Sam Miller III: ScubaBoard's first "Scuba Legend"

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Seriously impressive, and (judging from his posts on SB) a wonderful person as well.
 
@aquacat8
@coldwaterlloyd
@Kharon

Individually and collectively thank you for the comments

Did you open and read the NAUI generated pdf file ?

It is a narrative of the diving history of me and son Sam IV.
Sam IV began diving over 50 years ago in a bath tub and has never stopped . Sam IV became a NAUI Life instructor (not too many of them around) a PADI instructor and a SSI Pro 5000 He is now the director of ER & Hyperbarics at a local regional hospital.

All the sisters became divers, two have doctorates-- makes for interesting conversation at Thanksgiving dinner

Thanks again,

Sam III
 
Wow!!!! So impressive story! It is a big honor to have such person in this forum.
 
Great article. I found out the type of person Sam is when he reached out to me (out of the blue) to share information about one of his ex-students, author Clive Cussler, after I had replied to a thread about Cussler's books. He made a standing offer for me to contact him if I wanted any other info. It was really nice to have a conversation with him.

Thanks Sam!
 
A little of topic but some of you might enjoy this about the history of regulator repair and Sam IV ( in bold) regulator repair course when he was a strapping young boy of 12 who rode his bike to US Divers for the course


In the beginning there was one company marketing diving equipment in US- Rene Sports, located in the back of a men's clothing store in Los Angels, California. In 1952 the company expanded and the name was changed US Divers, now Aqua lung.

Original advertisements and "word of mouth" indicated the Aqua lung was good for over 1000 dives with out adjustment or major maintenance, which was the first example of diving's false news.

Some of the components of the Aqua Lung were French war surplus - either WW1 or WW11, it was never really determined exactly what War. The components that gave most grief was the hoses and the diaphragm,
The hoses were prone to leak so were replaced with longer US WW11 gas mask hoses. The diaphragm,? A different story. It might have been a component from the Gas-O-gen, war surplus or just poor 1940s manufacturing

Never the less It seemed we always were breathing wet air (Oh! the Horror - wet air) either from leaking hoses or a microscopic hole or holes in the diaphragm. On occasion the diaphragm. would rupture, generally at the most inopportune time with little or no warning which gave the diver two options either remain on the bottom and attempt to breathe water or head for the California sunshine and fresh air- most all were successful in the later activity.

It was called "Swallowing the diaphragm."

It happened to me twice, The last time was the most memorable. I was a body length back in a cave breathing hard and deep after California Lobsters, Suddenly a more than normal amount of water with inhalation. The next breath as pure SoCal Salt water, I got on my on my horse, backed out and did a blow and go to the surface to the then smog free California Air..

Around that same time a number of things occurred
US Divers, under Rene & crew discovered some holes in the original US patent for the Aqua Lung which allowed US Divers to improve the breed with the DA model an produce it in the US by B&B,

My neighbor and friend Rory Page invented and marketed the Hope-Page non return valve

LA Co UW instruction Certification course was created

And US Divers hired a repairman, possibly the world's first Aqua Lung (aka SCUBA) full time repairman the late Bill Millman- Lung diving was beginning to emerge as a company

Only a few repair courses were offered by the manufactures for a number of years, then only to handful of local LA Co UW instructors as a sponsored recertification seminar.

Over 40 years ago Lt Cmdr. Leslie "Tommy" Thompson USN Ret (LA Co UW Instructor ) was hired as the PR of US Divers. Tommy was a diver's diver he had many first - most notable was his lock out under the ice cap in 1947.

Tommy recognized the need for a repair course for US divers dealers, military personnel and industry leaders so he created and established a free week long 40 hour equipment repair course presented at US Divers in Santa Ana California.

I was one of the first to enroll and repeated the course for a number years in a row. It was a very complete course, beginning with monkey see -monkey do and repetition, repetition until the break down and reassemble could have probably been performed blindfolded like some of us did with our side arms in the service of our county.

About 40 years ago my son was 12 years old. Sam IV had been raised in a pioneer diving family surrounded by divers and diving all his life. He had attended summer BSA camp at Catalina Island, had some time on his hands and needed a challenge. I called the then instructor Bryan Miller (a dear friend but not related) and asked if it was possible to enroll 12 years old Sam IV in the repair course? The response was positive so Sam IV packed a lunch jumped on his bike and peddled through the then mild Orange county traffic to US divers and the equipment repair course.

He returned home the first day excited has I had hoped he would. Over dinner he chatted about his new found companions in the course by first name ( a family no no - adult were to be addressed as Mr. or Miss, but these were his adult classmates and he was a young adult) He was amazed that he had more dives and had been diving longer than any others in the class- but this was 40 years ago and diving was just beginning to migrate past the SoCal borders.

