The Mask

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Sam Miller III

Scuba Legend
Scuba Legend
Rest in Peace
Scuba Instructor
Messages
5,141
Reaction score
4,136
Location
CALIFORNIA: Where recreational diving began!
# of dives
5000 - ∞
I published the following DYI article over twenty years ago in my dedicated column "The Way it was...." in the monthly in the now defunct San Diego based national dive magazine "Discover Diving."

It is about one of the all time great pioneers of diving the late Charlie Sturgil and a mask he made for me so many years ago, at the very beginning of recreational diving

"The Mask,

One of the great pioneer divers of all times was the late Charlie Sturgil. "The Old Walrus," as he was affectionately known, started his diving career in 1929 in the frigid waters off Northern California where he hunted for abalone by a method he described as "feeling for abalone." He would dive on a reef, feel until he found an abalone and pry it off, without the use of mask, fins, snorkel or thermal protection.

Charlie began diving with a mask using a Japanese mask in the late 1930s which was loaned to him by his good friend Bill O'Conner. A few years later after the end of WW 11, Charlie, a master tool and die maker and an inventor of sorts, developed the necessary tooling to produce masks on a semi-custom basis for himself and a few close friends. I consider myself very fortunate to have been included in the latter category.

In early years during the genesis of recreational diving the masks were either too large, too small, too stiff or after a few dives, would rapidly deteriorate into a gummy, sticky mess. This did not make for comfortable diving! After using a number of the masks of that era,the Japanese imports, and the American made *Sea Net, I decided it was time to contact Charlie to ask him if he could make one of his custom masks for me.

After checking my meager finances, found I could possibly afford one of Charlie's masks, so I gave him a call. "Sure, Sammy, I'd be happy to make a mask for you, come on over", Charlie replied to my request. Within moments I was off to the temple of Southern California diving, Charlie Sturgil's garage.

I was met by this jovial hunk of a man with his infectious, ever-present smile. "Hey ya, Sammy" was always his cordial greeting. Alter a few moments of catching up on the diving scene it, was time to get to work. "Sammy, I'm now making two masks; the original for $6.00 and a new oval model for $8.00", Charlie explained. After considerable soul searching and penny counting, I opted for what I felt I could afford, the original round mask for $6.00.

Now, Charlie's garage was something to behold. It appeared to be in total disarray, and the best way to describe it would be the day after a big sale in a bargain basement. Diving equipment in various stages of repairs, pieces of metal, lengths of stainless rods scattered about... Omnipresent was the huge metal turret lathe and miscellaneous metal working machines. But to Charlie, it was his arena, it was where he excelled in turning these seemingly scrap pieces of metal into custom spear points, spear shafts, yes, even masks.

Charlie knew the location, size, shape and type of everything in his garage. His storage system was logical and certainly workable, but it still defies the imagination how he managed to find anything, let alone make anything, but he did.

Charlie went to work with the speed and skill of a emergency room surgeon. He immediately uncovered a length of 5 inch O.D. soft rubber World War 11, surplus firehose, from which he cut a 4 inch piece. He placed the piece of rubber hose in the wooden mold and proceeded to his trusty bench grinder where he slowly cut a 1/8 inch wide, 3/32 deep groove all around the edge for the glass. This was followed by the rough contouring for the forehead, cheeks, and upper lip. He then went to his metal rack and withdrew a piece of 3/4 x 16 inch 22 gauge stainless steel, which he placed in his specially constructed mold and carefully, yet skillfully, forced the stainless steel around the mold forming it into a familiar round mask shape. His next step was to form the band evenly and smoothly around the mold creating the lip for the compression hand with light rapid laps of a hammer. Using silver solder, the welding process of the era, he soldered the tabs for the strap and the compression screw tabs to complete the band. A piece of pre-cut 1/3 inch glass, the same kind used for window glass, was taken from the shelf and fit into the groove; the compression band placed around the mask and the compression screw tightened.

At last, the mask was assembled. My own custom Sturgil mask! Charlie proceeded to take some cursory measurements of my then youthful face, and returned to the grinding wheel, skillfully grinding a little here, a little there, another trial fit, a little more grinding. Finally, a perfect fit. A final hand finish with fine sandpaper, attaching of the strap, cut from a truck inner tube, and I was the proud possessor of a real genuine Charlie Sturgil Original Style Diving Mask.

This occurred many years ago when diving as well as life was much simpler, a time when pride in workmanship and ownership were at a premium. Charlie made almost 40 of these one of a kind custom dive masks, however only three are known to have survived the rigors of our disposable society, mine, Alex Pierce's of Toronto, Canada and Charlie's widow's Laura's mask which now on loan and rests in a Southern California museum. And indeed they are museum pieces... the three remaining masks are all almost sixty years old and represent an era which was experienced by only a precious few which will never be experienced again upon this earth.

