Tag Archives: Waikiki Surf Club

“Tarzan” Smith paddled a surfboard to Kauai in October 1940

–>View the photos and news clippings about Gene “Tarzan” Smith

[text]In 1940, Gene “Tarzan” Smith paddled a surfboard from Oahu to the island of Kauai. The event was sponsored by the Hawaii Surfing Association which had been formed just a year earlier.

When the Waikiki Surf Club was formed in 1947, Smith became its first beach attendant.

My father, John Lind, president of the HSA, was in charge of preparations for Smith’s Kauai paddle. These photographs and undated newspapers clippings were found among his papers. Use the link at the top of this entry to view this small collection.

More from my dad’s files: Duke, Dad Center, and a day at Makapuu in 1953

[Update (December 8, 2010): Well, sometimes I’m just plain wrong. Today I found two columns by Honolulu Advertiser Sports Editor Red McQueen that provide the real story behind these photos. Turns out that the photos are actually from May 1959 and were not from the 1953 body surfing event as I originally believed. I made the mistake when trying to make sense of these unidentified photos. I’ll add a link to the correct story as soon as it’s finished.]

–> See today’s full photo gallery.

[text]On Sunday, August 16, 1953, the Waikiki Surf Club sponsored the first body surfing championships held in Hawaii since the beginning of World War II.

In addition to the body surfing competition, the day included a demonstration by the Hawaii Surf Life Saving Association “featuring the surf-life saving reel that was introduced to Hawaii recently by the visiting Australian Team,” according to newspaper stories at the time.

Honolulu newspapers reported that 4,000 spectators crowded Makapuu for the event, although photos taken that day don’t appear to confirm the high attendance.

Police ticketed cars illegally parked along the highway, with one officer reporting 50 tickets given out within an hour.

Nine bodysurfers were chosen as “champions”: Mango Kalahiki, Louis Zarko, Charles Todd, Kennis Rowe, Rabbit Kekai, Renny Kruger, Noah Kalama Sr., George Downing, and Buster Kine.

I found several small envelopes containing 120 format negatives that turned out to be from this daynat Makapuu.. Most were in bad shape, virtually melted together. I tried soaking one set in water for several hours, but the emulsion didn’t soften enough to separate the sheets of negatives.

But I was able to salvage a few in relatively good condition, and was surprised to find several photographs of my dad, John Lind, with Duke Kahanamoku and George “Dad” Center. They were at what appears to be a reception for several unidentified visitors.

The photos also show Duke escorting several guests at Makapuu, the life saving demonstration and body surfing contest. The reception appears to have been associated with this event.

[text]I don’t know who the visitors were. I was sure my dad would recall this blond, who certainly looks like a model or a movie star, but no lights went on when I showed him the photo.

A reader identified one of the people at the reception as Sam Harris, manager at the Outrigger Canoe Club, so it’s possible that’s the location. Other guesses are the old Waikiki Tavern, where the Waikiki Surf Club had its office, or Don the Beachcomber’s restaurant in Waikiki.

And who is that blond? And don’t you love that surfer hood ornament? Several online references indicate it was on Duke Kahanamoku’s car.

If you recognize any other people, please email me or leave a comment below.

Waikiki Surf Club: Christmas Day, December 25, 1948

The Waikiki Surf Club was just a year old when they put on a winter event featuring a six-mile surfboard race that sent paddlers from Waikiki out around Diamond Head and back.

The winners of that inaugural race posed for this photo. It’s just one of several photos from that long ago Christmas that I found among my father’s papers.

From left to right: Rabbit Kekai (#1), George Downing (#2), Robert Krewson (#3), Herb Bessa (#4), Edward Whaley (#5), Wally Froiseth (#6), Dorian Paskowitz (#7), Frank Freitas (#8), Blue Makua (#9), Russ Takaki (#10).

->Click on the photo to more from the Waikiki Surf Club in December 1948.

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Behind the scenes at the Makaha International Surfing Championships in 1958

The temperature in Honolulu rose to 86 degrees on August 19, 1958, but it probably seemed hotter as members of the International Surfing Championship Committee began arriving at the old Pearl City police station for their first planning meeting looking ahead to the next annual event at Makaha, considered the premier and most prestigious surfing contest in the world at the time.