Every day he returned home with a memento from US Divers, a tee shirt, a sweat shirt, fins, mask and snorkel and finally a youth size wet suit. Apparently the word had got out among the company officials that he was the youngest ever to take the US Divers repair course and they wanted to reward him.

Several weeks after the completion of the course he received a telephone call from US Divers There was a fellow who would like to meet him - could he drop by tomorrow ?

As 12 year old adventuresome boys did and I assume still do he took off with out a word to his mother and I to US Divers.

Waiting at US Divers was Jacques Cousteau who met him, congratulated him on being the youngest ever to complete the company sponsored repair course him and gave him an autographed copy of his latest book. Sam IV was some what impressed .with his new friend Zeek ( JY Cousteau)

And that was the way it was -- a long time ago from US recreational diving's birth place which has now spread to the hinterlands of the US and the world.

Sam IV ? He competed his Eagle scout a few years later, became a NAUI (Life) and PADI instructor, ER & Hyperbaric doctor and is now a director of the local regional hospital.


Sam Miller, III



.
 
NAUI-SourcesMag2018Q3p18-19.pdf

NAUI article

DEPARTMENTS I DIVING WORLD

Two Generations: Two NAUI Leaders
I n our world of scuba, there are many divers, but there are relatively few "capital D" Divers. Multigenerational Diver families are fewer still. The Cousteau family is one. The Sam Miller family is another. The father, Samuel Miller III (NAUI A27) made his first scuba dive in 1951. The son, Samuel Miller IV (NAUI 13227) made his first scuba "dive" in the bathtub when he was 2 years old. Miller III's acquaintance with the underwater world began in 1943 when an eye infection from his local YMCA pool in Indiana forced him to wear swim goggles, and he discovered he could see underwater. He managed to acquire a mask and a pair of Churchill fins and became an avid snorkeler in area lakes. The early 1950s brought him to California, where he immediately made the transfer from fresh water to the Pacific Ocean. One of the attractions of the ocean was spearfishing and bringing home dinner. He made his first scuba dive on Memorial Day 1951 in Divers Cove, Laguna Beach, California. ''We had no diving instruction till1954," Miller III said. "In those days, every time you put your head underwater, it was a new experience .... When you bought your diving equipment, you got a little pamphlet of about six or eight pages that you read, and that was the sum total of instruction." There was no real buddy diving either. It was "same ocean, same day'' buddymanship. Once in the water, each diver did what he wanted. After serving in the U.S. Air Force in Korea, he returned to Southern California and diving. The sport was burgeoning; its main attraction remained spearfishing. The ocean was teeming with life, and you could easily harvest a dinner oflobster, abalone or fish, often simply wading in from the beach. Diving brought together Miller III and his wife, Betty, who was also a diver. Their four children - daughters Roni, Randi, and Keni, and son, Sam IV - could easily go down to the ocean and catch dinner. They sometimes grew tired of the seafood delicacies that they or their father brought home and pleaded for hot dogs "like the other kids."
Once the whole family became qualified divers, Catalina Island became a favorite offshore diving destination for them. Miller III began teaching scuba at the Long Beach YMCA in 1956. Los Angeles County established its Underwater Instructor Certification Program in the mid-1950s, and Miller III attended a course and became a certified instructor. When NAUI was established in 1960, he became a NAUI Instructor (NAUI A27), and he spent 28 years actively teaching people to dive. His enthusiasm and increasing knowledge of diving made him a recognized expert in the field. He has authored numerous articles for diving magazines and websites, developed instructional programs, been a lecturer at conferences, a newspaper columnist, consultant for equipment manufacturers, expert witness and even diving safety officer for Cousteau's deep submersible Denise. He has assembled what is probably the most complete private collection of recreational diving books, periodicals and ephemera in the world. Miller III has estimated that in his more than six decades of diving, he has made over 8,000 dives all around the world, many of them with his wife and son. At 86 years old, his adventure with all things ocean continues. In the next generation,

