Sportsways harness spotted on feebay

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Now that you own it, begin researching its genealogy...or heritage ?
Suggest
1) Famous western movie star who was an early active diver
2) Famous pioneer diver...began diving in 1929
a) pole spear....spear fisherman ....SoCal Spear fishing meet
b) inventor-
c) LA County UW instructor
3) Dick Klein
a) established a number of pioneer diving companies ...one survives

SDM

Charlie Sturgil. "The Old Walrus," as he was affectionately known, started his diving career in 1929 in the frigid waters off Northern California. Inventer of masks and spears.

Dick Klein was one of the divers who started SCUBAPRO that we know today.
 
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Dead dog,
I might have known if posted you would have the answers

You are absolutely 100 % correct !

Charlie Sturgil did indeed make the original back pack in his garage for Coop some times around 1956 or so. Richard Dick Klein was the president of Healthways which created Sportsways which again attempted another spin off with SCUBA Pro..

Charlie Sturgil and his garage was the "temple of diving." So many first that found their way into the maim stream of
diving and in a modified form is still in use today throughout the current world wide community of diving. The diving world owes this unheralded pioneer diver/inventor so much ,

Dick Klein on the other hand business practices and equipment left so much to be desired. So much so that as you recall there was very little if any Healthways or Sportsways equipment sold in SoCal shops.

SCUBA Pro was also a spin off from Healthways in their later days in 1962. They never got off the ground but did manage to produce a 1962 (Healthways) SCUBA Pro catalog which I have a copy and which current management of SCUBA Pro demies exists !

Than same year Healthways went bankrupt and all the assets were sold. The late Gus dela Valle and Dick Bonin purchased the assets and began to build the SCUBA Pro to the company we know and respect today.

The Klein's heirs apparently have the legal ownership of the word "SCUBA" as related to water sports.

In the early 1970s Dick Klein's cousin Sheldon Breslow established the short lived company SCUBA Master. I was retained as a consultant for a year and a half for the then princely sum of $50.00 a month.

A little history in a nut shell......

Bill I assume you gleaned the information from my article "The Mask" about Charlie making me a dive mask so many years ago which as I recall was published in my dedicated column in the national dive magazine Z"Discover Diving .

My computer is acting up (what's new???) would you be so kind as to C & P the article for the three readers of this thread. It would be appreciated.

Your response on this thread was fast and correct....But you don't need to study or research a subject since you are one of the rare ones who have lived diving history for the last 50 almost 60 yearss

Now for the Sportsways involvement and Sam Le Cocq or as he is popularly know as Sam the crook




.
 
Dead dog (AKA Bill)

I located an old posting of "The Mask" right here on the SCUBA Board so hold off your search.

The following is for the three posters to the thread and those who are or have followed the thread but have not posted


I published the following DYI article over twenty years ago (almost thirty years now) in my dedicated column "The Way it was...." in the monthly in the now defunct San Diego based national dive magazine "Discover Diving."

It is about one of the all time great pioneers of diving the late Charlie Sturgil and a mask he made for me so many years ago, at the very beginning of recreational diving, long before NAUI, PADI and the rest of the Instructor alphabet .

"The Mask,

One of the great pioneer divers of all times was the late Charlie Sturgil. "The Old Walrus," as he was affectionately known, started his diving career in 1929 in the frigid waters off Northern California where he hunted for abalone by a method he described as "feeling for abalone." He would dive on a reef, feel until he found an abalone and pry it off, without the use of mask, fins, snorkel or thermal protection.

Charlie began diving with a mask using a Japanese mask in the late 1930s which was loaned to him by his good friend Bill O'Conner. A few years later after the end of WW 11, Charlie, a master tool and die maker and an inventor of sorts, developed the necessary tooling to produce masks on a semi-custom basis for himself and a few close friends. I consider myself very fortunate to have been included in the latter category.

In early years during the genesis of recreational diving the masks were either too large, too small, too stiff or after a few dives, would rapidly deteriorate into a gummy, sticky mess. This did not make for comfortable diving! After using a number of the masks of that era,the Japanese imports, and the American made *Sea Net, I decided it was time to contact Charlie to ask him if he could make one of his custom masks for me.

After checking my meager finances, found I could possibly afford one of Charlie's masks, so I gave him a call. "Sure, Sammy, I'd be happy to make a mask for you, come on over", Charlie replied to my request. Within moments I was off to the temple of Southern California diving, Charlie Sturgil's garage.

I was met by this jovial hunk of a man with his infectious, ever-present smile. "Hey ya, Sammy" was always his cordial greeting. Alter a few moments of catching up on the diving scene it, was time to get to work. "Sammy, I'm now making two masks; the original for $6.00 and a new oval model for $8.00", Charlie explained. After considerable soul searching and penny counting, I opted for what I felt I could afford, the original round mask for $6.00.

