A picture, it has been said, is worth a thousand words, but neither a
picture nor a thousand words will adequately describe a Limbershaft.
Only when waggled does a Limbershaft reveal its exceptional flexibility.
Suffice it to say, there has never been another shaft like it produced
for the world of retail golf clubs. Think of this Limbershaft brassie
as a 9-piece buggy whip with a golf club on the end of it. Really!
The soleplate is marked "Brassie, Limber Golf Shaft, Pat 1662712, Jim Thompson, Inc. Tarpon Springs,
Florida." The shaft consists of 8 lengths of rattan surrounding a
square hickory core. A cross section of all these pieces can be viewed
at the butt end of the shaft.
Limbershafts were covered under a US patented issued in 1931 to Carl F.
Mensing of Tarpon Springs, Florida.
Limbershafts proved to be a flash in the pan, a here today gone
tomorrow story. But the beautiful example up for auction is still here
today! Thankfully!! This is a great club to waggle. Put it in the hands of a friend and watch them smile when the address an imaginary golf ball. For more on Mensing and his Limbershaft, see TCA2 v2
p641-642.