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Famous surfers, young and old, attended a gala event, which opened
the doors to the Museum, on the 100th anniversary of the town of Haleiwa,
on August 8, 1999. Today the museum is open most afternoons. Locals,
tourists and historians now visit the museum daily.
The collection of old 
and antique surfboards is of interest to enthusiasts and
collectors.
The first snow-board, first motorized surfboard and  old
hollow
wooden boards are now on display.
Ancient artifacts are
displayed near collectable bottles and

interesting Hawaiiana . A scale model of the Haleiwa
Theatre fronts the screen where surf movies are shown all day
long.
.Learn about big waves and the culture of the North Shore.


      
     
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History
of Surfing on the North Shore
Surfing was said
to have been the one sport in ancient times which Hawaiian Chiefs
and the common kanaka shared in common. Early visitors to these
islands were amazed that the natives would play in that part of the ocean
that they had grown to fear the most.
To take control of a breaking wave and actually ride it to the
shore was something the most experienced seamen of the world had never
considered. On Oahu's North Shore, men and women together surfed
the waves known to them as Paumalo, named for the waves
that were torn off the swimmer. We know that break today as Sunset
Beach, the crown jewel of Hawaiian surfing sites. As good as the waves
were on the North Shore, they remained a secret known only to the locals
for some time.
Surfing with long
hollow boards, built like small boats gained popularity in Waikiki,
as did surf-riding with Hawaiian
canoes. In time the availability of light balsa wood and later, fiberglass
revolutionized the construction of surfboards as well as canoes. The sport
of surfing was popularized by the Olympic swimmer Duke Kahanamoku.
Californians took to the
sport in droves and made pilgrimages to Hawaii for the big waves of winter.
Even as late
as the Mid 1950s, the destination of visiting surfers from the West Coast
was Makaha, site of the first International Surfing Contest
in 1953. Makaha was, at that time, the place for big rideable waves.
As Greg Noll recalls: "The North Shore in those days was as remote
as the back side of the moon, the Great Taboo Land. The subject
of many spooky stories and legends." While a few locals occasionally
surfed at Paumalo, the best of the North Shore breaks, so well known and
famous today, then lay ignored, unnamed and unridden.
When crowds at
Makaha chased Noll and his friends to the North Shore, one fateful
day, they spotted a young Hawaiian named Henry Preece surfing all
alone at Haleiwa. When he invited them to join him, the stage was set
for a shift in emphasis from Makaha to the wide-open spaces of Haleiwa
and beyond. Over the next few years, Noll and other Californians pioneered
the various North Shore surf spots. One of those surfers that pioneered
the big waves at Waimea was a photographer named Bruce Brown. He
is said to have named both Pipeline and Velzyland. To get
an idea of how uncrowded the breaks were in those days, check out Bruce
Brown's 1960 film Barefoot Adventure, now available on video
at the North Shore Surf and Cultural Museum.
From that point
on, surfing the North Shore evolved. One day in the early 60s, Sunset
was breaking big with excellent conditions. Just about every famous surfer
of the era happened to be out in the lineup, tearing up the waves in a
session so memorable that Fred Van Dyke wrote an article about it for
Surfer Magazine. Kimo
McVay, owner of Duke's restaurant in Waikiki, read the story and conceived
the idea of a special invitational Surf Contest, ridden for honor, that
in celebration of Hawaii's legendary waterman, would be called The
Duke Kahanamoku International Surfing Championship, with Duke
himself presenting the awards.
This trophy is on display at the North Shore Surf and Cultural Museum,
today.
Inaugurated in
California in 1968, the Smirnoff Pro Surfing Contest was
moved to Hawaii's North Shore in 1970. First place purses of $2000 and
$1000 respectively, the Smirnoff and the Duke
represented the birth of a North Shore Tour. After this, the number of
surf meets held on the north shore and the amount of available prize money
expanded almost yearly. The Hawaiian Professional Surfing Association
Haleiwa Open was added in 1971, the Hang Ten American Pro
Championship and the Pipeline Masters in 1972. Today,
the Triple Crown of Surfing has combined the three most
prestigious contests and offered a very high purse if one surfer were
to win all three. During the winter surfing season, there now seems to
be an endless series of surfing contests. For more information on the
History of Surfing on the North Shore, or just to watch
the latest surfing videos, stop in at the North Shore Surf and Cultural
Museum, in the North Shore Marketplace.
Surf
Museum links;
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