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An L A nonprofit s culture mapping project goes statewide - The San Diego Union-Tribune

An L A nonprofit s culture mapping project goes statewide

Balboa Art Conservation Center welcomes Audience & Engagement Specialist, Andrea Angie Chandler

How Racism Ruined Black Santa Monica

In the 1940s, Nick Gabaldón, an athletic, handsome student at Santa Monica High School, would often escape class to Bay Street Beach, a half-mile stretch of shoreline roughly between Pico and Bicknell Streets, by the Casa Del Mar hotel. Derisively called the Inkwell by some white Angelenos, Bay Street Beach was a haven for people of color. Here, Gabaldón would bodysurf for hours, impressing two white lifeguards who loaned him a rescue board. With this heavy, 13-foot board, Gabaldón taught himself to surf, becoming the first documented Black surfer in America. He eventually took to riding the waves in Malibu, paddling six miles north and another six miles back, because he knew he would not be welcome walking on most of Santa Monica s beaches.

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