Main content

1964: When surfing came to Australia

In 1964, Australia hosted the first official World Surfing Championships with surfers from France, USA, South Africa, England and Peru. Around 60,000 people watched the event.

Nearly 60 years ago, New South Wales in Australia hosted the first official World Surfing Championships. The competition attracted around 200 entries, including surfers from France, USA, South Africa, England, Peru and New Zealand.

The event was held in May at Sydney's Manly Beach and pulled in a crowd of up to 60,000 people.

Australian finalist Mick Dooley speaks to Patrick Kiteley about competing in the competition and how the weekend heralded a new wave of surf lovers in his country, making it a catalyst for the phenomenon the sport has become there today.

(Photo: Bernard 'Midget' Farrelly surfing during the First World Championships held at Manly beach, Sydney, Australia, on Sunday May 17 1964. Credit: Australian National Maritime Museum Collection. Gift from Dawn and Jack Eden)

Available now

11 minutes

Last on

Mon 16 Oct 2023 02:50GMT

Broadcasts

  • Sat 14 Oct 2023 18:50GMT
  • Sat 14 Oct 2023 23:50GMT
  • Sun 15 Oct 2023 03:50GMT
  • Sun 15 Oct 2023 23:50GMT
  • Mon 16 Oct 2023 02:50GMT

Olympic history

Olympic history

The inside and personal story of the key moments from sporting history

Sporting Witness Films

Sporting Witness Films

Watch sporting heroes tell their stories of astonishing achievement

Podcast