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Image 1 for Innovative longboarder, musician, free-thinker, inventor of the shark biscuit, Tom Morey gone at 86

His surfing skills matched other stars of the 1960s, including Miki Dora and Phil Edwards.

Image 2 for Innovative longboarder, musician, free-thinker, inventor of the shark biscuit, Tom Morey gone at 86

In 1965 Tom instigated the first surf comp with prize-money – the Tom Morey International Nose Riding Championships.

Image 3 for Innovative longboarder, musician, free-thinker, inventor of the shark biscuit, Tom Morey gone at 86

He played multiple instruments, here on drums with his jazz band.

Image 4 for Innovative longboarder, musician, free-thinker, inventor of the shark biscuit, Tom Morey gone at 86

Inspired by the ancient paipo, the modern bodyboard had been born.

Image 5 for Innovative longboarder, musician, free-thinker, inventor of the shark biscuit, Tom Morey gone at 86

Tom Morey never patented his groundbreaking invention and ended up witnessing others making large sums of money out of his creation.

Innovative longboarder, musician, free-thinker, inventor of the shark biscuit, Tom Morey gone at 86

18 October 21


"The world is an old-fashioned place to me. Everything I see can be improved." 

Despite the incredible world-wide success of the boogie board, Tom died broke - but money was never his motivation, and his was an extraordinary life.

A surfing/longboarding contemporary of Phil Edwards and Miki Dora, Morey was a futurist and a philosopher, who once said in an article on surfboard design in Surfer Magazine: 

“I am a spaceman. I am the spirits of Einstein, Thomas Edison, Alexander Graham Bell, and Bob Simmons, taken possession, temporarily, of the innocent body known here on earth as Tom Morey,” he wrote. “I (we, really) am looking at your surfboards of today and thinking they are junk.” 

In 1999 Morey changed his name to Y explaining that it’s “easy to say and hear” and “the symmetric look of ‘Y’ is quite pleasing.”

In an interview just last year reflecting on 50 years of the boogie board and what may come for surfing over the next 50, he said;

“There are a lot of things. But we need to get out of our own way and scratch out the word ‘bodyboard’ and ‘boogie board’ and all that stuff.

We are surfers, and this is all about surfing, whether we’re standing up on huge planks of yesterday or lying down on smaller things that fit the inside of the wave today.

So, that’s the biggest challenge — to get out the terminology that we already abuse and to see that the name of the game is “the free ride.”

As Miki Dora said, ‘life is a waste of time, and surfing is a great way to waste it’.

We’re here on this planet, finding out as we grow up, thinking that we might be finding out why we’re here, if there is a why.

But from my standpoint, I buy into the fact that absolutely nothing other than we do is to make the best of what we do, to enjoy it, and to teach by it.”

There have been a lot of tributes out there in the surf press and straight press since Tom paddled off the peak on Friday, but this one from SURFERTODAY.COM – beautifully written by founder Luís MP – is the most comprehensive. Pleased to repost it here:

Surfer, engineer, inventor, musician, and philosopher Tom Morey passed away on October 14, at 5 pm, in California, aged 86.

The man who invented the modern bodyboard and created one of the most popular and accessible water sports in the world left us.

Morey was one of the last true American sports icons.

The visionary was born in Detroit on August 15, 1935. At the age of eight, his family moved to Laguna, California.

One year later, Tom was already riding his first waves on a surf mat.

Thrilled with the extraordinary experience, he borrowed a surfboard and quickly became one of the most prolific longboarders in the Golden State.

The Hyperactive Innovator

In the 1950s, Morey would form a jazz band, work as a lifeguard at Laguna Beach and at Disneyland as the Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs ride operator, and earn a degree in mathematics from the University of Southern California.

His first business venture was a honeycomb paper hat joint-venture with Bob Tierney.

But Tom's heart and soul were already shifting toward wave riding, and so he developed a unique surfboard made from paper honeycomb.

His surfing skills matched other stars of the 1960s, including Miki Dora and Phil Edwards.

So, a sponsorship deal inked with Velzy and Jacobs Surfboards came as no surprise. Tom kept introducing new concepts and materials into surfing.

Honeycomb cardboard cores and concave nose pockets, three-piece travel surfboard, and space-age materials and technology were all used and applied to surf design.

The Detroit-born innovator ran his own longboarding contest - the Tom Morey Invitational - which became one of the first prestigious nose riding events.

An Obsession With Functionality

In 1964, one year after landing the cover of Surfer Magazine, Morey releases the world's first polypropylene fin and the first-ever commercial interchangeable fin system.

There was also the Skeg Works, the first-of-its-kind removable skeg system.

In 1966, Tom served as President of the United States Surfing Association, and by the end of the decade, he was already a well-known surfboard shaper.

In 1969, International Paper Company challenged him to shape a honeycomb paper surfboard and ride it at Makaha during a big swell.

The idea was to shoot the stunt for a commercial that would help sell the firm's top waterproof materials.

At the first attempt, the surfboard sank.

But everyone knew Tom Morey - he would make it happen, one way or another.

So, he spent the night working on an upgraded version by adding fiberglass to the top and bottom honeycomb holes.

On the next day, the board glided across the famous surf break - mission accomplished.

Bodyboard: A Revolutionary Wave Riding Craft

In the 1970s, Tom Morey chose Hawaii as his spiritual home.

He met and married Marchia Nichols - the love of his life - and on July 7, 1971, he came up with the invention that would change the lives of millions of ocean enthusiasts around the world.

Tom Morey cut a nine-foot piece of foam in half, put down a sheet of the Honolulu Advertiser on top of it to prevent it from melting, and used his wife's iron to shape a small board.

Inspired by the ancient paipo, the modern bodyboard had been born.

The rest is history. Morey Boogie became a legendary brand and a synonym for bodyboard and bodyboarding.

Interestingly, the name of the revolutionary wave riding craft was profoundly inspired by his love of music and jazz in particular.

A new industry - built from scratch within surfing - was ready to take over the world.

Tom Morey never patented his groundbreaking invention and ended up witnessing others making large sums of money out of his creation.

But he never complained about his always fragile financial situation.

Surfers United

Morey went on to inspire the world, every day, every week, every month, and every year. His words echoed in the young and old.

In the 1980s, Tom envisioned the wave pool of the future, decades before everybody else. And his revolutionary artificial wave design became a timeless symbol of dreams becoming a reality.

In several exclusive interviews with SurferToday.com, Tom Morey stressed the importance of uniting all wave riders - no matter the board they're riding - into one single entity.

And that is surfing. "We're all surfers," he told us.

It's hard to describe Morey's contribution to the world in general and sports in particular.

One thing is certain: Tom Morey's legacy will live for as long as there are healthy oceans and waves of joy ready to be ridden.

One day, we will all meet him and thank him in person.

He was one of my three idols or inspiring figures, alongside Duke Kahanamoku and Winston Churchill.

SurferToday is proud to host Tom Morey's official biography.

I miss you already, Tom Morey.

 - AUTHOR: LUIS MP

 - SOURCE: SURFER TODAY.COM

ORIGINAL ARTICLE HERE



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