2020-04-03 Messenger Mountain News - "Early Surfers" by Pablo Capra

"Early Surfers"

by Pablo Capra

Ed Fearon, Don James, and Jack Quigg at Topanga Beach, 1941-12-07. Photo: Don James.

In 2005, former Topanga Messenger editor Susan Chasen and I interviewed the Rusts’ daughter Thais (b.1925) about growing up in Lower Topanga. Thais’s memories, many of which we published in the newspaper and re-published in The Topanga Story, presented a vision of our hometown so unfamiliar that it astonished us.

One of Thais’s earliest memories was watching the enormous German Graf Zeppelin fly by Topanga Beach on its 1929 trip around the world. A few years later, the zeppelin would become a symbol of Nazi propaganda and carry the swastika.

Thais also remembered the gambling ships of the 1930s, which would sometimes anchor off Topanga. They had to stay three miles from the coast to avoid US laws.

Holiday fun was had at the annual “Webster Christmas Party for the Children of Malibu,” a 20-year tradition at John L. Webster’s Malibu Courthouse that started in 1932, and drew hundreds.

A simpler ritual was collecting honey with painter Laura Way Mathiesen (1876-1966), who kept her bees in a side canyon that doubled as a shooting range for the police.

Thais’s favorite memories were of spending whole summers on the beach with her cousin Marilyn Kays (1924-2002), and neighbors Dick Carhart and Ida Lee Carrillo (1924-1948).

We were at the beach probably from eight or nine in the morning till five or six at night. It didn’t matter how large the waves were, we just had fun….

One day, Marilyn and I went with Ida Lee and her dad to the beach. The three of us got out beyond the waves, not knowing that there was a strong riptide. When we couldn’t get back to shore, Ottie called the Santa Monica lifeguards to rescue us. We were picked up just before Sunset Blvd. We were having a great time but Ida Lee’s dad was frantic.

Ida Lee was the daughter of Octavio “Ottie” (1889-1980) and Bessie Carrillo (1889-1980), the niece of actor Leo Carrillo (1880-1961), and a descendant of one of California’s oldest Spanish families.

Other swimming options were the bathhouse of Alfred T. Stewart, rebuilt after the 1926 fire and nicknamed The Plunge, and the private swimming pool of actor/Olympian Johnny Weissmuller (1904-1984) at Las Tunas Beach, where the neighborhood kids liked to jump in from the balcony.

Weissmuller was probably a vacation renter of actress Natalie Talmadge (1896-1969), who lived there with her sons Joseph “James” (1922-2007) and Robert “Bob” (1924-2009). She legally changed their surnames to Talmadge to avoid being reminded of her famous ex-husband Buster Keaton (1895-1966).

In the early 1940s, actors David Niven (1910-1983) and Errol Flynn (1909-1959) took over the house, with Bing Crosby (1903-1977) and Paulette Goddard (1910-1990) living on either side. In the mid-1940s, it became the Las Tunas Isle Motel. Today it’s a private residence again.

After high school, Thais became engaged to Bob Talmadge, but they broke up before the wedding. During World War II, she spent Friday nights scanning the sky for enemy planes from a lookout tower that was across the street from today’s Getty Villa.

In the early 1950s, she was briefly married to a second beach resident, Dave Sykes (1926-2009).

However, a third man from the beach was destined to become her life partner, and surprisingly it was Dave’s younger brother, John “Jack” Sykes (1935-2017), whom she married in 1956.

Jack, Dave, and their sister Beverly (1930-2001) were the children of Sherman (1895-1986) and Gladys Sykes (1897-1987), who owned a bar called The Glen, in Beverly Glen. It had a reputation for being tough, and Sherman carried a gun that he would sometimes leave out on the family table. Their house had a gangplank that led onto the sand. When it was pulled up, it covered the door to keep big waves from splashing in.

Chasen and I interviewed Jack simultaneously, and he shared vivid memories of what Topanga Beach was like during World War II.

By then, the gambling ships had been outlawed, but the Air Force kept an abandoned one off Topanga for target practice. The hills along the coast were full of artillery. It was a common sight to see 100 army vehicles at a time driving down the highway in convoy. At night, drivers kept their headlights off, and a Blackout Warden fined houses where light was visible. One night, a tank came to investigate a fishing boat that shouldn’t have been there.

The Coast Guard had a headquarters at Sunset Blvd., and patrolled the coast on foot every evening, passing by Topanga Beach with bayonets and German Shepherds. Sometimes the army closed the beach to play war games.

Machine gun nests were placed on dirt mounds on either side of the lagoon. One was in front of Jack’s house.

They dug a big hole in the sand, and had soldiers in there. I would bring them cookies from our house, and my dad got so mad at me. I was taking all our stuff out for these guys to eat.

Contrasting with the wartime grittiness was the glamour of Jack’s celebrity neighbors, like actresses Greta Garbo (1905-1990), with whom he took walks, and Shirley Temple (1928-2014), who occasionally asked his dad for a ride to town.

Jack was also surrounded by icons of early California surfing, which included his brother.

[Dave] Sykes was the best surfer I had seen at that time because he lived there and surfed all day, every day. He could just glide and glide.

