Skip to main content

Lost LA Field Notes: Surf’s Up!

Displays at the Surfing Heritage & Cultural Center | Katie Noonan
Displays at the Surfing Heritage & Cultural Center | Katie Noonan | Katie Noonan
Support Provided By

Union Bank is a proud sponsor of Lost LA.  

Full disclosure: despite growing up in Orange County, California, I’ve never surfed. And to be perfectly honest, before we made this “Beach Culture” episode of Lost LA, I didn’t realize how far surfing’s influence extended — to my own childhood, it turns out.

As a child, I’d spend hours playing in the waves on my family’s weekly trips to Corona del Mar State Beach. To me, nothing felt more natural. Yet, until surfers like Duke Kahanamoku and George Freeth came to Southern California from Hawaii in the early 20th century, few people ventured beyond ankle-deep water into the surf. Surfers, as historian Peter Westwick explains in the episode, invented modern lifeguarding techniques that made the beach safe for children like me. They also introduced comfortable beach wear that made playing in the waves more enjoyable. (Imagine body surfing in one of those heavy Victorian bathing suits!) Several times over the course of production, I thanked surfers for making those childhood adventures possible. And I resolved to (someday) learn to surf.

Meeting Dick Metz

In the making of this episode, I was — to borrow a word from surf slang — “stoked” to chat with Dick Metz, who shares his encyclopedic knowledge of the evolution of surfing and the surfboard. Dick lived the history he narrates in the episode, witnessing dramatic changes not only to surfing but, more generally, to beach culture and beach fashion.

In fact, we really could have made the episode just about him and his own personal journey.

In conversation with Dick Metz at the Surfing Heritage & Culture Center in San Clemente | Katie Noonan
In conversation with Dick Metz at the Surfing Heritage & Culture Center in San Clemente | Katie Noonan

Dick began surfing near Dana Point in the 1930s. His first board was made from solid redwood and weighed more than a hundred pounds. He rode waves with Duke Kahanamoku, perhaps the most legendary surfer of all time. He was a retail pioneer. Partnering with Hobie Alter, he opened the first retail surf shop on Oahu and later co-founded the Surf Line Hawaii clothing line that introduced Jams surf shorts to the world. And, most impressively, Dick’s globetrotting, hitchhiking surf adventure between 1958 and 1961 took him to breaks in South Africa, the South Pacific, and Australia — a three-year trek that inspired his friend Bruce Brown’s landmark 1966 film, “The Endless Summer.”

More recently, Dick got serious about preserving surf history and founded the Surfing Heritage & Culture Center in San Clemente. See “The Archive” section below for details.

Surfer Duke Kahanamoku posing with his board c. 1915 | National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution
Surfer Duke Kahanamoku posing with his board c. 1915 | National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

Muscle Beach

If I mention Muscle Beach, you just might picture Arnold Schwarzenegger pumping iron next to the Venice boardwalk. But bodybuilding is only part of the story of Muscle Beach. An early cut of this episode highlighted the history of the original Muscle Beach in Santa Monica, which has long provided a home for acrobats, gymnasts, and Hollywood stunt performers. Unfortunately, that segment didn’t make the final cut, but I do encourage viewers to browse Steve Ford’s excellent Muscle Beach website for the full story behind both the Santa Monica and Venice editions of Muscle Beach.

Essential Reading

  • “The World in the Curl: An Unconventional History of Surfing” by Peter Westwick and Peter Neushul (Crown Publishing, 2013)

The Archive

The Surfing Heritage & Culture Center in Orange County boasts one of world’s largest and most significant surfboard collections. Some one hundred artifacts are on display in the central museum space, and each narrates a piece of the story of surfing’s evolution through technological innovation. The center also maintains a research library with extensive archival collections, including more than 100,000 images and complete runs of major surf magazines. The center is open six days a week, Tuesday through Sunday.

Top Image: Displays at the Surfing Heritage & Culture Center | Katie Noonan

Support Provided By
Read More
A sepia-tone historic photo of a man holding a cane standing in front of a food stand, surrounded by various crates, boxes, and advertising signs promoting cigarettes, candies, barbeque and more.

Pasadena Claims To Be The Home Of The Cheeseburger — But There's Beef

The cheeseburger was supposedly invented by Lionel Sternberger at The Rite Spot in Pasadena, when he added a slice of cheese to a regular beef burger and called it the "Aristocratic Hamburger." But the real history behind this fast food staple is a bit more complicated.
A hand-colored postcard of a large, white, colonial-style building with a green tiled roof stands behind a lush landscape of flower beds, a green lawn and many varieties of trees, with mountains looming just behind. An American flag waves at the top of a flagpole above the roof.

From Hiking to Hospitals: L.A. at the Center of the Pursuit of Health

The opportunity to get and stay healthy was a major draw for people to both visit and move to Los Angeles — whether it was during the tuberculosis epidemic (a.k.a. the "forgotten plague") during the 19th century or the health and wellness boom of the early 20th century. Both of these topics are explored in Season 6 of the PBS SoCal Original Series Lost LA.
A black and white photo of an adult dressed as the easter bunny with a giant costumed head, holding a little girl on their left who gives it a kiss on the cheek and, with his right arm, holding a little boy who brings his hands to his eyes as though wiping away tears.

Behold the Bunnies and Bonnets of L.A.'s Past Easter Celebrations

The onset of the spring season heralds the arrival of fragrant flowers in bloom — and all the critters that enjoy them, including the Easter bunny and families who anticipate his arrival with egg hunts, parades and questionable fashion choices.