Surfing museum fundraising appeal
Just one donation could help THREE worthwhile organisations
- Surfers Against Sewage (SAS), The Surfing Museum and Cancer
Research UK. Many thanks in advance for your support.
What's needed
* We need to raise £500
* That £500 will be donated by The Surfing Museum to
Surfers Against Sewage
* In return for this donation, SAS will give the museum a
one-off piece of surfboard art by respected British artist
Conrad Shawcross, created as part of SAS 'Drawing Boards'
campaign (see photo below)
* This is an 'eco surfboard' and when we display it next year
it will help us get twin messages across - the need for more
sustainable living, and highlighting the work of SAS in helping
to keep our seas, beaches and rivers free from pollution
* Any additional funds raised will be donated to Cancer Research
UK (receipts will be posted on the museum website)
* A list of donors is published on a roll of honour under
the surfboard photo below
How to donate
You can send donations securely online via Paypal to: thesurfingmuseum@btinternet.com
You can post cheques or Postal Orders (no cash) to: The Surfing
Museum Ltd, c/o Seaside Cottage, 69 St George's Road, Brighton
BN2 1EF
No amount is too small - every penny helps!

Donations received so far - thank you!
Jem Oxenden and family - Jersey
Dave Gale - Dorset
Bianca Robinson - Brighton
Peter Robinson - Brighton Sam Kiddy - South Devon Darren Warburton - Thailand!! Andrew Coleman - Brighton
Hugo Tagholm - Dorset Henry Marfleet - South East England Scarborough Malibu Club -
www.s-m-s-c.org.uk
Tiki Surf Company - Braunton, Devon -
www.tikisurf.co.uk
Doctors Jamie & Tabitha Morrison - Brighton Sally Parkin - The Original Surfboard Company, Devon -
www.originalsurfboards.co.uk Anneke Prins - via Paypal online
Bob & Eileen Groves - Hampshire Chas Walker - Brighton An art history of British surfing
At least 20,000 people have seen our latest show
'an art history of British surfing' in 2008 - we have visited
Havant, Christchurch and Grimsby, continuing to bring surf
history to communities around the UK.
We have a limited number of large posters for sale at £15
including postage - email us for details.

Here's a short video from ITV
Local showing our installation at Grimsby.
Special surf history displays
We also ran a series of special shows in 2008 - teaming
up with legendary surf photographer Jeff Devine for a two
month exhibition of his work in Brighton - plus we had a display
at the now world-famous Paddle Round the Pier beach festival
in Brighton in the summer.

Museum founder Pete Robinson with Jeff Divine &
the late Viscount Ted Deerhurst's Lightning Bolt in Brighton
- photo by Bianca Robinson.
Our sponsors
Oxbow have opened a great new store at South
Street in Chichester, West Sussex. The Surfing Museum loaned
a couple of vintage surfboards for the opening ceremony which
was performed by Oxbow pro surfers Sam Bleakley and Ben Skinner
(see photo below). We wish Oxbow every success for the shop
and thank them for their sponsorship of The Surfing Museum
which has now been confirmed for 2009.

