Strip Laminated Traditional Boomerang by Bill Pemberton

Item SG2 

This Item was Sold on 9 July 2020 for $85


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This large strip laminated traditional boomerang was constructed out of thin laminated hardwood strips. I sold a similar boomerang and the customer insisted that the pattern was the natural wood grain rather than strip laminated. This boomerang is in the best condition of the Pemberton strip laminated boomerangs. It is in excellent shape with no delaminations or edge damage. The air foils are magnificent. The elbow has a red dot and " Eu-P. " and " 114 1/2 gm " neatly printed above the red dot. This boomerang looks like it is strong enough to throw, but please be careful because nothing is known about the glue that was used to construct this magnificent boomerang This is a valuable historical boomerang made in California nearly 100 years ago.

Specifications: Right Handed ; Tip-to-tip Span = 55 cm ; Weight = 112 gm


Bill Pemberton is not a well known boomerang maker or thrower. In the mid 1990s, someone bought a collection of approximately 25 boomerangs at a yard sale in the Bay Area of California and they sold the boomerangs on eBay. Two collectors purchased most of these boomerangs - Dan Neelands and Dain Torguson. The majority of these were made out of hardwood strips or homemade plywood and the designs and construction techniques were wild. Some even had Aluminum sheet as a layer, similar to the construction technique of Oscar Cuartas. A few years after these were sold on eBay, Dain Torguson passed away and I purchased some of Dain's boomerangs from Dain's mother. After I acquired these, Dan and I decided to do some detective work and find out who made them and when they were made because none of the boomerangs were signed or dated. There were two big clues that helped us find this information. First, the boomerangs had been wrapped in newspaper dated in the early 1930s. Second, there was a single Aboriginal hunting boomerang in the lot and that artifact had Bill Pemberton's name, some notes and a date in the mid 1910s. Using the notes on the throwstick, we figured out that Bill Pemberton had traveled to Australia nearly 100 years ago. He purchased at least one boomerang and then he returned home to California and made boomerang construction and throwing his hobby. I assume that he passed away or became disabled in the early 1930s and his family packed them away with newspaper, only to be taken out of storage in the mid 1990s and sold at a rummage sale. Therefore, all of the Pemberton boomerangs are 90-100 years old. Quite a story!



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