logo
Duke Kahanamoku: Father of Surfing

Duke Kahanamoku: Father of Surfing

Epoch Times15-05-2025

Duke Kahanamoku (1890–1968), or more accurately, Duke Paoa Kahinu Mokoe Hulikohola Kahanamoku, seemed born to become a waterman. In Hawaii, to be 'waterman' means to understand the ways of the water,
a gift typically passed down through the generations. Perhaps more than any other Hawaiian of his generation, he truly understood water.
Kahanamoku was named after his father, who was named by Princess Bernice Pauahi Bishop. She
was visiting the islands at the time of the baby's birth.
An Unbelievable Record
Kahanamoku was born into a devout Christian home and had five brothers and three sisters. Despite their former connections to royalty, his family wasn't wealthy. His father was a policeman, and young Kahanamoku eventually had to leave school for work to help make ends meet. What he never left, though, was the water. As a teenager he became an avid swimmer, diver, and surfer.
In 1908, he and two friends, Knute Cottrell and Ken Winter, formed Hawaii's first surf club. Organized at the Moana Hotel in Waikiki, members focused on swimming, surfing, canoe paddling, and 'kanikapila,' a Hawaiian word meaning impromptu music sessions that commonly take place at the beach.
Duke Kahanamoku and his group of friends formed a surf club called the Hui Nalu Club in 1908.
Public Domain
By this time, Hawaii had become an American territory. This change of state presented Kahanamoku with numerous opportunities to compete in swimming. On Aug. 12, 1911, he joined an Amateur Athletic Union competition and entered the 100-meter freestyle race, which took place in Honolulu Harbor. The result of the race was so astounding that the judges couldn't believe the result. He'd beaten the world record by 4.6 seconds. In fact, he wouldn't receive credit for the feat until years later.
His First Olympics
With Hawaii now a U.S. Territory, Kahanamoku entered the Olympics as an American competitor. He tried out for the U.S. swim team and easily made it. The 1912 Olympics were held in Stockholm.
Kahanamoku competed in the 100-meter freestyle. In the qualifying heat, he tied the world record. There was no doubt he was the favorite to win. In fact, during the final, he dominated the field so quickly that he actually looked back to see how far ahead he was. Even with this slight pause, he defeated the second place swimmer by two meters. During these Olympics, he also competed in the 4x200
meter freestyle relay in which the team came in second. He was the first Hawaiian to medal at the Olympics.
Duke Kahanamoku cuts a dashing figure at the 1912 Olympic Games in Stockholm.
Public Domain
Immediately a prominent sports figure in America, he began touring to teach swimmers his 'Kahanamoku Kick.' He also showed beachgoers and swimmers how to surf, introducing the sport to Americans on the Atlantic seaboard in 1914.
Related Stories
7/10/2024
9/14/2024
Also that year, he arrived in Australia and New Zealand. Two days before Christmas, at Freshwater Beach in Sydney, he was the star attraction for an exhibition. While staying at the Boomerang Camp at Freshwater Beach, Kahanamoku built a surfboard out of sugar pine and introduced surfing to the Australians. In fact, Kahanamoku's pine surfboard remains on display at the Freshwater Surf Life Saving Club.
An Olympic Return
Having spread surfing around America and Australasia, he set his sights on the 1916 Olympics. Unfortunately, hopes for a repeat performance were doused due to World War I. When America entered the war, Kahanamoku conducted swimming exhibitions in 30 different cities throughout mainland America to raise money for the war effort.
In 1920, Kahanamoku joined the American team
