File:1892 wobble board precursor by William Madsen.png

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These are the five patent drawings for a physical-fitness exercise device.

The inventor was William Madsen of Chicago, Illinois.

The 1892 U.S. patent for this device was applied for also in 1892. Its patent number is 478,166.

This device (rather than one invented by Bernard L. Coplin, whose 1957 U.S patent was applied for in 1954) would be the first wobble board known to be patented if it could be stood on without the user holding on to some stable external support, but there are three indications in the patent that it couldn't be:

The patent refers to "suitable devices adapted to be grasped by the user."

In the patent's drawing, the size of the base puts the board about two and a half feet above the ground, a height unlikely for an inventor to recommend balancing at (unless the intended user is an acrobat or, at least, a gymnast, which the patent doesn't indicate is the case).

The patent says: "It will be seen that in the several modified forms of my invention above illustrated a rest is provided whereon the weight of the user of the apparatus will be exerted– that is to say, in the construction shown in Fig. 1 the saddle constitutes a rest to sustain the entire body of the user, and in Figs. 3 and 4 the foot-plates constitute rests for sustaining the user's feet." This description of the foot-plates's purpose doesn't say, as the description of the saddle's purpose does, that they are meant to "sustain the entire body of the user." Although it might be supposed that "sustaining the user's feet" implies sustaining a user's entire weight, this omission when considered together with the two previous indications seems not to imply this.

The issue of which device was the first wobble board known to have been patented and the issue of whether a device can be considered a wobble board if its user needs to hold onto an external support are elaborated on at the Image Description Page of the patent drawings of Samuel L. Jordan's 1951 precursor to the wobble board.
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Source

Patent 478,166 of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office

If your computer doesn't display the drawings of the patent when you click that link (which goes to the page of that patent at the website of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office), you need to install a plug-in that will enable your web browser to display a TIFF file. Using such a plug-in might increase your web browser's zoom level (its magnification level) to 200% at all webpages (until you reset it to 100%). You can avoid needing to install such a plug-in by going to a search engine such as Google and typing the patent's number (478,166) and the word "patent" in the keyword searchbox. This will deliver links to the patent's page at non-governmental patent-search websites. At most of those websites, the images' file format isn't TIFF.
Author William Madsen
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Public domain The text and illustrations of US patents published before March 1, 1989 are in the public domain unless the patent text contains a specific notice that portions are copyrighted. See 37 CFR 1.71(d), 37 CFR 1.84(s)

The original patent contains no such notice, so its contents are in the public domain. Note: This only applies to images published before March 1, 1989. Patents published after that date are most likely copyrighted, unless in the public domain for another reason, such as {{PD-ineligible}}.

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current16:01, 9 September 2011Thumbnail for version as of 16:01, 9 September 20113,060 × 1,943 (168 KB)DavidMaisel (talk | contribs){{Information |Description= These are the five patent drawings for a physical-fitness exercise device. The inventor was William Madsen of Chicago, Illinois. The 1892 U.S. patent for this device was applied for also in 1892. Its patent number is [http:

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