—Joe Quigg, “The Archivist: Turning Points” The Surfer’s Journal, 2017-09-19

Topanga dweller Sykes’ finely honed speed lines and turning were years in advance of others. Sykes delighted in perfect planing surfaces and placed 15 layers of hand rubbed lacquer over his boards creating a hard shelled outer surface many years before the discovery of fiberglass and resin.

—Craig Stecyk, The Surfer’s Journal

Dave Sykes, 1942. Photo: Joe Quigg, with permission from Gibbs Smith Publisher

The Malibu Point was first surfed in September 1927, when it was still a private ranch, by Tom Blake (1902-1994) and Sam Reid (1905-1978). We don’t know who first surfed Topanga, but it would make sense for Tom and Sam to have tried it before Malibu. Reid is often quoted as saying that “there were only six surfboards in the entire United States” when he graduated from Santa Monica High School in the early 1920s.

Although Reid’s count was meant more to give an impression, two of those “six” surfboards belonged to brothers John E. O. (1915-1990) and Jim Larronde (1917-1989), whose parents had them engraved with the boys’ initials in Hawaii and shipped to their Topanga Beach vacation house in 1921 (John’s redwood board is now in the Museum of Ventura County). In the late 1930s, a transition balsa-redwood surfboard was called the Larronde Model. In the late 1940s, John made a 16-minute home surf movie, popularly known as Sweet Sixteen, of trips he took between Malibu and Santa Barbara.

Their father Pedro Larronde (1875-1922) supposedly built their beach house in 1917, just after the prison camp closed. He may have been given this privilege because his brother John M. (1878-1954) was an executive of the Title Insurance and Trust Company.

Or it may have happened because their grandfather Pierre (1826-1896) had been the legal guardian of Deputy Sheriff Eugene Biscailuz’s uncle William (1864-1943), who was also of Basque ancestry.

Pedro was an executive of the Franco-American Baking Company, and a member of the Los Angeles Athletic Club. For some reason, his wife Gladys (1883-1950) was forced to move their beach house across the street to Old Malibu Road when the LAAC took ownership in the mid-1920s.

The Larronde house became known as the Three J’s Inn, after the boys and their sister Juanita (1912-2004). It was bulldozed in the mid-2000s, along with the Rust house and the rest of Lower Topanga, after State Parks took ownership.

Other early Topanga Beach surfers were Ted Berkeley (1912-1997), Chuck Spurgin (1916-1996), Bob Simmons (1919-1954), Don James (1921-1996), Ed Fearon (b.1921), Jack Quigg (b.1922), the Talmadge brothers, Warren Miller (1924-2018), half-brothers Jerry Hanes (b.1924) and Bobby Jacks (1927-1987), Mike Roberts (1925-2014), Dick Hunt (1926-1967), brothers Dave (1928-2015) and Roger Sweet (b.1930), brothers Ted (1928-1951) and Fred Harrison (b.1931), Howard Terrill (1929-2019), Matt Kivlin (1929-2014), and twin brothers Corny (1930-2011) and Peter Cole (1930-2022).


Jerry Hanes, Bobby Jacks, Bob Talmadge, c. 1942. Photo: Sykes Family.

More than just a random surf pack, this group is actually noted for evolving the sport with their skill, precociousness, and other contributions.

Don James was California’s first dedicated surf photographer.

Bob Simmons and Dave Sweet were influential shapers.

Warren Miller was an early surf filmmaker, then transitioned to ski filming, a passion which he traced back to a freak snowstorm at Topanga Beach.

Many people and businesses change forever because of a simple event. Mine changed on the beach at Topanga Canyon in 1929. It had snowed about an inch the night before and as I walked barefooted in ankle-deep warm ocean water, I stepped out onto the snow and a kind of visceral feeling happened that to this day is impossible for me to explain.

—“Nostalgia,” Idaho Mountain Express, 2010-01-22

(No snow was reported in 1929. Miller could be remembering the snows that fell in the winter of 1931-32.)

Matt Kivlin was considered to be the best California surfer of his generation, and Kathy “Gidget” Kohner (b.1941) caught her first wave on his board, which led to an explosion in surfing’s popularity.

Peter Cole moved to Hawaii to become a big-wave rider, and his brother Corny became the art director of Topanga Beach’s own Surf Guide magazine.

World War II interrupted the lives of many of these young surfers, but offered unexpected opportunities for the Rust women. Thais followed her mom into the aerospace field, getting her first job at Douglas Aircraft. She went on to work at the RAND Corporation and the Planning Research Corporation.

Jack was too young to fight in World War II, but chose a military career anyway when he came of age. He then worked as a plumber, and eventually started his own company.

Jack and Thais raised two daughters, Lori (b.1958) and Lisa (1961-2018), and retired in Orange, CA.

Thais turned 95 on April 5, 2020.

"Early Surfers," republished in the Malibu Times Magazine, 2022-06-01

***
This is an excerpt from the book Topanga Beach: A History, 1820s-1920s. Author Pablo Capra is a former Lower Topanga resident, and continues to preserve the history of that neighborhood on his website, www.brasstackspress.com, and as a board member of the Topanga Historical Society, www.topangahistoricalsociety.org.

About Me

My photo
Los Angeles, California, United States
Official website at www.brasstackspress.com