in Belgium, a country that had been pummeled by the war. Nonetheless, the 1920 Olympics were held in Antwerp. Kahanamoku again dominated the field in the 100-meter freestyle. He tied his record in the semifinal, and in the final, he broke it, winning first. A dispute, however, required the race to be swam again. Kahanamoku won again, beating fellow Hawaiian Pua Kealoha. Unlike the 1912 Olympics, the American 4x200 relay team won first with a world record, giving Kahanamoku his third Olympic gold.
Shortly after the Olympics, Kahanamoku pursued an acting career in Los Angeles. From 1922 to 1930, while living in L.A., he appeared in 28 films. While living in Southern California, he helped popularize the sports of swimming and surfing.
In 1924, Kahanamoku arrived in Paris for the Olympics. It was here that he became close friends with fellow swimmer Johnny
Weissmuller would also enjoy a Hollywood career, best known for his role as Tarzan.
Johnny Weismuller (L) and Duke Kahanamoku laugh in a candid photograph while at the 1924 Olympics in Paris.
Public Domain
The Waterman's Heart
The following year, Kahanamoku did not just demonstrate his ability; he demonstrated his heart and courage. At Newport Beach, California, a 40-foot yacht capsized. Kahanamoku leapt on his surfboard and rescued eight people from drowning. He was joined by two other surfers, who rescued four. The police chief of Newport Beach
He finally moved back to Hawaii, where, in 1929, he quickly made waves … or rode them. He hopped a massive wave that took him 1.128 miles, possibly the longest wave ride of the modern era. In 1932, he returned to the Olympic Games in Los Angeles as an alternate for the water polo team, which won bronze.
Duke Kahanamoku poses with his surfboard in Los Angeles in 1920.
Public Domain
In 1935, it seems he found another calling. Kahanamoku was elected Sheriff of Honolulu, a position he held until 1960, after winning 13 consecutive elections. During this span, he was the U.S. representative at the 1956 Olympic Games in Melbourne, Australia. He was also an official guest at the 1964 Olympics in Tokyo.
Ambassador of Aloha
When Hawaii became the 50th U.S. state in 1959, Kahanamoku was appointed the state's Official Ambassador of Aloha. His international celebrity made him a surefire candidate for the ambassadorship, but it was also due to his friendly personality and his personal creed he called 'Aloha.'
Kahanamoku
'In Hawai'i we greet friends, loved ones and strangers with Aloha, which means 'with love.' Aloha is the key word to the universal spirit of real hospitality, which makes Hawai'i renowned as the world's center of understanding and fellowship. Try meeting or leaving people with Aloha. You'll be surprised by their reaction. I believe it and it is my creed. Aloha to you.'
Sam Kahanamoku (L) and his brother Duke Kahanamoku were Olympic medalists in the early 20th century.
Public Domain
In 1966, Kahanamoku was the first person inducted into the International Swimming Hall of Fame. He was inducted into the Surfing Hall of Fame the same year. In 1980, 12 years after his death, a photo of him at the beach, standing in front of a large surfboard, was added to the Smithsonian Institution's National Portrait Gallery. Four years later, he was inducted into the U.S. Olympic Hall of Fame.
In 1990, to celebrate the centennial of his birth, a large bronze statue of Kahanamoku was erected at Waikiki, where his swimming and surfing life began in earnest and set him on the path to becoming known as the Father of Surfing.
Lastly, surfing officially became an Olympic sport in 2021 at the Tokyo Olympics, a moment that can be greatly credited to Kahanamoku's efforts.
What arts and culture topics would you like us to cover? Please email ideas or feedback to

