:02:22
	The ancient Hawaiian sportof surfing can be traced back...
:02:25
	... as far as 1000 years ago,as men, women, children...
:02:29
	... and even Hawaii'sgreat King Kamehameha...
:02:32
	... enjoyed the thrill of riding waves.
:02:38
	In the earliest descriptionof the sport by a visiting European...
:02:41
	... Captain James Cook observedupon watching a surf rider...
:02:45
	... in the year of 1777:
:02:47
	"I could not help concluding this manfelt the most supreme pleasure...
:02:52
	... while he was being driven onso fast and so smoothly by the sea. "
:02:58
	Then in the 1800s,the waves fell flat...
:03:01
	... with the arrivalof the Calvinist missionaries.
:03:06
	Shocked and outragedby the state of undress...
:03:08
	... and the easy mixing of the sexesthat surfing fostered...
:03:11
	... the missionaries banned the sport.
:03:17
	The extinct Polynesian pastimewas then reintroduced...
:03:20
	... in the early 20th centuryby Alexander Hume Ford...
:03:23
	... a globetrotting promoter, who setabout reviving island tourism...
:03:27
	... by romanticizing surfing at Waikiki.
:03:32
	In 1912 came surfing'sfirst international icon...
:03:36
	... Waikiki beach boy and celebratedOlympic swimming champion...
:03:39
	... Duke Kahanamoku, the only surferto ever appear on a U.S. Stamp.
:03:46
	While traveling the globegiving swimming demonstrations...
:03:49
	... Duke became surfing'sJohnny Appleseed...
:03:51
	... introducing his favorite sportto far-flung places like California...
:03:55
	... New York and Australia.
:03:59
	One of the fans enthralledby the Duke was a young Wisconsin...
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