Now, Charlie's garage was something to behold. It appeared to be in total disarray, and the best way to describe it would be the day after a big sale in a bargain basement. Diving equipment in various stages of repairs, pieces of metal, lengths of stainless rods scattered about... Omnipresent was the huge metal turret lathe and miscellaneous metal working machines. But to Charlie, it was his arena, it was where he excelled in turning these seemingly scrap pieces of metal into custom spear points, spear shafts, yes, even masks.

Charlie knew the location, size, shape and type of everything in his garage. His storage system was logical and certainly workable, but it still defies the imagination how he managed to find anything, let alone make anything, but he did.

Charlie went to work with the speed and skill of a emergency room surgeon. He immediately uncovered a length of 5 inch O.D. soft rubber World War 11, surplus firehose, from which he cut a 4 inch piece. He placed the piece of rubber hose in the wooden mold and proceeded to his trusty bench grinder where he slowly cut a 1/8 inch wide, 3/32 deep groove all around the edge for the glass. This was followed by the rough contouring for the forehead, cheeks, and upper lip. He then went to his metal rack and withdrew a piece of 3/4 x 16 inch 22 gauge stainless steel, which he placed in his specially constructed mold and carefully, yet skillfully, forced the stainless steel around the mold forming it into a familiar round mask shape. His next step was to form the band evenly and smoothly around the mold creating the lip for the compression hand with light rapid laps of a hammer. Using silver solder, the welding process of the era, he soldered the tabs for the strap and the compression screw tabs to complete the band. A piece of pre-cut 1/3 inch glass, the same kind used for window glass, was taken from the shelf and fit into the groove; the compression band placed around the mask and the compression screw tightened.

At last, the mask was assembled. My own custom Sturgil mask! Charlie proceeded to take some cursory measurements of my then youthful face, and returned to the grinding wheel, skillfully grinding a little here, a little there, another trial fit, a little more grinding. Finally, a perfect fit. A final hand finish with fine sandpaper, attaching of the strap, cut from a truck inner tube, and I was the proud possessor of a real genuine Charlie Sturgil Original Style Diving Mask.

This occurred many years ago when diving as well as life was much simpler, a time when pride in workmanship and ownership were at a premium. Charlie made almost 40 of these one of a kind custom dive masks, however only three are known to have survived the rigors of our disposable society, mine, Alex Pierce's of Toronto, Canada and Charlie's widow's Laura's mask which now on loan and rests in a Southern California museum. And indeed they are museum pieces... the three remaining masks are all almost sixty five years old and represent an era which was experienced by only a precious few which will never be experienced again upon this earth.

Charlie has reverend position in the fraternity of diving pioneers; he won the world's Spearfishing contest in 1950 with a pole spear, was a LA County Underwater Instructor and serendipity developed much of the spearfishing and SCUBA equipment which has become mainstream in todays diving.

I will never forget Charlie, nor will anyone who ever knew him.... nor will there ever be another mask like a Sturgil Mask.

Dr Samuel Miller"

<< copyright 2116 by Dr.Samuel Miller,111 and Dr.Samuel Miller,IV may not be reproduce for private or commercial use with out the specific written permission of the authors >>

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
post script;

* the first American made dive mask was designed and patented in 1940 by Frank Roedecker and produced by Pops Romano who owned the first recreational diving manufacturing company "Sea Net" located in Terminal Island San Pedro California. The mask is known as the Sea Net mask and today is highly prized by collectors.

I used my Sturgil mask for about 10 years until Bud Brown's "Swimmaster wide" view appeared and switched to that mask which I still use. The 65 + year old Sturgil mask has been stored in an air tight 50 cal ammo box all these good and great years is as good as new and could be worn if I so desired..

We Charlie, Frank and myself were all members of a long forgotten long disbanded dive club called the Southern California Skin Divers. Only two members are still alive, Harry Vetter (LA Co & NAUI #4 & your truly LACo, NAUI #27 & PADI 241 or 2241.my records were lost, CMAS and several other long forgotten instructional organizations )

Charlie passed on November 15 1984, His devoted wife Laura passed on a few years ago at the age of 90.

About 25 years ago at the "Fathers of Spearfishing" gathering at Seatec/inflatable systems in Corona California I organized a "Tribute to Charlie." Nothing formal, we just stood around and told stories about our experiences with Charlie--and what stories were told...The experiences we had!

If Charlie knew you and liked you he always addressed you in the familar; Ie Sammy, Bobbie, Jimmie,--Those he didn't have great admiration or didn't know well it was formal Sam, Bob or Jim.

His daugher Laura Lee was married to Billy Meistral, one of the twin brothers who founded Dive and Surf and the very sucessful Body Glove. Billy and his brother Bobby passed on several years ago and are now diving on that big reef in the sky.

A SoCal spearfishing club "The Fathomiers" has been presenting the Charlie Sturgil spearfishing meet for about 30 years...It came full circle when Charlie's grand daughter, Laura Lee Gonta won the meet several years ago using one of Charlie's legendary pole spears.