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Olympic president Kirsty Coventry starts work with strong IOC and challenges for Los Angeles Games
Olympic president Kirsty Coventry starts work with strong IOC and challenges for Los Angeles Games

Washington Post

timean hour ago

  • Washington Post

Olympic president Kirsty Coventry starts work with strong IOC and challenges for Los Angeles Games

GENEVA — The world Kirsty Coventry walks into Monday as the International Olympic Committee's first female and first African president is already very different to the one she was elected in three months ago. Take Los Angeles, host of the next Summer Games that is the public face and financial foundation of most Olympic sports. The city described last week as a 'trash heap' by U.S. President Donald Trump is preparing to welcome teams from more than 200 nations in July 2028. Most of the 11,000 athletes and thousands more coaches and officials who will take part in the LA Olympics will have seen images of military being deployed against the wishes of city and state leaders. A growing number of those athletes' home countries face being on a Trump-directed travel ban list — including Coventry's home Zimbabwe — though Olympic participants are promised exemptions to come to the U.S. Several players from Senegal's women's basketball team were denied visas for a training trip to the U.S., the country's prime minister said. A first face-to-face meeting with Trump is a priority for the new IOC president, perhaps at a sports event. Welcome to Olympic diplomacy, the outgoing IOC president Thomas Bach could reasonably comment to his political protégé Coventry. The six Olympic Games of Bach's 12 years were rocked by Russian doping scandals and military aggression, Korean nuclear tensions , a global health crisis and corruption-fueled Brazilian chaos . Still, Coventry inherits an IOC with a solid reputation and finances after a widely praised 2024 Paris Olympics, plus a slate of summer and winter hosts for the next decade . Risks and challenges ahead are clear to see. For the two-time Olympic champion swimmer's first full day as president Tuesday she has invited the 109-strong IOC membership to closed-doors meetings about its future under the banner 'Pause and Reflect.' 'The way in which I like to lead is with collaboration,' said Coventry, who was sports minister in Zimbabwe for the past seven years, told reporters Thursday. Many, if not most, members want more say in how the IOC makes decisions after nearly 12 years of Bach's tight executive control. It was a theme in manifestos by the other election candidates , and the runner-up in March, IOC vice president Juan Antonio Samaranch , will lead one of the sessions. 'I like people to say: 'Yes, I had a say and this was the direction that we went,'' Coventry said. 'That way, you get really authentic buy-in.' In an in-house IOC interview, Coventry also described how she wanted to be perceived: 'She never changed. Always humble, always approachable.' That could mean more member input, if not an open and contested vote, to decide the 2036 Olympics host. Coventry's win was widely seen as positive for the ambitions of India, and its richest family, to host the Summer Games that will follow Los Angeles in 2028 and Brisbane in 2032. Nita Ambani, the philanthropist wife of industrialist Mukesh Ambani, has been an IOC member since 2016 and helped promote India's Olympic bid in Paris last year. She and Coventry are seen as being close, and the 2036 hosting award is among the biggest decisions pending. 'It is an open question,' Coventry told reporters Thursday. 'For me as a president I need to be able to remain neutral.' Qatar is bidding for the Summer Games for a fourth time and Saudi Arabia also is interested. A regional Middle East bid could be a political and logistical solution. A Bach legacy is the policy of fast-tracking well-connected bidders into exclusive negotiations toward a rubber-stamp vote by IOC members. At some point in Coventry's presidency, Russia could possibly return fully to the Olympic family. It is unclear exactly when less than eight months before the 2026 Winter Games opening ceremony in Milan. Russian athletes have faced a wider blanket ban in winter sports than summer ones during the military invasion of Ukraine. Even neutral status for individual Russians to compete looks elusive. Vladimir Putin offered 'sincere congratulations' on Coventry's election win, with the Kremlin praising her 'high authority in the sporting world.' However, there seems little scope for the IOC to lift its formal suspension of the Russian Olympic Committee imposed in 2023 because of a territorial grab in sports administration. Four regional sports bodies in eastern Ukraine were taken under Russian control. Coventry said she will ask a task force to review IOC policy relating to athletes from countries involved in wars and conflicts. The first Summer Games under a female presidency will be the first with a majority of athlete quota places for women. Another task force is promised to look at gender eligibility issues, after the turmoil around women's boxing and two gold medalists in Paris. The new World Boxing governing body said last month it will introduce mandatory sex testing. Coventry often states the importance of 'Olympic Values,' which include gender parity, inclusion and inspiring young people through sports. 'That is something that we can never, never, never compromise. And we have to be proud of that.' The top-tier Olympic sponsor program might have peaked in Paris with 15 partners earning the IOC more than $1.6 billion in cash and services over the past two years. The sponsor slate is down to 11 after all three Japanese sponsors and US tech firm Intel did not renew, though a major new backer from India is all-but promised. Total revenue was $7.7 billion for 2021-24, including $3.25 billion of broadcasting revenue in 2024. It helps fund the Olympic Channel media operation in Madrid and about 700 staff in Lausanne. Salary and staff costs topped $250 million last year. Though the future broadcasting landscape is hard to predict, the IOC has said $7.4 billion already is secured through 2028, and $4 billion for the 2033-36 commercial cycle. That sum was topped up in March with a foundational $3 billion deal. NBC renewed for two more Olympics through the 2034 Salt Lake City Winter Games and the 2036 Summer Games that look destined for Asia. The IOC also has a 12-year deal with Saudi Arabia through 2036 to host a video gaming Esports Olympics, though the launch is delayed until at least 2027. ___ AP Olympics:

In America's Outfield, Giants' Ramos, Lee and Yaz bond over differences (and trash talk)
In America's Outfield, Giants' Ramos, Lee and Yaz bond over differences (and trash talk)

San Francisco Chronicle​

timean hour ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

In America's Outfield, Giants' Ramos, Lee and Yaz bond over differences (and trash talk)