Members of the committee represented the event’s co-sponsors, the Waikiki Surf Club and the Waianae Lions Club. The groups had worked together on the annual event for five years. In 1958, the committee’s chair was Waianae Lion’s president, William Jackman, who had come to Hawaii twenty years earlier and was stationed at Wheeler Army Airfield. He later became a senior civil service employee at Hickam Air Force Base.

Fireworks started as soon as Jackman called the meeting to order and announced the Lions had a proposal. He passed a copy of a written statement to Waikiki Surf Club president John Lind, then asked another Lion, David Klausmeyer, to read the prepared statement.

Klausmeyer announce the Lions had voted to withdraw as co-sponsors and instead take over and put on the event on their own.

The statement began by pleading inexperience and their own failure to follow rules established by the Internaional Association of Lions Clubs, which were described as “strongly opposed to any Lions Club co-sponsoring any project with another organization.”

But the Lions’ statement also cited “other pressures beyond our control,” which were not specified. One clue might be the reference to an interest in “fair unbiased competition”, possibly alluding to criticism already being heard from Austalian and California surfers who went home saying the local judges were biased in favor of Hawaiian surfers.

The Lions offered to turn the event back over to the surf club if, in the future, the Lions were unable to continue.

The Lions did not disclose that, prior to this meeting, they had already applied on their own for a permit from the city to use the Makaha Beach area for the event.

Lind, speaking on behalf of the Waikiki Surf Club, said he was shocked by the proposal and had no choice but to flatly reject it and, instead, accept the Lions’ decision to withdraw as co-sponsor, minutes of the meeting show.

After a brief private meeting, the WSC members announced their official decision to reject the proposal and instead “carry on the project alone.”

During an open discussion that followed, Klausmeyer claimed the idea of the Makaha championships had originated with the Lions Club. This was quickly challenged by WSC members, who said the idea was originally floated by Lind, who raised it during an invited presentation to the Waianae Lions about the organization of the Waikiki Surf Club.

Following the meeting, the WSC executive committee immediately moved to register the Makaha event name, negotiate the beach permit with the city, and assigning responsibilities for everything from security to food to judging, pushing ahead without their former co-sponsor.

On September 20, 1958, Lind wrote Jackman to confirm that the Lions were now out of the picture and to “arrange an early impeccable settlement with the Waianae Lions Club in connection with all the property relating to the project which we at present jointly own.”

Operating on a tight timeline, Lind said the program had been set for the weekends of November 22-23 and November 29-30.

Jackman responded with a request for a joint audit of the finances by the treasurers of the groups, and the audit was quickly set in motion.

What is most striking, from today’s perspective, is how little equipment and money was held after putting on the event for five years. There was $494.54 in the bank as of October 12, 1958, along with three umbrellas for judges, 20 event vests, 18 judges shirts and hats, and 13 souvenir shirts. Total current value of these items was estimated at $72.76.

The accounting also notes that Chinn Ho has not followed through with a donation promised in 1957, and had advised he would not contribute more than $250.

Ho had been a backer of the Makaha Championships from the beginning, apparently believing that the public attention and news coverage would increase the worth of his land holdings in the area.

The partnership between the two organizations officially came to an end on October 22, 1958, when a check for $247.27 was sent to the Lions Club from the championships account and another $82.12 from the Waikiki Surf Club “in full settlement of International Surfing Championships funds and property.”

Documents of these events can be viewed in pdf format.

-Ian Lind, Kaaawa, Hawaii

Footnote: After writing this brief account of the 1958 incident, I decided to see whether my father, John Lind, had any recollection of the events. He’s in a nursing home suffering from Alzheimer’s, and his memory, while fading, can be unpredictable.

I don’t like to put him on the spot by directly asking whether he remembers something particular. In this case, I told him that I had been reading about the time in 1958 when the Lions Club attempted to take control of the Makaha event.

He immediately looked at me and said sharply: “Where did you read that?”

A short pause, then he continued: “I know it happened, but where was it published?”

Then he shook his head. “These are things no one talked about.”

He seemed to vaguely recall Jackman, but had a clearer recollection of Doak Klausmeyer. He said Klausmeyer, who appears as “David Klausmeyer” in the minutes of the meeting, lived in a house right next to the beach at Makaha. I’m assuming that Doak and David were the same person, although that could be wrong.

He relaxed after a minute or two, sinking into his pillow, and reflected: “I wonder what people will say about me when I’m gone?”

I left that question unanswered.

But it seems to me that “things no one talked about” are histories that need to be written.