I still have a number of items custom made for me by Charlie; the mask, spear points, fish stringers, dive float frame etc. All are as good as they were when he made them so many years ago, no longer is use they are religated to places of honor in my dive locker, a silent testimony to days and dives of the past.

So now you know...Just a little about Charlie Sturgil and small part of recreational diving...but there is a lot more to tell about Charlie

SDM
 
Killerflyingbugs,

~~~ Thank You for the complement. ~~~~
The responses were a total waste of my time and effort.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~ But ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
It did document a piece of equipment and personality from the genesis of recreational diving
for the great self appointed historians who can remember pieces of equipment that was never made, people who were never evolved and events that never happened.

I suspect that you as NAUI Certified and a card carrying member of ADC appreciate this sort of information.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
For the Modern late model tube sucking bubble blower OP who did not know Gary Cooper (Coop to the tribe ) and his wife Rocky were involved in diving I would suggest that you do a little more research ....

You will discover Coop & Rocky were featured on the cover of a Life Magazine wearing a D&S wet suit I have the magazine but I think it is time for you to do some research.
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FYI Lamonica birth name was Joseph Benjamin Lamonica AKA "JBL."

May I suggest that you research him and especially my article about Joe titled "The man with the Golden gun" which was published in a national diving magazine about 25 years or more ago. You will learn a lot about him and the very beginnings of recreational diving in SoCal--- where it all began.

The article is about the celebration of Joe's many years in the industry.

Joe personally hand selected a limited number Sawed Off Mangum spear guns to be presented to diving personalities of the era and certain JBL dealers. The guns that were selected were highly polished, serial numbers were applied and they were gold plated

I was fortunate to receive number 007 the first one presented out side of the factory.

Now you know just a little more about Joe

SDM
 
Greatly enjoy your posts Sam. Learning about the early history on the West Coast adds a sense of how far we have come and an appreciation of what the early pioneers of our sport did to getting us where we are today.

Thanks for all your information.
 
Sam a picture of the gun would be great.
Thanks for the history lesson, it is most insightful and I appreciate it.
 
[QUOTE="TN Traveler, post: 7800256, member: 38513"

Greatly enjoy your posts Sam. Learning about the early history on the West Coast adds a sense of how far we have come and an appreciation of what the early pioneers of our sport did to getting us where we are today.

Thanks for all your information.
[/QUOTE]
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TN Traveler,

It is gratifying to learn that some one enjoys my posts.

I strongly suspect most do not have any inkling as to the fascinating history of the evolution of recreational diving and those few of us who were privileged to be participants of an era that lasted only a few short years and will never ever be experienced again.

Our numbers have shrunk to a precious few: Dottie Frazier, at 95 still going strong is the leader of the pack
In1955 she had the distinction of being the first female Underwater Instructor in the world, ( LA County of course) , she was followed by Barbara Allen, Zale Parry and Lyn Chase-- All well into their mid 80s. (and so am I ! now on the down hill slope to 90.) Dottie was also the first woman member of the famous Long Beach Neptunes Spearfishing club, was the first woman to own a dive shop, first woman to make a dry suit and the first woman to make a wet suit.

We who were participants all reside in California -- where it all began. We remain in contact via e mail and occasional visits. The most devastating is when an e mail arrives that begins with "Did you hear about ..."

Since I had a sub profession of writing; 4 dedicated columns in dive magazines, the first US dedicated news paper column and was the first Guest Editor of Skin Diver Magazine as well as appearing on the cover and authoring articles, (the only person with that distinction) I have been encouraged by my venerable compatriots to write a book on the real diving history of recreational diving

After a few threads on this board it appears that writing a book on recreational diving would not be a profitable endeavor and a waste of my money and as I approach the 9th decade of life certainly a foolish waste of the precious time remaining. ( as was responding to the OP on this thread --waste of time and effort )

All to soon now diving history will be inherited by junior nimrods who preface their comments with I heard, I believe, I suppose, but devoid of historical facts

Sam Miller,111

PS I was just glancing at my avatar "Then N Now" so true!
I would like that you take the time to google my name plus either Diver or SCUBA--it may surprise you ...sdm

Killerflyingbugs

The golden gun is a Sawed off Magnum part number G44 every part but the barrel & rear balance bar is gold plated. When I wrote the article I took the gun to a professional photographer and even he could not get a good image. I have a copy in my file that I can reproduce and send you via snail mail. Will need your address.

sdm
 
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My interest in diving/scuba stared in 1955, when as a "pup" of 9 years old, I read Jacque Cousteau's "The Silent World". From that point I was hooked on the ocean beneath the surface and scuba as my vehicle to get there. Growing up on the East Coast, I had no knowledge of what was happening on the West Coast. That is why you "history lessons " are so fascinating. Look forward to learning more about how our sport developed.
 

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