Beach Volleyball
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- 1924
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The game of volleyball was invented by Massachusetts gym teacher William G. Morgan in 1895 as an indoor sport. Beach volleyball spun off from the original in 1915 at the Outrigger Canoe Club on Hawaii’s Waikiki Beach and came to Santa Monica with legendary surfer Duke Kahanamoku in 1922. It quickly became so popular that the city installed several public volleyball courts on the sand, primarily in the area south of the Santa Monica Pier. These courts offered a free, accessible alternative to volleyball courts springing up at private beach clubs that were dotting the Santa Monica’s northside coastline. The first beach volleyball tournament in Santa Monica was a casual event held in 1924.
Beach Volleyball Courts with Lifeguard Headquarters and Purser Apartments in the background, 1956.
The sport changed forever in 1930 at the Sorrento Beach Club courts. While a group of players were waiting for the rest of their teammates to arrive, they decided to play a match with only two people on each side rather than the standard six. Paul “Pablo Johnson” is credited with instigating that casual game that changed the sport’s dynamic forever. The 2v2 format demanded greater athleticism, communication, and court coverage from each player, elevating it from a pastime to a serious sport. The two-player game became the standard for competitive beach volleyball, leading to the professional and Olympic formats used today.
Beach Volleyball before the Lifeguard Headquarters were built, Santa Monica Public Library, 1956.
During the 1940s and 50s, Santa Monica was the global epicenter for beach volleyball. The first official tournament was held at Will Rogers State Beach in 1947. The proximity of the first public courts to Original Muscle Beach meant the same community of physically elite athletes competed in both arenas, fostering a culture of extreme fitness that helped shape the “beach lifestyle” as the world came to know it. This period also saw the introduction of the first “open” tournaments, which laid the groundwork for the professional tours that emerged in the 1970s and 80s.
Beach Volleyball, Santa Monica Public Library, 1970s.
Today, Santa Monica is officially recognized by the international volleyball community as the cradle of the sport. The iconic courts at Sorrento Beach (a private club located just south of Montana Avenue during the 1930s) and the first public courts near the Santa Monica Pier remain active training grounds for amateur and professional players alike. In 1993, the city of Santa Monica dedicated a plaque at Sorrento Beach to commemorate the site as the birthplace of the two-player game, ensuring its role in sports history is permanently honored.
Learn more:
- City of Santa Monica – Beach Volleyball
- Visit Santa Monica – Beach Volleyball (Video)
- Wikipedia – Beach Volleyball
- Sand Court Experts – The Origins of Beach Volleyball
- Santa Monica Daily Press – Hall of Fame Honors Beach Volleyball
- Pacific Park – 6 Things That Originated on Santa Monica Pier
- Volleyball 1 on 1 – The History and Impact of Beach Volleyball
- Lost Angeles – 1930s Beach Volleyball
- King of the Beach – History of Beach Volleyball
- CISM Europe – History of Beach Volleyball