The San Francisco Giants feature America's Outfield, if you define America as a cultural and ethnic melting pot. The left fielder is Puerto Rican, the center fielder is South Korean, born in Japan, and the right fielder is American, with Polish and Italian immigrant roots holding up his family tree. Left to right, they are Heliot Ramos, Jung Hoo Lee and Mike Yastrzemski. Pronounce and spell all three names correctly, win a prize. It's a defensive rainbow coalition. Probably the first Dominican/Korean/Polish-Italian American outfield in major league history. They've come to the right team. The Giants, New York and San Francisco, are big on ethnic outfield firsts. The first MLB all-Black outfield — Monte Irvin, rookie Willie Mays and Hank Thompson in the 1951 World Series. The first all-Latino outfield, which was also the first and only all-brothers outfield — Felipe, Matty and Jesus Alou, for eight games in 1963. Ramos, Lee and Yastrzemski are close neighbors in the clubhouse, too, their lockers side-by-side-by-side in one corner. Make it a foursome, counting Justin Han, Lee's interpreter. The Giants' clubhouse dressing cubicles are arranged by position. 'It's about being close to the guys you're going to be playing close to,' Yastrzemski says. 'There's so much communication that goes on out on the field, and it all starts in here, so it's nice to be close to each other. We can talk about how we're going to play against a certain team, how we're going to do against a certain guy, so it's pretty helpful.' In their first full season together, the three have become buddies. Amigos. Be peu. 'Sometimes baseball,' Lee says when asked what the three talk about, 'but more of it is just joking around, you know, being friendly with each other.' 'We're super close to each other,' Ramos says, referring to more than geography. 'We have a good communication, we talk a lot of crap to each other, we just play around a lot.' Yastrzemski says, 'We go out to eat on the road together a decent amount. Me and Ramos both have families, so if they're on the road, one of us will be missing (from dinner), but we try to do as much stuff together as possible.' Language is not a barrier. Ramos speaks English fluently, working at it since he signed his first pro contract at 17. 'I feel like I'm still learning a lot,' Ramos says. 'It was a challenge for sure when I was coming up, but I feel pretty good at it now. It was a main thing for me, I watched everything in English, all my friends were Americans, that helped me a lot. I like talking, so I just go out there and talk, I'm not shy.' Lee works hard on his English. 'Jungy's done a great job of focusing on learning English, and he understands really well,' Yastrzemski says. 'I don't think he's quite comfortable talking to the media in English, but he does pretty well with us, and he understands just about everything we're saying, which is great. 'At the same time, I'm learning some Korean and some Spanish words, we all just kind of mix and match and have fun with it. There's some interesting conversations.' What has Yastrzemski learned in Korean? 'A lot of it is probably stuff that I can't say (for print). That's obviously our nature, the first place we want to go is to learn the curse words and the ways to make fun of each other.' Lee says, through Han, 'I have Justin around, he helps out, but the players also help out with English, so that makes it comfortable for me.' Learning English is no picnic for a South Korean. English has sounds that don't exist in Korean, and vice versa. Humor helps, it's kind of universal. 'Youngie's pretty funny,' says Ramos, who gives Lee's nickname a Latin flavor with the soft J, while Yastrzemski gives it the hard J — Jungie. The three have stuff in common, such as athletic bloodlines. Lee's father, Jong Beom Lee, was a star player in the Japanese and Korean major leagues. His nickname was Son of the Wind. Jung Hoo's nickname in Korea was Grandson of the Wind, although his speed is only slightly above average. Ramos' older brother Henry is a true baseball journeyman, currently in the 16th year of that journey, which has included a cup of coffee in the big leagues and two seasons in the Korea Baseball Organization. Another older brother, Hector, was a professional soccer player. Yastrzemski's grandfather is, of course, Red Sox Hall of Famer Carl. Carl's parents emigrated from Poland to become potato farmers on Long Island. Mike's mother's family traces back to Italy. All three Giants have roots in great baseball cultures. South Korea came relatively late to the game, but has produced 29 MLB players, seven of whom are currently in the majors. Puerto Rico's rich baseball world has churned out more than 400 big leaguers, including late Giants legend Orlando Cepeda. Culture-wise, Yastrzemski trumps his buddies. Historical records show that in the early 1600s, Polish immigrants brought a sport to the New World, a game called palant, played with a bat and a ball made of rags, to the amusement of Native American spectators. In the outfield, Ramos, Lee and Yastrzemski communicate with looks, gestures and baseballese. Question to Lee: How do you say, 'I got it'? Lee (skipping his interpreter): 'I got it.'

Olympic president Kirsty Coventry starts work with strong IOC and challenges for Los Angeles Games
Olympic president Kirsty Coventry starts work with strong IOC and challenges for Los Angeles Games

San Francisco Chronicle​

timean hour ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Olympic president Kirsty Coventry starts work with strong IOC and challenges for Los Angeles Games

