Traditional Plywood Boomerang by Frank Donnellan

Item PDM    

This Item was Sold on 10 June 2021 for $56


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This traditional boomerang was made by Frank Donnellan in the 1950s. This is the premium tourist model made out of coachwood and decorated with Emu art and the words " Hello All At Home from Australia " burned into the upper surface. The under surface has " Msde by Frank Donnellan Champion Granville N.S.W. " burned into the elbow. The airfoil is nearly symmetrical about the center line with handedness carved in with undercut bevels at the leading edges of both blade tips. A very nice collectible. Most of these were thrown until broken. This one is in almost new condition.

Specifications: Right Handed ; Tip-to-tip Span = 54 cm ; Weight = 158 gm


Frank Donnellan was one of Australia's earliest boomerang champions and record holders. Frank did amazing feats and he claimed to be the holder of "all records" long before there were any official boomerang clubs or sanctioned competitions. On May 4th, 1934, Frank threw a long distance boomerang of his own construction at Centennial Park, Sydney in the presence of "Sun" news representatives. The boomerang circled a pole 140 yards away and then it was caught on the return. This, and other feats included throwing over Watson's Bay Gap one hundred yards over the water and caught on the return and throwing off the "Sun" Office Buildings seventy-five yards out over the city, and caught on the return. Frank made and sold boomerangs well into the 1950s. His commercial models were constructed out of plywood and his long distance models were constructed out of Whalebone, a composite material similar to Paxolin, but made out of pressed whale baleen and wood products. Whalebone was used by the railroad companies to line the inside of railroad box cars for shock absorbing purposes. Frank obtained his whalebone material by jumping into empty box cars as trains passed by his home and he would then rip out a sheet and take it home to make his long distance boomerangs. Frank's commercial boomerangs were plentiful in the 1940s and early 1950s, but they have become quite scarce and they are hard to obtain by contemporary collectors, especially in mint condition.



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