Gabe Davies becomes British Surfing Museum Patron
One of Europe’s top pro surfers has been appointed
Patron to the British Surfing Museum.
Quiksilver and Gravis rider Gabe Davies, who holds multiple
British and national titles, has agreed to join the not for
profit organisation and will help out with publicity, advice
and special events.
“We asked Gabe because we believe he is the perfect
role model for British surfing,” said museum founder
and director Pete Robinson, “his recent achievements
alone – riding some of the biggest waves in the world
off the coast of Ireland – mean his name is already
legendary.”
“He has his own great history of British surfing, with
his many competition wins and performances in oceans the world
over – but more than that he is a forward thinking man
with great credentials. Gabe is someone all surfers of all
abilities can look up to with admiration.”
Gabe has been surfing since the age of 11, taking to the waves
at his home beach of Tynemouth in North East England. He now
divides his time between the UK and South West France where
he lives with his wife – the best selling fictional
author Lauren Davies.
The British Surfing Museum, sponsored by Oxbow UK, is in detailed
talks with a trust in Cornwall and plans to establish a permanent
home by 2010. Among its many artefacts, the museum owns more
than 100 original British surfboards that create a complete
timeline of the last century of surfing in the UK.
Its research has recently uncovered remarkable footage of
stand-up surfing in Cornwall in 1929, plus references to surfing
taking place in England in the mid 19th Century and evidence
that Captain James Cook’s crew tried surfboards when
they first made contact with Hawaii in 1778.
Gabe Davies said: “One of the most unique and fascinating
aspects of surfing is its history and its heritage. Every
surfer feels he or she is a direct descendant of the sport
of Hawaiian kings. We all share that special connection with
the ocean. The British Surfing Museum is the best way for
myself and others to view our heritage first hand, as well
as to help educate, and of course protect the roots of British
surfing. This is something I feel proud to support and I'd
encourage participation in the museum at every level”
The surf museum project was started in 2003 by 47 year old
Robinson, who runs ITV’s community broadband internet
service ITV Local, and currently operates a series of touring
exhibitions visiting surfing communities around the UK.
Next dates are May1st – June 14th 2008 at Red House
Museum in Christchurch, and June 28th – September 7th
2008 at the National Fishing Heritage Centre in Grimsby.
As well as appointing Gabe Davies as Patron, the museum’s
steering committee has now been expanded to include World
Champion kite-surfer Kirsty Jones, Surf Nation author Alex
Wade, surf writer and journalist Alf Alderson, and Neil Watson
from East Anglia who cut his teeth in surf publishing in the
1970s with seminal titles that included Ripple and Surf.
2008 tour - 'an art history of British surfing'
Watch a video about the surf history exhibition on ITV by
clicking
here.
Art and surfing have been inextricably linked for hundreds
of years, and now a new exhibition looks at how both these
elements combined to glide into British consciousness over
the past few centuries.
From early sketches of surfers during the voyages of Captain
James Cook in the 18th century and iconic hand sculpted wooden
surfboards, to the flower power of the 1960s and garish fluorescent
colours of the 1980s – paintings, posters, photography
and film – ‘an art history of British surfing’
is a visual feast.
The act of riding a wave itself, is perhaps the purest form
a surfing art; the surfer propelled by a pulse of energy from
mother nature, painting lines on the ever changing canvas
of the wave.
This exciting new show - 'an art history of British surfing'
- has been put together by Brighton-based not for profit organisation,
The Surfing Museum and is sponsored by the clothing company
Oxbow and the Wavedreamer graphics team in North Devon.
“Surfing is part of everyday culture in the UK today,
it’s imagery is the marketing person’s dream come
true,“ said director of The Surfing Museum, Peter Robinson.
“It is something that has always captured the public’s
imagination, probably because of its innovation, free flowing
form and laid back lifestyle.”
Among the artefacts on display will be original British surfboards
dating back almost a century featuring art and sculptural
form. It will be complemented by an eclectic mix of memorabilia
showing amazing artwork from the creative minds of surfers
and those drawn to this ancient pastime.
Also on show will be stunning replicas of ancient Hawaiian
surfboards hand carved by the Tom Pohaku Stone – a lecturer
in Hawaiian culture and surfer of legendary status. The exhibition
has already been seen by thousands of people at museums in
Havant and Christchurch this year.
The
National Fishing Heritage Centre in Grimsby, Lincolnshire
- June 28 to September 7, 2008 (open 7 days)
We will also have a special 1960s surfing display
at the Paddle
Round the Pier charity weekend on Brighton beach on July
5 & 6, 2008 alongside our friends & sponsors Oxbow.
The museum also hopes to be in Bournemouth for a special
event to mark the completion of their artirficial surfing
reef - this will include a visit from the legendary Hawaiian
waterman Tom Pohaku Stone who will be blessing the waves.
Work is starting on Europe's first artiifical surfing reef
next to Boscombe Pier at Bournemouth on England's south coast
- it's hoped the first waves will be ridden on the new reef
around Autumn 2008.
We are now in our fifth successful year of exhibitions all
over the UK and brought British surfing history to more than
150,000 people.
Below is a beautiful 1975 surfboard from Tris of Cornwall
featuring psychedelic art that will be on display in 'an art
history of British surfing'.

New logo - and our VW split screen van is back!
Our friends at Prosign
have reworked The Surfing Museum's logo into a great new look
and signwritten our VW split screen van - she's looking beautiful!
We now have some stickers featuring our new logo for sale
in our online
shop. (Photo by Bianca Robinson).