GENEVA (AP) — The world Kirsty Coventry walks into Monday as the International Olympic Committee's first female and first African president is already very different to the one she was elected in three months ago. Take Los Angeles, host of the next Summer Games that is the public face and financial foundation of most Olympic sports. Most of the 11,000 athletes and thousands more coaches and officials who will take part in the LA Olympics will have seen images of military being deployed against the wishes of city and state leaders. A growing number of those athletes' home countries face being on a Trump-directed travel ban list — including Coventry's home Zimbabwe — though Olympic participants are promised exemptions to come to the U.S. Several players from Senegal's women's basketball team were denied visas for a training trip to the U.S., the country's prime minister said. A first face-to-face meeting with Trump is a priority for the new IOC president, perhaps at a sports event. The six Olympic Games of Bach's 12 years were rocked by Russian doping scandals and military aggression, Korean nuclear tensions, a global health crisis and corruption-fueled Brazilian chaos. Still, Coventry inherits an IOC with a solid reputation and finances after a widely praised 2024 Paris Olympics, plus a slate of summer and winter hosts for the next decade. Risks and challenges ahead are clear to see. New leadership style For the two-time Olympic champion swimmer's first full day as president Tuesday she has invited the 109-strong IOC membership to closed-doors meetings about its future under the banner 'Pause and Reflect.' 'The way in which I like to lead is with collaboration,' said Coventry, who was sports minister in Zimbabwe for the past seven years, told reporters Thursday. Many, if not most, members want more say in how the IOC makes decisions after nearly 12 years of Bach's tight executive control. It was a theme in manifestos by the other election candidates, and the runner-up in March, IOC vice president Juan Antonio Samaranch, will lead one of the sessions. 'I like people to say: 'Yes, I had a say and this was the direction that we went,'' Coventry said. 'That way, you get really authentic buy-in.' In an in-house IOC interview, Coventry also described how she wanted to be perceived: 'She never changed. Always humble, always approachable.' That could mean more member input, if not an open and contested vote, to decide the 2036 Olympics host. The 2036 decision Coventry's win was widely seen as positive for the ambitions of India, and its richest family, to host the Summer Games that will follow Los Angeles in 2028 and Brisbane in 2032. Nita Ambani, the philanthropist wife of industrialist Mukesh Ambani, has been an IOC member since 2016 and helped promote India's Olympic bid in Paris last year. She and Coventry are seen as being close, and the 2036 hosting award is among the biggest decisions pending. 'It is an open question,' Coventry told reporters Thursday. 'For me as a president I need to be able to remain neutral.' Qatar is bidding for the Summer Games for a fourth time and Saudi Arabia also is interested. A regional Middle East bid could be a political and logistical solution. A Bach legacy is the policy of fast-tracking well-connected bidders into exclusive negotiations toward a rubber-stamp vote by IOC members. Russia's return At some point in Coventry's presidency, Russia could possibly return fully to the Olympic family. It is unclear exactly when less than eight months before the 2026 Winter Games opening ceremony in Milan. Russian athletes have faced a wider blanket ban in winter sports than summer ones during the military invasion of Ukraine. Even neutral status for individual Russians to compete looks elusive. Vladimir Putin offered 'sincere congratulations' on Coventry's election win, with the Kremlin praising her 'high authority in the sporting world.' However, there seems little scope for the IOC to lift its formal suspension of the Russian Olympic Committee imposed in 2023 because of a territorial grab in sports administration. Four regional sports bodies in eastern Ukraine were taken under Russian control. Coventry said she will ask a task force to review IOC policy relating to athletes from countries involved in wars and conflicts. Gender equality The first Summer Games under a female presidency will be the first with a majority of athlete quota places for women. Another task force is promised to look at gender eligibility issues, after the turmoil around women's boxing and two gold medalists in Paris. The new World Boxing governing body said last month it will introduce mandatory sex testing. Coventry often states the importance of 'Olympic Values,' which include gender parity, inclusion and inspiring young people through sports. "That is something that we can never, never, never compromise. And we have to be proud of that.' IOC housekeeping The top-tier Olympic sponsor program might have peaked in Paris with 15 partners earning the IOC more than $1.6 billion in cash and services over the past two years. The sponsor slate is down to 11 after all three Japanese sponsors and US tech firm Intel did not renew, though a major new backer from India is all-but promised. Total revenue was $7.7 billion for 2021-24, including $3.25 billion of broadcasting revenue in 2024. It helps fund the Olympic Channel media operation in Madrid and about 700 staff in Lausanne. Salary and staff costs topped $250 million last year. Though the future broadcasting landscape is hard to predict, the IOC has said $7.4 billion already is secured through 2028, and $4 billion for the 2033-36 commercial cycle. That sum was topped up in March with a foundational $3 billion deal. NBC renewed for two more Olympics through the 2034 Salt Lake City Winter Games and the 2036 Summer Games that look destined for Asia. The IOC also has a 12-year deal with Saudi Arabia through 2036 to host a video gaming Esports Olympics, though the launch is delayed until at least 2027.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store