entrepreneurial appetite.

“That got the wheels turning,” he told a Norfolk, Va., reporter in 2007. “There was a business.”

RIP Fred… my dogs and I thank you for many years of entertainment.




  1. qb says:

    Does this mean he’ll be stuck up on the roof for eternity?

  2. T-Timmy says:

    Frisbee dogs are awesome!

  3. Smith says:

    When we were kids, my friends and I did the pie-tin thing until my mom caught us. Then we switched to hubcaps off of the old clunkers behind the barn. The Hudson hubcaps flew best, but the Chevy hubcaps made better looking “Jupiter 2’s”. They were no good for playing catch; the sharp tabs would rip the shit out of your hands if you tried (which we did … once).

  4. Ah_Yea says:

    It takes a one-in-a-million kinda guy who could take a pie dish, turn it upside down, and sell it to the world.

  5. sargasso says:

    RIP Frisbee Guy,
    who threw a pie tin in the sky,
    which people do and wonder why,
    their dogs go nuts and try to fly.

  6. McCullough says:

    #5. I love it….

  7. BobHand says:

    After the funeral, the attendees went to celebrate his life by throwing small plastic tombstones to each other…

  8. Greg Allen says:

    I wonder how rich he was from his invention. I’ve heard other stories where very successful inventors didn’t get that much money.

    Like the designer who came up with one of the most iconic logos of the modern era — the Nike Swoosh — got $35 for her design.

  9. Ron Larson says:

    From the late, great George Carlin:

    Frisbeeism is the belief that when you die,
    your soul goes up on the roof and gets stuck.

  10. Uncle Patso says:

    Gotta admire someone willing to dress up (and be photographed) in that ridiculous (but at the same time, sorta sublime) outfit!

    Cool cars behind him too — one looks like a Dodge maybe; the other is definitely a GM of some kind, possibly a Caddy.

  11. mangurian says:

    Bogus !!! Frisbee was a pie company in Stratford CT. People (primarily Yale students) played with the pie tins (post pie eating). The name was on the pie tin. Thus the name and the real origin. Morrison could be the first guy to use plastic and market it, but the people of southcentral CT “invented” the Frisbee.

  12. Grey Bird says:

    To Mangurian: Get your facts straight! Morrison _did_ invent the frisbee, but not the name, in the 1940s. After Wham-o had it under production for a while was the name changed to Frisbee because of the east coast college kids. This was in the late 1950s. Calling something by a different name isn’t by any stretch of the imagination “inventing” it.

  13. mangurian says:

    hmmmmmmm…. wonder why he didn’t patent it until 1957. Elis were skimming pie tins long before this. Where was Morrison’s Frisbee being thrown in the 1940’s?

  14. mangurian says:

    http://inventors.about.com/library/weekly/aa980218.htm

    The history is a bit murky, but it is very likely that saying Morrison invented the Frisbee is like saying that Philco (or whoever) invented the radio rather than Marconi or Tesla, because Philco put it in a box. A more accurate statement might be: Morrison was the first to market the device.
    Anywhooo, I don’t really give a hoot.


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