Oxbow sign 3 year sponsorship deal
We are stoked to announce that Oxbow UK are going to sponsor
The British Surfing Museum for the next 3 years. This is fantastic
news, and their generous donation has made all the difference
to our unique project. Oxbow UK have now been our headline
sponsor since 2004 - we're proud to be associated with them,
and thank them deeply for their generous support.
Pottz joins surfing's hall of fame
Martin Potter is inducted into the Surfing Hall of Fame in
California on July 27. Pottz won the surfing world championships
for Britain in 1989 & pioneered the aerial moves that
are popular today. Congratulations! click
for more

Surfing in Ireland - since 1949!
Check out The Silver Surfari for the latest revelations in
the remarkable story of surfing on 'our' side of the Atlantic
Ocean - an amazing tale of one man's quest to ride the waves
on a wooden board he made from old tea chests! Go to www.irelandsurfari.com
Britons win two world kneeboarding titles in 2007
Congratulations to Jody Winter from Newquay who
is the new Ladies World Kneeboard Champion and Richard Smith
from Polzeath who was crowned by the International Surfing Association
as the Pro Junior World Champion. Natalie Silverthorne also
from Polzeath consolidated the British success by taking second
place in the women's event. The 2007 championships were held
in Santa Cruz California.
British Surfing Museum online shop - great new products
for sale!
The British Surfing Museum's online
shop has now been re-stocked and redesigned
by our friends at
Blue Cloud Media.
We have awesome surfing gifts for sale, including stunning
art from the lens of surf photography pioneer Tom Blake and
a great range of books about the history of both surfing and
skateboarding - all profits go direct to the museum to help
us keep our project going for future generations to enjoy.
British Surfing Association 40th Anniversary Exhibition
We visited Covent Garden in London, the International Surfing
Centre in Newquay and the Old Sunday School in St Ives in
autumn 2006 to help celebrate 40 years of the BSA. All of
the artwork has been auctioned to raise money for the British
junior team and the whole event has been a great success.

Aberdeen goes off!
Thousands of people from all over the world, including Hawaii,
visited the first ever exhibtion of British surfing history
in Scotland. The event at Aberdeen Maritime Museum turned
up some great stories about the surf scene in Scotland and
brought back some great memories for the locals. The event
generated incredible publicity - even featuring on drive time
radio in New Zealand!

We also took part in the Banff surf festival as part of the
exhibition, judging the surfing competition and showing the
classic film Stylemasters to the locals. During the day the
director of The Surfing Museum Pete Robinson gave a surfing
demonstration on a 1968 Harbour v-bottom on the small waves
that popped up during the morning.

Photos of our Aberdeen exhibition by Bianca Robinson.
Tom Pohaku Stone carves new friendships in England
We've recently staged an historic two week surf festival featuring legendary
Hawaiian waterman and cultural ambassador Tom Pohaku Stone.
The event was based around Saltburn in the north east of England
and staged with the Captain Cook Birthplace Museum.
During his stay Tom hand carved a replica of an ancient Hawaiian
Olo surfboard and rode it next to Saltburn pier. The festival
was looking at Cook's first contact with surfing and the links
between Hawaii and Britain over the centuries. Tom very generously
left three wooden boards behind for British surfers to see
and use - including one donated to The Surfing Museum - thanks
Tom!

Pictured is Tom on the left, with director of The Surfing
Museum Pete Robinson next to Saltburn Pier.
The festival featured surf films, music and talks on surfing
history - but the highlight was probably the public workshops
where everyone could come along and help shape the solid wood
surfboard designed to be similar to those seen by Captain
Cook when he arrived in Hawaii in the late 1700s.
It was Tom Stone's first time wearing a full wetsuit and
surfing in the cold water of the North Sea, but he loved it
and said the waves were fantastic - everyone was stoked to
see him in the line-up.

We were also proud to have the world's oldest surfboard on
loan from the Bishop Museum in Honolulu for our exhibition
of British surfing history at the Captain Cook Birthplace
Museum near Saltburn. The board was ridden by Hawaiian royalty
and almost certainly dates back to the time when Cook first
saw surfing in the Islands in 1778.

A big thanks to the Bishop Museum and Tom Pohaku Stone for
their aloha.
Britain's oldest longboard?
The Surfing Museum has received its most incredible donation
yet - an original 1930s 12 foot hollow wooden surfboard that
turned up in a barn in Sussex. It's in great condition and
we'll let you know when and where it will be on display (but
we've got to take it out for a ride first!).
Other new arrivals include original 1920s and 1940s surf/swim
suits and an incredible book with a surfing picture on the
cover that was written and published in Britain in 1908 -
and a great Silva Yates longboard made in the Channel Islands
in the 1960s.
Top Barbadian surfer drops in
On his way back to Barbados, former pro surfer Zed Layson
visited The Surfing Museum's gallery in Brighton to soak up
the atmosphere and go back in time. Zed has toured the world
competing and was ranked in the top 20 amateurs - coming up
against top surfers like Kelly Slater and taking part in the
World Surfing Championships.

