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Note: This is a letter Steady Ed wrote to
the City of Pasadena. We at the DGA would like to urge you to also
write the City of Pasadena and urge them to protect the first Disc
Golf Coarse. Please feel free to use any or all of this letter to
add your own voice to Save Oak Grove.
March 27, 2002
City of Pasadena, California
Re: The pending removal or relocation of the
1st Disc Golf Course in the World
You probably do not know the history of Oak Grove
Park from the early mid 70s when the County of Los Angeles
was responsible for the park. Oak Grove had degenerated to a drug
store. Oak Grove Park was within easy walking distance from a grammar
school, a military school, high school, a junior high school and
a branch of Cal Tech University, J.P.L. The small town of La Cañada
was a bedroom community with several thousand children, young adults
and scientists that worked at J.P.L., yet had no place to enjoy
healthy recreation. Oak Grove Park was the headquarters for recreational
drug use among the students with drugs being distributed out of
the backs of cars. It was so bad that the Sheriffs Department
wouldnt go into the park on Saturday or Sunday. Ask them if
some of them are still alive. Adults were afraid to use the park
and the original campers including BSA looked elsewhere for safer
facilities.
Ed Headrick lived with his family of 3 boys and
1 girl, who attended La Cañada schools at all grades, in
La Cañada from the early 1960s. Mr. Headrick also worked
for Wham-O Manufacturing Co., in San Gabriel and invented the modern
Frisbee, developed the Super Ball and was VP of R/D and on up to
CEO from 1964 to 1975. Other children from La Cañada were
in Wham-O TV commercials along with his children; they had a scout
troop, little league team and were well aware of the lack of wholesome
recreation facilities in the area. The Rose Bowl hosted the first
IFA Frisbee Tournament in 67 that was directed by Ed and featured
movie stars, players from around the country and was won by Mr.
Headricks son.
In 1975, Mr. Headrick conceived of taking the
old game of Frisbee Golf that had targets of opportunity and making
them permanent with pipe 5 above in the ground and formal
Tee Signs. All done with the permission and encouragement of the
director of LA County Parks & Rec., Semore Greeben. The game
of Frisbee Golf was so popular that most of the drug problem was
solved with many people playing Frisbee Golf with pipe targets.
Literally thousands of plays per month by adults from J.P.L. to
children in grammar school. Headrick and Greeben were ecstatic.
A small problem developed in that the holes (targets)
were subjective rather than objective. If you made a good shot especially
if money was involved, and you said Wow, did you see that
shot? The other members of your foursome would all be looking
in the other direction and turn and say What shot? After
two and a half years and 56 attempts of Headrick trying to conform
with Greebens specifications, (i.e., cant hurt anyone,
cant be easily vandalized, will last forever, will not support
a fire, will be unobtrusive), galvanized chain was the answer.
Headrick built a prototype, showed it to an amazed
Greeben and with some cash from Sport Chalet in La Cañada
he built and installed 18 Holes on the cut off pipe and the Worlds
1st Disc Golf Course was created. The rest is history from the creation
of the game to the amazing speed that it spread across the county
with the support of the International Frisbee Association, which
Headrick also created. The IFA had 112,000 members; he then formed
the Disc Golf Association, and the Professional Disc Golf Association.
There has been over 5 million people who have played disc golf,
1,210 golf courses in the World and over 20 thousand members of
the PDGA (that is now run by the players). Most of these players
revere Oak Grove Park as a shrine and a monument to the sport we
all love, Disc Golf has literally changed the lives of thousands
of players. It taught them how to deal with themselves on a one
on one basis. There are few sanctuaries that can equal the contribution
that Oak Grove made to hundreds of thousands of people, please dont
destroy this monument and this moment in time.
I will personally re-produce 18 of the original
disc pole holes and re-install them as close to the original design
as possible at no cost to the city. I am confident that we can collect
the funds to preserve this amazing piece of history for posterity
to the benefit of the people of Pasadena and the rest of the World.
Sincerely,

Steady Ed Headrick
Inventor of the Sport of Disc Golf
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