Windsurfer

Watercraft

Effect: Surfs-Up

Type: Sailboard

Place: North America

Size: 14' 4"

Date: 1970

Builder/Location: Jim Drake and Hoyle Schweitzer, Windsurfing International

Donor: Gift of Dr. and Mrs. David Gundlach and Sons

Museum Location: 48

The capabilities of a simple surfboard are greatly increased when the basic components of a sailboat—sail, hull, daggerboard, and fin—are added.

Windsurfer, circa 1970
Jim Drake and Hoyle Schweitzer, Windsurfing International, California
Gift of Dr. and Mrs. David Gundlach and Sons

The capabilities of a simple surfboard are greatly increased when the basic components of a sailboat—sail, hull, daggerboard, and fin—are added. Windsurfing dates to the 1930s, when surfer Tom Blake experimented with putting a mast on a surfboard. The idea resurfaced in 1965 when Newton Darby designed a universal joint to connect a mast to a floating platform he called a sailboard.

The windsurfer owes much of its popularity to its suitability for all skill levels and its relatively low cost.

Origin: California, USA

Windsurfer