Dan B. Hains |
1982
Hall of Fame Inductee
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If
he were alive today, Dan B. Hains could look at organized water skiing and
recognize it as a sport proliferating throughout the world in same pattern
in which he created it back in 1939. Slalom competition as it is
known in water ski tournaments was his idea. So was jumping, and
tricks. To be sure, there have been many refinements, but the three
events or disciplines of tournament water skiing worldwide were the
conception of Dan Hains. He
used them as the framework for the first National Water Ski Championships
held at Jones Beach State Park on Long Island in 1939 -- the first
tournament sponsored by a new organization Hains initiated called the
American Water Ski Association. Hains was tournament chairman.
He wrote the rules. He was judge and sponsor. He made the first
Nationals a success. Yet,
characteristically, he was inclined to minimize his contribution to the
sport, of the first Nationals, he wrote in 1964 on the occasion of the
25th anniversary of the association: "It
was a bit presumptuous to call this a "National" tournament
since it was made up largely of local talent. In this first
tournament, the three basic events of slalom, jumping and tricks were
inaugurated. The slalom buoys were in a straight line rather closely
spaced. The jump was raised to five feet with a surface of two-inch
diameter wood rollers spaced about eight inches apart--quite a dangerous
contraption. The winner was the only man not to fall on three
jumps. Trick riding was a bit primitive. The winning trick was
familiar maneuver of removing one ski, placing the tow bar on th4e instep,
then replacing the ski." Like
most of the pioneers in water skiing, Hains came by interest through
aquaplaning. His son, Dan P. Hains, recalls that he made his first
pair of skis in 1935 by splitting an aquaplane. The skis were towed
directly by the boat, with the skier holding onto lines attached to each
ski, similar to skis patented by Fred Waller 10 years before. Hains
then bought a conventional pair of French make, and he was off on a
combination hobby and business that would occupy a major share of his
attention for nearly 25 years. Not
long after he began to take water skiing seriously, Hains met Hudson
winner and the tow went into business together in Trenton, N.J.
Manufacturing water skis among other equipment related to pleasure
boating. Hain's name became synonymous with water skiing in the
greater New York City area. In
1939, he was called on by the New York World's Fair Authority to organize
a water ski show for the fair after a group of French skiers were forced
to cancel their contract. Hains rounded up some skiing friends in
New York and called in other performers from the Atlantic City Steel Pier,
and their act became one of the hits of the fair. The French skiers
make it the following year but the authority sent them home when their
performance turned out to be inferior the show Hains put together in '39
and he was called on once again. Meanwhile,
on the other side of Long Island at Jones Beach, Hains was staging the
first two National Water Ski Championships with several of his better show
skiers competing, including Bruce Parker, the winner of the first two
nationals overall titles. Hains
used a picture of Parker jumping off a wake at Jones Beach as the basis
for the AWSA insignia, which is still in use today. With
the onset of World War II, Hains and his manufacturing interests were
involved in military production, including the first reinforced fiberglass
boats produced for the U.S. Navy. After the war, Hains was principal
in several industrial firms specializing in reinforced plastics, but he
also resumed his interest in water skiing, continuing to manufacture skis
in New York and New Jersey and serving as head of AWSA until 1949 when he
turned over the reins of the association to Chuck Sligh of Grand Rapids,
Mich. Hains, however, was destined for another significant role in
the organized sport. In
the fall of 1950, when a dispute among European members of the
International Water Ski Union reached a climax during the world tournament
at Cypress Gardens, Hains was prevailed upon to accept the presidency of a
new World Water Ski Federation. The
federation, in cooperation with Canadian National Exhibitions, sponsored
the World Championships at Toronto, Canada, in 1953. Two years
later, the WWDF was formally dissolved following a New York meeting
between Hains and Andre Coutau of Switzerland that resulted in the
founding of the World Water Ski Union, which have continued as the sport's
ruling international organization since that time. The
AWSA Board of Directors presented Hains with a Certificate for Meritorious
Service at the National Water Ski Championships in 1955 at Lakeland, Fla.,
and elected him honorary vice president for life, the first member ever so
honored. On
the occasion of Hain's death on August 9, 1966, Jack Andersen, who was the
first to do turnarounds on double-end skis at the 1940 Nationals, paid
tribute to his old friend: "Dan's greatest achievement is that he drew into water skiing people who, like himself, would work for the sport itself and not for what they could get out of it. Every water skier and even more so, every competitor -- whether he knows it or not--has benefited from the ability and sportsmanship of Dan Hains." |
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