Huntington Beach Is on Surfari to Stay
Main photo courtesy of Visit Huntington Beach; other photos by Garrett Martin
This weekend Huntington Beach pays tribute to a man who did more than most to popularize surfing—even if he wasn’t a surfer himself. Brian Wilson might not have ever waxed his own board, but his songs with the Beach Boys helped define how the world saw surfing and California as a whole, and the beachfront town known as Surf City USA will recognize that contribution with a surfboard paddle out in his honor on International Surfing Day—June 21.
Wilson wasn’t from Huntington Beach, but the two share an unbreakable connection to surfing. The beach town’s climate and weather patterns make it an ideal spot for surfing year round, and it was one of the first places in America to really embrace the sport. Over the last century surfing’s become a vital part of Huntington Beach’s culture and identity, an ever-present connection that’s represented throughout town in a myriad of ways and is as impossible to miss as the Huntington Beach Pier.
That pier, which extends almost 2000 feet into the Pacific Ocean, provides not just a great fishing spot, but a prime vantage point for watching the surfers that flock to the beach every morning. On the pier you’ll also find commemorative plaques honoring fallen residents who played a crucial role in the town’s history, with more traditional symbols of civic pride like politicians sharing space with HB legends like the beloved surf shop owner Rick “Rockin’ Fig” Fignetti. And right in front of the pier, on the edge of the Pacific Coast Highway, you can eat at Duke’s—a bright, colorful Hawaiian restaurant named after Duke Kahanamoku, whose legacy courses throughout Huntington Beach still today, almost 60 years after his death.
Duke Kahanamoku was born in the final years of the Kingdom of Hawaii, before the United States annexed the islands. He went on to represent his new country in three Olympics, winning gold medals for swimming in 1912 and 1920 and a silver in 1924. Despite his peerless reputation as a swimmer, though, Kahanamoku’s perhaps best remembered today for a different sport: surfing. He helped introduce the world to the traditional Hawaiian sport, bringing it to Huntington beach in 1925. Today you can find the restaurant named in his honor at the pier, and across the street stands a statue of Kahanamoku and his board. Kahanamoku was also the inaugural inductee into the Huntington Beach Surfing Walk of Fame, which officially recognizes him as “Surf Pioneer,” and which starts on the street corner opposite the statue’s.