Charles R. Sligh, Jr. |
1982 Hall of Fame Inductee |
|
Not
long after witnessing water skiing for the first time at the New York
World's Fair in 1939, Charles R. (Chuck) Sligh Jr. purchased a pair of
water skis at Marshall Field's in Chicago and had them sent to his home in
Grand Rapids, Mich. The purchase changed his life -- and changed the
sport of water skiing. The
skis were manufactured by a New Jersey company, which Sligh wrote to find
out what to do with them. A reply came from the company's Vice
President in charge of sales, Dan Hains, who that same year was organizing
the American Water Ski Association and completing plans for the first
National Water ski championships. Their correspondence became a
course of instruction for Sligh and led to his participation in the second
National Tournament in 1940 when he won the national "amateur"
title. This
tournament experience marked the beginning of a water skiing career that
for the next 20 years took up almost as much of Sligh's time as his
Charles R. Sligh Furniture Company and the National Association of
Manufacturers, which he served as president, chairman of the board, and as
its paid executive vice president until his retirement in 1963. After the 1940 Nationals, Sligh organized a troupe of skiers and staged ski shows throughout the Midwest and at the President's Cup Regatta in Washington, D.C., where as a "premier Water Skier" he was given a police escort from national Airport to his hotel. For the next few years he divided his skiing time between competition ski shows. Sligh
organized the National Championships in 1941, 1946 and 1947 at Holland,
Mich., and for the '47 tournament, he laid out the first slalom course of
the type that is still in use today. As a jumper, he experienced the
evolution of the ramp from a dangerous surface of wooden rollers to the
smooth surface type that resulted in his setting the fist national
distance record of 49 feet in 1947. His
show skiing took him in 1945 to Dayton, Ohio where he met Ralph Hept, a
local skier. This chance meeting was indirectly responsible for the
development of barefoot skiing. Hept wrote to Sligh later that he
was skiing on boards 12 inches long and 2 3/8 inches wide, nailed to
tennis shoes. Sligh made his own "shoe skis" the next
season and took them with him to Florida that winter. Young skiers
in Winter Haven soon reasoned, with Sligh's encouragement, that if you
could ski on shoe skis, you could ski on bare feet -- and they did. Dan
Hains, who had continued as president of the American Water Ski
Association, finally convinced Sligh to take over in 1949. One of
his first acts, with the assistance of his secretary, Isabel Howe, was to
increase the frequency and enlarge the distribution of a "News
Bulletin" started by Hains, So that the growing number of water
skiers through out the country would have a regular central means of
communication. Ski
Clubs began sending in more new of their activities and forthcoming
tournaments. Individuals wrote of stunts they had performed on water skis
and equipment innovations they had conceived. The mimeographed
newsletter soon grew until it was sometimes 16 pages long. It then
evolved into a magazine, The Water Skier, the first issue of which was
published in October of 1951. Sligh
served as president of AWSA until 1954 when he was elected chairman of the
board, a post he held until 1963. Under his leadership, the
association realized its major growth from a desk drawer operation of its
president into a full-fledge national organization of geographical regions
and volunteer committees. He encouraged the industry-supported
Outboard Boating Club of America to take over administration of the
association in 1954 until its growth warranted the hiring of a paid
executive director four years later. Sligh recommended William
D. Clifford for the job. Clifford, who had served as AWSA president
while Sligh was chairman of the board, accepted and still was heading the
headquarters operation 25 years later. Sligh
was born in Grand Rapids in 1906. His father, who had been a
successful in the furniture business, died in 1927, and when the business
was liquidated in 1932, Sligh bought th4e name and started his own
company. His business success and his leadership role in the N.A.M.
afforded him opportunities to become acquainted with such prominent
figures as Hubert Hoover, Franklin D. Roosevelt, General Douglas MacArthur,
Dwight D. Eishenhower, and John F. Kennedy, Richard Nixon, Lyndon Johnson
and Gerald Ford. But with all this, Sligh, even at age 75, liked to recall that on meeting someone new, he would be greeted with, "oh, you're the water Skier." As of 1982, he was one of only four persons ever honored by the AWSA Board of Directors as Vice President for Life. |
1251 Holy Cow Road * Polk City, Florida * 33868-8200
Phone: 863-324-2472 * Fax: 863-324-3996