their stamp on surf city
Mike Sciacca
Amid a bustling beach crowd that walked along a busy stretch of Main
Street near the corner of Pacific Coast Highway, Steve Coleman was
crouched down at the sidewalk, hovering over a cemented plaque in
front of Jack’s Surfboards.
A week prior to when the Huntington Beach Surfing Walk of Fame,
the nation’s first sidewalk monument honoring surfing, was to induct
its 11th class, Coleman, with cleaning tool in hand, was busy
preparing the sidewalk for today’s 10 a.m. festivities.
“Every year, a week before the ceremony, we come out here and
clean ‘em up, re-highlight them and get the grime and gunk off these
plaques,” said Coleman, who works for Permeco, a granite and marble
wholesaler based in La Verne. “There’s been a lot of foot traffic
over these plaques in the past year, but we’ll have this place
looking sparkling clean for the big day.”
The Surfing Walk of Fame honors individuals who have made
significant contributions to the sport and culture of surfing. Adding
to the luster of the sidewalk monument today will be the names of the
2004 induction class: Charles “Corky” Carroll, Pat Curren, Gordon
“Grubby” Clark, Rich Harbour and Lisa Andersen.
Huntington Beach resident Meg Bernardo will receive Roll Call
recognition.
“With this year’s class, the Walk of Fame now has over 60 names in
Granite emblazoned on the sidewalk,” said Peter Townend, Walk of Fame
board member. “This ceremony is the longest, continuing
acknowledgment of its kind for surfing in North America.”
Each inductee receives a granite stone embedded in the sidewalk in
front of Jack’s Surfboards, located at the corner of Main Street and
Pacific Coast Highway.
Dedicated on May 28, 1994 by honoring Duke Kahanamoku as the
Father of Modern Surfing, the Huntington Beach Surfing Walk of Fame
became part of the city’s surfing culture.
Each year, the Walk of Fame’s selection committee conducts
research through surf associations, museums and media venues around
the world to compile a comprehensive ballot of qualified candidates.
An international panel of voters affiliated with the surf
community cast their votes in five categories.
The 2004 Surfing Walk of Fame induction class includes:
Corky Carroll
Surf Champion
Charles “Corky” Carroll still holds the record for most victories
of all time at the Huntington Beach Pier, and is the Surfing Walk of
Fame’s first-ever two-time inductee.
A much-decorated surfer, Carroll was a junior West Coast
Championship winner in 1963, finished third at the 1966 World
Championships and won the paddle race title at the 1964 U.S. Surfing
Championships.
He went on to win the 1967 Big Wave Championships in Peru, took
the 1968 World Small Wave Championships in Florida and captured five
consecutive U.S. Championships from 1966-70.
Carroll later branched out and learned to play the guitar and
recorded multiple record albums. He wrote two books, designed
surfboards, did some acting and stand-up comedy, managed a car
dealership, worked as both a ski instructor and tennis pro and spent
a near decade as the advertising director of Surfer magazine.
Today, the Huntington Beach resident runs the highly successful
Corky Carroll Surf School and does surf retailing at Huntington Surf
and Sport.
Carroll also starred in 13 Miller Lite television commercials.
Pat CurrenSurf Pioneer
Curren, who lives near Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, was a North Shore
pioneer, renowned big wave rider and revolutionary shaper. He’s the
father of Tom Curren, who preceded his father into the Surfing Walk
of Fame.
He also was a founding member of the notorious “Wind and Sea Surf
Club”
Rich Harbour
Local Hero
Harbor, a legendary surfboard manufacturer from Seal Beach, still
has a shop located on Main Street in Seal Beach.
As of this month, Harbour Surfboards has produced more than 26,000
boards.
Lisa Andersen
Woman of the Year
Andersen is a four-time world champion and former U.S. Open of
Surfing winner.
The Ormand Beach, Fla. resident and mother of two won her first
world title in 1994, then won three more after that, to become the
first surfer since Australian Mark Richards to win four consecutive
championships.
She appeared on the cover of the April 1996 issue of Surfer
magazine and was the second female surfer to make the cover in the
publication’s 40-year history.
Gordon “Grubby” Clark
Surfing Culture
Clark is a surfboard manufacturing pioneer whose foam blanks still
account for 90 percent of the surfboards made today.
Surfer magazine named Clark No. 10 on its 25 Most Influential
Surfers of the 20th Century.
Meg Bernardo
Honor Roll
Bernardo is administrator of Assn. of Surfing Professionals North
America and Surfing America.
Created in 1995, the Honor Roll pays tribute to those individuals
who have contributed to surfing and its culture, and are deserving of
recognition, but might not qualify to receive a stone on the Walk of
Fame.
“Meg has been the heart and soul of the ASP on the mainland since
1982,” Townend said. “She’s been instrumental in growing the sport
and helping guide the careers of several pros.”
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