Tag Archives: Surfing history

Surfing history: A few copies of “The Surfer”, newsletter of the Waikiki Surf Club from the 1950s

I just found a file among my father’s papers containing several issues of the Waikiki Surf Club newsletter (“The Surfer”) from the period 1954-56.

These are very informal and simple, typed sheets, 1-3 pages each. They introduce new members, name club officials, congratulate teams in various competitions, recognize births, birthdays, and members leaving the islands, spread the word about club events, etc.

The paper is discolored and brittle, old staples have rusted away. I’ve scanned some and will have to make another try with several others that are badly faded.

Anyone interested in the development of competitive surfing and canoeing during the 1950s will probably want to check these out.

The Surfer

October 1954

May 1955

August 1955

May 1956

July 1956

August 1956

Undated

Sunday (2)…More from the Waikiki Surf history files

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Here are a couple of additional photos found among my dad’s collection of photos, clippings, and documents from his 60 years of involvement in Hawaii water sports.

The first photo shows legendary surfer Wally Froiseth outside the Waikiki Natatorium posing with several paddleboards.

The second photo is an enlargement of just a section of the image showing the people in the background behind Froiseth. I think that’s my dad, John Lind, in the center of the detailed photo, walking towards the camera.

[text]He appears to be wearing the same clothes as in another photo posted here last week with a group of paddlers at the Natatorium. That leads me to belief these two photos were taken on the same day in 1940.

The Waikiki Surf Club was founded in early 1948, and the next photo must date from this period. It again shows Froiseth, at left, with a number of young men in the club.

Froiseth, co-founder of the WSC, has been described to me as a key to the surf club’s success because he was able to attract young people to join.

The last photo is again an enlargement of one section, showing some of the younger surfers those watching as the photo was being taken.

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Interesting glimpses of Waikiki in a bygone era.

Thursday…Paddleboards in Waikiki 1940-42

NatatoriumHere’s another oldie–paddlers pose at the Natatorium in 1940.

This was only a year after my father, John Lind, arrived in Hawaii from Long Beach, California, and years before the Waikiki Surf Club was formed after the end of WWII.

The photo looks like it might have been a publicity shot for an upcoming race, and it provides evidence that two future WSC founders, Wally Froiseth and my dad, were already active together in paddleboard racing by 1940.

My father said it was paddling that led him to surfing back in California, and he remained active as a paddler after he came to Hawaii.

When I was a kid, I remember that big, long, hollow, canvas-covered paddleboard, a rather bright yellow, stored in the garage. During a particularly heavy rain, our yard flooded and my dad got out his board and floated around in the flood waters, but I think I just remember the story being told rather than the actual event.

Clippings in my dad’s collection show paddling was a popular sport back in the 1940s and 1950s.

[text]I showed this second photo to my father recently, and he immediately recognized it as a 1942 race from Waikiki to the Diamond Head buoy and back.

He pointed to the paddler on the far right, closest to the camera. “That’s me,” he said. At least on this point, on this day, his memory was quite clear.

He recalls finishing the race “somewhere in the middle”.

Click on either photo for larger versions.