© 2012 California Surf Museum
SURFING LEGENDS - Tom Blake
Tom Blake One of the Most Important Watermen of this Century
Tom BlakeslThomas Edward Blake was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on March 8, 1902. Eleven months later, his mother
Blanche Wooliver Blake, died from tuberculosis. Devastated by his wife's death. Tom Blake, Sr. gave young Tom to family
members to be raised for the next seventeen years. In 1919, Tom Blake headed west facing many lonely, hungry years
ahead, riding freight trains and taking various jobs in New York, Florida and California.
In 1922, Tom became a vegetarian and a pioneer of the health food movement. He has stuck to a philosophy of exercise
and strict dietary habits. His understanding and perception of nature has become an inspiration to many.
Tom adapted to life on the California beaches easily. Blake was a "natural" waterman and with less than one year of formal
training became a world class swimmer racing against legends such as Duke Kahanamoku and Johnny Weismuller. His
work as a lifeguard kept him close to the pool and ocean.
While working as a lifeguard at the Santa Monica Swimming Club in 1924, Tom found an old surfboard being stored there.
He paddled out into the surf, and got his first successful ride. Realizing the sport was quite enjoyable, Tom traveled to
Hawai’i that same year to surf in the warm water. For the next thirty years. Tom would either live in or travel to, Hawai’i every
year.Tom Blake Model
During this era, surfboards weighed between 90 and 150 pounds. Some of the Hawaiian 16-foot long Olo boards weighted
as much as 200 pounds. Because of the weight factor, Tom Blake conceived of and build his first hollow board in 1926. The
first hollow board was a redwood plank that had hundreds of holes drilled through the deck and was covered with a thin
sheet of veneer, top and bottom. The next step in the evolution of the hollow board was to hollow out a solid board by
carving chambers in the hull. This was first done on Tom's racing paddle boards. Step three in the hollow board evolution
was the use of transversely braced hollow hull, using ribs for strength, much like an airplane wing is built The result of this
design was a strong 40 to 70 pound board, depending on length.
The hollow surf and paddle board soon could be found worldwide. From 1932 to the early 1950s, there were four major
builders of Blake's hollow board. Thomas Rogers, Robert Mitchell, L.A. Ladder Co., and the Catalina Equipment Company.
The hollow paddle rescue board was adopted by the Pacific Coast Lifesaving Corps and used by the Red Cross National
Aquatic Schools for instruction. Today the rescue paddle board can be found Internationally on beaches where lifeguards
are employed.
In 1928, Blake won the first Pacific Coast Surfriding Championships at Corona Del Mar, California, using his hollow
surfboard. Tom Blake was the first surfer to ride the waves at Malibu Point, California.
In 1930, Blake built the first waterproof camera housing used for surf photography. In 1932, he started the Mainland to
Catalina Paddleboard Race and won first place. That same year he also invented the sailboard. In 1935, Blake placed the
first fin on a surfboard and also wrote his first book, Hawaiian Surfboard. Soon after he wrote Royal Hawaiians and again in
1959, authored Hawaiian Surf riders. His most recent book appeared in 1969, and was titled Voice of the Atom. Tom Blake
worked as a stunt double in dozens of movies with such noted actors as Clark Gable. A complete list of Tom Blake’s aquatic
accomplishments, surf, safety and rescue inventions would take pages to record.
When Tom Blake was given recognition by the National Surf Life Saving Association of America for contributing immensely
to many phases of aquatic safety and personal accomplishments in ocean lifesaving, it was the statement, "And most
important, the thousands of lives saved because of his inventive contributions
in
the interest of fellow human beings" which pleased Blake the most.
Tom Blake, a complex, intensely creative yet simple-living man, is considered
to
be one of the most important watermen of this century. Blake passed away at
age 92, on May 5, 1994, in Ashland, Wisconsin.
- All material for this project was researched and written by Gary Lynch.
Funding for this exhibit came from Surfing Magazine, with special thanks to
David Gilovich.
NATURE = GOD
-- Tom Blake inscription in stone, somewhere in Wisconsin, 1964