Ralph Samuelson

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Ralph Samuelson, the inventor of water skiing
Ralph Samuelson, the inventor of water skiing

Ralph Wilford Samuelson (July 3, 1904–August 28, 1977) was the inventor of water skiing, which he first performed in the summer of 1922 in Lake City, Minnesota, just before his 19th birthday. Samuelson was already skilled at aquaplaning—standing on a board while being pulled by a powerboat—but he hoped to create something like snow skiing on the water. Lake Pepin was the venue for his experiments, a wide portion of the Mississippi River between Minnesota and Wisconsin.

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[edit] Patent

Unfortunately, Samuelson did not patent his invention, nor was his work sufficiently publicized at the time to prevent U.S. Patent 1,559,390 for water skis from being subsequently issued, on October 27, 1925, to prolific inventor Fred Waller of Huntington, New York. Waller marketed his product as "Dolphin Akwa-Skees." Waller later invented the Cinerama wide-screen motion picture system, and in 1952's "This is Cinerama," the first feature film released in the panoramic format, water skiing at Cypress Gardens, Florida, was a prominently-featured subject. Famed journalist Lowell Thomas was an early investor in Cinerama, and in his introduction to the book "Water Skiing" (1958, Prentice-Hall), by Dick Pope, Sr., creator of Cypress Gardens, Thomas described the connection between Waller and water skiing's prominence as a subject in the motion picture. In several instances in the book, Pope reiterates--erroneously, we now know--that Waller was the first to invent water skis.

[edit] Early attempts

Samuelson's early attempts included using staves from wooden barrels and snow skis before he created new skis made of pine boards 8 feet long and 9 inches wide (240 × 23 cm). He bent up the front tips after softening the wood by boiling them in his mother's copper kettle. His brother Ben operated the powerboat that pulled Ralph along, towed by a rope. Gaining confidence on the water, he began jumping wakes, but broke the original skis in one landing. His slightly-modified second pair still exists; today they are at the Water Ski Hall of Fame museum in Winter Haven, Florida.

Samuelson first succeeded on June 28 by starting off wearing skis while standing on top of an aquaplane board, and then slipping one foot and then the other into the water. However, this first trip only lasted a few seconds, plus he wanted to be able to start without the need for an additional board. After a few more days of trial and error, Samuelson realized that he could get on top of the water by leaning back and angling the skis upward. He got up on the water with this method for the first time on July 2..

[edit] Ski Jumping

He attracted a lot of attention locally in the following days and weeks. On July 8, 1925, Samuelson went on to perform the first ski jump on water. He fell flat in his first attempt, but soon greased the launch platform with lard and succeeded on the second try. Also that year, he became the first speed skier as he found himself racing across the water at 80 mph, pulled by a Curtiss flying boat that flew just above the waves.

Samuelson soon went to work for the Ford Motor Company in Detroit, Michigan, bringing his skis with him. They also followed him to Florida where he was in a boat business. However, his back was injured in a construction accident in 1937, and Samuelson was forced to stop water skiing. He returned to Lake City, where a vacationing reporter from St. Paul eventually came across the skis as they were hung in a municipal boathouse there in 1963. The reporter's story attracted the attention of the American Water Ski Association. Samuelson became known as "The Father of Water Skiing."

[edit] Later Years

In his later years, Samuelson moved to Pine Island, Minnesota where he was a turkey farmer. He was a guest of honor at a water skiing 50th anniversary in 1972, and was inducted into the Water Ski Hall of Fame on January 22, 1977. When he returned to Minnesota, he began to suffer the effects of cancer, and died in Pine Island on August 28, 1977.

[edit] References

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