Charlie has reverend position in the fraternity of diving pioneers; he won the world's Spearfishing contest in 1950 with a pole spear, was a LA County Underwater Instructor and serendipity developed much of the spearfishing and SCUBA equipment which has become mainstream in todays diving.

I will never forget Charlie, nor will anyone who ever knew him.... nor will there ever be another mask like a Sturgil Mask.

Dr Samuel Miller"

<< copyright 2115 by Dr.Samuel Miller,111 and Dr.Samuel Miller,IV may not be reproduce for private or commercial use with out the specific written permission of the authors >>

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
post script;

* the first American made dive mask was designed and patented in 1940 by Frank Roedecker and produced by Pops Romano who owned the first recreational diving manufacturing company "Sea Net" located in Terminal Island San Pedro California. The mask is known as the Sea Net mask and today is highly prized by collectors.

I used my Sturgil mask for about 10 years until Bud Brown's "Swimmaster wide" view appeared and switched to that mask which I still use. The 60 + year old Sturgil mask has been stored in a 50 cal ammo box all these good and great years is as good as new and could be worn if I so desired..

We Charlie, Frank and myself were all members of a long forgotten long disbanded dive club called the Southern California Skin Divers. Only two members are still alive, Harry Vetter (LA Co & NAUI #4 & your truly LACo, NAUI #27 & PADI 241 or 2241.my records were lost )

Charlie passed on November 15 1984, His devoted wife Laura passed on a few years ago at the age of 90.

About 25 years ago at the "Fathers of Spearfishing" gathering at Seatec/inflatable systems in Corona California I organized a "Tribute to Charlie." Nothing formal, we just stood around and told stories about our experiences with Charlie--and what stories were told...The experiences we had!

If Charlie knew you and liked you he always addressed you in the familar; Ie Sammy, Bobbie, Jimmie,--Those he didn't have great admiration or didn't know well it was formal Sam, Bob or Jim.

His daugher Laura Lee was married to Billy Meistral, one of the twin brothers who founded Dive and Surf and the very sucessful Body Glove. Billy and his brother Bobby passed on several years ago and are now diving on that big reef in the sky.

A SoCal spearfishing club "The Fathomiers" has been presenting the Charlie Sturgil spearfishing meet for about 30 years...It came full circle when Charlie's grand daughter, Laura Lee Gonta won the meet several years ago using one of Charlie's legendary pole spears.

I still have a number of items custom made for me by Charlie; the mask, points, stringers, dive float frame etc. All are as good as they were when he made them so many years ago, no longer is use they are religated to places of honor in my dive locker, a silent testimony to days and dives of the past.

So now you know...Just a little about Charlie Sturgil and small part of recreational diving...but there is a lot more to tell about Charlie

SDM
 
Thanks Sam, I love the stories.



Bob
 
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thanks for the great read.
 
Love these stories. Thanks, Sam
 
if you two enjoyed this article I would suggest that you venture over to Trapezus's thread on Russian vintage equipment.

I also posted two interesting articles from the past and about the past titled:

"Orange County did you know?" which is about earlier times when the diving world and the ,majority of all dive manufactures were located in OC , as well as the pioneer certifying agencies, NAUI and PADi...as noted prior to their establishment more LA Co UW instructors were located in OC than LA Co. As I recall I wrote this for inclusion in the Legends of diving articles.

"You can't go home again"
is a reflection from my youth prior to wet suits, dive magazines, training and even SCUBA Board when the major concern was keeping warm and the sport was spear fishing and chasing Abalone . Even though it was witnessed and published in my news paper column, Dive Bubbles (the first ever news paper column devoted to diving in the US) about 20 years ago it is applicable to day as the day it was authored.

If you are truly into dive history and vintage diving I suspect you will enjoy this and the OC article.

SDM111
 
Great article, thanks, Sam. I have a fondness and a deep loyalty for the concern shown by NAUI Instructors and LA County Instructors which led to my lifelong enthusiasm for sport diving.
In 1971 I went to NAUI Instructor Carter Breusing down at the formerly iconic Laguna Sea Sports (as a 13 year old water fanatic) -
The guys in the shop said '" kid, you're a little too green yet for this, diving can be hard work and dangerous" - "Listen, go see our pal so and so up in L.A. and tell him you'd like to take the summer long "Skin Diver" course with L.A. County Dept of Parks and Recreation, then come back when you're 14 and we'll see what we can do for ya" -

I think when I finally was accepted as a prospect by Mr. Breusing, I was much more comfortable in mask, fins and snorkel which is what they wanted to see in a kid asking for dive lessons. Not money. Not pushing me off to somebody else because they knew a kid wasn't going to have any money to purchase equipment like tanks and regulators. They had a genuine concern for safety and water competence. If you couldn't show it, you were out and no refund.

Sorry to stray off topic but unfortunately, change is not always better just for its own sake
 

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