This week marks the 87th anniversary of a life-saving effort by
Hawaii’s greatest athlete that happened in an ocean far away from Duke’s
Oahu home. It was June 14, 1925, along the shores of Corona Del Mar in
Newport Beach, Calif., where the 34-year-old Olympian gathered with a
few of his actor and actress friends from Hollywood for a day of
surfing. Just a few years before, Duke had helped popularize the sport
in Southern California as he lugged the giant boards that often weighed
between 100 and 200 pounds to the southland’s sandy beaches. Corona Del
Mar was one of his favorite surf spots as the waves often built up along
a sand-bar that was then offshore.
Duke just happened to have his surfboard in hand when the waves
became in his words “building up to barnlike heights.” In an interview
described by biographer Malcom Gault Williams, Duke says, “From shore,
we suddenly saw the charter fishing boat, the Thelma, wallowing in the
water, trying to get to safe water and it was a losing battle.”
The boat was filled with more than two dozen fishermen, and when it
suddenly capsized and its passengers were tossed into the water, Duke jumped into action.
“Fully clothed persons have little chance in a wild sea like that,”
he was quoted as saying. “Neither me nor my pals were thinking about
heroics, we were simply running – me with my board and the others to get
their boards – hoping to save lives. Don’t ask me how I made it, for it
was just one long nightmare of trying to shove through what looked like
a low Niagara Falls.”
Duke furiously paddled through the gigantic waves, oblivious to his
own safety. Miraculously, he made one trip after another into the
churning surf, pulling as many to safety as he could.
In all, 17 people drowned that day, but incredibly Duke and his
friends were able to save 12 potential drowning victims. Duke was
credited with saving eight of those himself. Befitting his humble
personality, he didn’t stick around to try to grab headlines. He left
the scene before reporters even arrived.
The Newport Beach chief of police, Capt. James Porter, was quoted in
the local newspapers: “Kahanamoku’s performance was the most superhuman
rescue act and the finest display of surfboard riding that has ever been
seen in the world.”
No comments:
Post a Comment