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SPECIAL HOURS:

  • Thursday, May 2, Pacific Park will be CLOSED to the public at 4 PM.
  • Thursday, May 9, Pacific Park will be CLOSED to the public at 3:30 PM.
  • Wednesday, May 15, Pacific Park will be CLOSED to the public at 4 PM.
  • Thursday, May 19, Pacific Park will be CLOSED to the public at 6 PM.
  • Thursday, May 23, Pacific Park will be CLOSED to the public at 6 PM.
  • Friday, July 12, Pacific Park will be CLOSED to the public ALL DAY.

๐Ÿ• For a full schedule of hours, please check our operating calendar before planning your visit.

Nick Gabaldon Day Celebrated in Santa Monica

Nick Gabaldon Day Celebration in Santa Monica
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Nick Gabaldon Day will take place on Saturday, October 9, 2021.

Join the Black Surfers Collective, The Surf Bus Foundation, Santa Monica Conservancy and Heal the Bay for a day of beach activities and free surf lessons to commemorate the life of Nick Gabaldon (1927-1951). The event will take place on Saturday, October 9th from 9AM-4:30PM at the historical Inkwell, Tower 20 on Santa Monica Beach (at the end of Bay Street). Heal the Bay will offer free admission to participants from 1P-4P. Register online ahead of time. Learn more about Nick Gabaldon Day 2021 here.

Nick Gabaldon was a Santa Monica native born in 1927. He loved the ocean and frequented โ€œInkwell Beachโ€, a stretch of sand a few hundred yards south of the Santa Monica Pier that was open to black Angelenos when the area was still heavily segregated. Gabaldon would leave early from his classes at Santa Monica High school to swim, enjoy the waters, and learn to surf.

The 2014 documentary, 12 Miles North, brought light to Gabaldonโ€™s life in Southern California as an early surfing pioneer who broke racial barriers. The tenacious young surfer would paddle a heavy, mid-century surf board 24 miles to the Point in Malibu and back to Santa Monica daily just so he could catch some of the best waves in the bay. Local surfers in the area noticed Gabaldonโ€™s commitment to the burgeoning surf and started giving him rides to and from the Point so he could save his strength for the surf.

Gabaldon first started paddling up the Pacific Coast not only because he had no car and there was no 534 bus to the โ€˜Bu in 1949, but because Los Angeles was still socially segregated and black man walking across the private beaches and lawns of white homeowners in those days could have led Gabaldon to trouble. The surfers who frequented The Point in Malibu back then paid no mind to Gabaldonโ€™s skin color โ€“ they admired his strength, dedication and love of the waves.

After surfing the waves off the beach in Malibu for two years, Gabaldon died in June 1951 while surfing big waves by the Malibu Pier.

In 2013 the Black Surferโ€™s Collective partnered with Heal the Bay to bring dozens of young kids from LA Neighborhoods with less beach access to Santa Monica for a free surf lesson. The intent was to provide the kids with a fun day by the water and possibly to inspire them to learn to surf and enjoy the open, public beaches that help make the area famous. For some of the kids, this would be their first experience with the ocean despite living just a few dozen miles from the beach. The Black Surferโ€™s Collective called the outing Nick Gabaldon Day, in recognition of the countryโ€™s first black surfer.


The Black Surferโ€™s Collective seeks to raise cultural awareness and promote diversity to the sport of surfing through community activities, outreach and camaraderie. The group sponsors family-oriented activities that get people down to the beach to share the love of the water. Through seaside events, the Collective engages public interest in the sport of surfing, history, beach culture and ocean stewardship. Learn more at www.blacksurferscollective.org.

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