
But inventing an inverting top based on this was not obvious.
The first person to patent a Tippe Top (Wenderkreisel) was a German nurse, Helen Sperl, in 1892 (applied October 7, 1891, DE63261)


Unfortunately for her, she let it expire a year later (fysikbasen.au.dk).
Danish engineer, Werner Østberg (1920-1999) from Hjørring popularized the tippe top, applying for patents in many countries (I found from England, France, Switzerland, Greece and US), starting in 1950. Apparently the toy became a big fad in Denmark.
The US Patent #2,700,246 was applied in 1950 and published in 1955:

Here is Østberg (with white coat) in 1997 in front of an exhibition about the tippe top:

The title of the poster is: "From the diary of the tippe top". I wish I could read it, because he said his inspiration was during a visit to "South America" when he saw some people sitting in front of their cabin playing with a round fruit. They turned the stem like you would turn an old-fashioned top, and when the fruit had spun for a moment, it suddenly turned around and continued on the stem. But South America is a big continent . . .
There are also contemporary patents by a German inventor, Oskar Hummel. He applied for DE 889,574 in 1949 and it was published in 1953


As you can see from the image, not only it's a tippe top, but also has a movable shaft so a little tip can protrude making it spin as a normal top.
It seems like a great coincidence that Hummel and Østberg came up with the idea simultaneously.