Help us find vintage surf shorts
We're trying to find a pair of 1960s Hang Ten surf shorts
like those below - can you help?

The floral 'baggies' were made under licence in Newquay for
the famous Californian brand Hang Ten, they were in almost
perfect condition despite being almost 40 years old and were
taken from our last Brighton exhibition. The label in the
back says "Made by the Newquay Knitting Co".
If you've seen a pair like them we could replace them with,
please get in touch.
Stars visit our shows
The actor Peter Gunn who starred in the classic British surf
movie Blue Juice alongside Catherine Zeta Jones, Ewan McGregor
and Sean Pertwee, dropped in to visit The Surfing Museum.
Peter played one of the central characters, Terry, who after
an emotional battle (and painting himself silver & dancing
at an all night beach party!) learned to surf and ended up
living the dream. We're stoked to have his signature in our
visitor's book. . now we just need to get him in the water
again!
Three times world masters surfing champion Gary Elkerton
also visited the British Surfing Museum. The Australian legend
was in the resort on the south coast of England campaigning
for cleaner seas with the environmental pressure group Surfers
Against Sewage.
He spent an hour looking round the historic surfboards, and
is pictured next to a classic early 1970s Weber Australia
single fin.

Your old surfing gear needed!
We need you to have a hunt around your garage, shed or loft
to see is there's anything we could use! The museum is still
looking for longboards by Stuart (St Ives), Bickers, Silva
Yates, Williams (St Ives), Powers, Groves-Davies, West Coast,
Tiki and Bilbo - plus colourful surfboards from the 1970s,
80s and up to the present day.
We also need old wetsuits from all eras, plus films, photos,
books, magazines, t-shorts, shorts, surf wax and general surfing
memorabilia.
Donations are subject to a written agreement, so
that you know they'll be properly looked after and kept for
the public to see in the future.
Thanks!
A big thank you to the family of the late Viscount Ted Deerhurst
for their support. Ted was Britain's first professional surfer
back in the 1970s. The Surfing Museum exhibitions feature
a special tribute to Ted - we're thankful to be able to keep
his memory alive.
Oxbow UK have supported us since day one - we couldn't have
got this far without them. Please support our sponsors by
checking out their awesome range of clothing and equipment.
Mahalo Oxbow!
Blue Cloud Media have worked hard to create
our new secure online shop - thanks guys!The Surfing Museum
continues to be supported by website designers Bionic
Media, hosting from Fastnet, plus
exhibition and poster design from Wavedreamer.
We really appreciate the support of everyone who has travelled
to see our exhibitions. The comments in our visitor's book
keep us going!
Other projects
Books - we're in the new Surf Nation book by Alex Wade, plus
we have supplied archive images for the new Stormrider
guide to the Atlantic Isles and worked on text and images
for the latest edition of the Surf UK guidebook
by Alf Alderson that's out now.
Magazines - we have recently appeared in The Surfer's
Path magazine with an article on Scottish surfing
history, plus we supplied historic surfing images for stories
in Cornwall's excellent Stranger lifestyle
magazine and the 'adult' mag Knave who ran
a big feature on surf history.
"The Royal" - a drama on ITV1
- we supplied copies of pre-1969 surfing posters and photos
to decorate the bedroom of one of the main characters, who
is a surfer. It's an offshoot of the popular Heartbeat series.
"Tribes - Surfing" - a mini
documentary on CBBC channel - we provided unique early film
footage of surfing in Britain and historic photographs and
drawings. The producers used the history section of our website
to write their script. The programme featured four young Newquay
surfers and tells the story of how surfing began.
"Reel Life" - British Library
DVD for schools and libraries - The Surfing Museum director
Peter Robinson wrote the script and recorded the voiceover
for the section all about British surfing history. We also
supplied cine movie footage of surfing in Cornwall in the
1960s along with photos and scans of historic surfing books.
"200 Years of Surfing Literature"
- a book published in Hawaii - we provided scans of British
surf publications and Peter wrote reviews of them for this
great book, which is the most comprehensive list of surf writing
ever printed.
We're happy to have helped students all over the UK with
their research projects into British surfing history and culture,
including some from the world famous surf technology degree
course at Plymouth University.
We can supply vintage surfing memorabilia and cine
movie footage for film productions or media use. We have a
large archive of classic surfing photos and literature available
for research or publication - but please remember we're all
volunteers and so can't answer all requests.
Have a great year and may the waves be with you!
Aloha and mahalo..
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