Samuel Miller IV, was a diver almost from birth. Having first mastered bathtub diving as a toddler-the regulator had a long hose and the cylinder was on the bathroom floor-he graduated to the family pool at age 4 using a MSA cylinder with homemade backpack. At 5 years old, he was in the Pacific Ocean. "Not too deep and not far from shore, but he was underwater, and in his own mind, he was a diver," said his father. Miller IV had a lot of encouragement from his family and also from family friends who were diving luminaries themselves. The photo shows "Sammy Miller" on his sixth birthday getting ready for a dive with Dr. Charlie Brown, NAUI's medical adviser, with whom Miller IV dived many times. Brown was interested in learning how a young child adapted to diving.
By the time he reached his lOth birthday, Miller IV had logged more than 100 open-water dives, and that year, he completed the Los Angeles County and NAUI Scuba Diver courses, although he was too young to be certified. During the summer of his 12th birthday, he was accepted and successfully completed a 40-hour US Divers equipment repair course. At age 18, he became the youngest person listed in Who's Who of Scuba Diving. In SoCal diving circles, Miller IV was considered a top hunter and freediving spearfisher. When he turned 18, he was accepted for provisional membership in the Long Beach Neptunes Spearfishing Club, and then into full membership. In his spare time, Miller IV designed, fabricated and sold custom-built teakwood spearguns. His guns had a custom-length balance bar measured to the user's arm length and a handle that was shaped from a mold of the owner's gloved hand in the shooting position. During college, he served on weekends as a deckhand on the dive charter boat Golden Doubloon.
DIVING WORLD I DEPARTMENTS
In 1991, Miller IV became a NAUI Instructor (NAUI 13227) and taught scuba at one of the Southern California dive shops. He won a scholarship to the Catalina Chamber course, completed their internship and became a qualified chamber technician. While waiting to enter medical school, he began technical mixed gas diving with his friend Jeff Bozanic, making deep technical dives on a regular basis off the California coast. After completing medical school in Pomona, California, and an emergency room residency in Kingman, Arizona, he won a fellowship in hyperbaric diving medicine at University of San Diego Medical Center. At the end of the fellowship in 2008, he accepted a position at Marion Regional Medical Center in Santa Maria, California, where he is currently their director of ER/Hyperbaric Medicine. Miller III summed up much of the feelings of him and his family: "The ocean provides bountiful gifts. It's a recreational area to protect for all present and future generations. Everybody should be able to enjoy it. Every time I went diving,
 
Happy 90th Birthday Sam!
This brief autobiography is posted on ScubaBoard with Sam Miller's permission. Today is his 90th birthday. I had the opportunity to spend part of his 88th birthday with him at his beautiful home. He graciously let me see his a small part of his amazing collection of publications and diving memorabilia.

A Diver’s Life: 70 Years of Spear fishing & SCUBA diving
Memorial Day Thursday May 31, 1951
(Roman numerals = XXXIVMCNMLI)

In 1951, America was recovering from World War II and the Korean "Police action" was developing into a full-scale war. Gasoline was around 25 cents a gallon, postage stamps were 3 cents. Songs were slow and low and easy on the ears.

In December 1951 “Skin Diver magazine; a magazine for skin divers and spear fishermen” was published in California. A new form of recreation was beginning.

In 1948 Dr. Hans Hass German B&W UW movie “Under the Red Sea was presented in movie theaters throughout the US. The movie introduces the world to “Swim diving

After viewing “Under the red sea” several times my adventuresome cousin who had recently graduated with a Mining Engineering degree and I decided to follow Dr Hass example and to construct a rebreather using WW II surplus and MSE items.

We “dove it” (submerged) it several times in a local swimming pool and immediately retired it. I hung in my workshop until about 30 years ago when I tossed it.

SCUBA (Self Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus) was developed in France 5 years previously in 1943.

December 1948 James Dugan publishes “The first of the men fish” which introduces the US to “Cousteau Diving” using compressed air contained in an “Aqua Lung.”

The Aqua Lung was first imported into the US by a Jacques Yves Cousteau and the west coast a short time later.

The Aqua Lung was immediately accepted by the young sun loving beach going aquatic Southern Californians.

I was no exception. I had been “Goggling” for a number of years previously and had relocated to Southern California and immediately became a member the small aquatic tribe.

On Thursday May 31, 1951 “Memorial Day” a member of the tribe arrived at Divers Cove in Laguna Beach with a new out of the box Aqua Lung, which we immediately christened “a bubble machine.”

Using this borrowed equipment, I made my first SCUBA dive at Divers Cove on Thursday May 31, 1951.

Clad in the diving costume of the era, a baggy bathing suit, covered with surplus long underwear, which was in turn held in place by another baggy bathing suit with my torso covered with a wool WW11 khaki shawl sweater, a pair of green Churchill fins on my feet and a crude oval Sea Net mask covered my face, with the last minute instruction "exhale when you come up or you will explore " I entered the chilly Sothern California water for my first short SCUBA dive.

Wet suits were several years in the future, 1953, as were SPGs (MarMac) 1954, and formal Instruction (LA Co UW instruction) 1954.

That was the genesis of my introduction to self-contained diving, from that time to the present my life has been devoted to the world of recreational diving .

Some of the highlights of 70 years of Spear Fishing and recreational SCUBA diving;

Instruction:
LA County Underwater Instructor
* The first and most prestigious difficult civilian diving program

National Association of Underwater Instructors (NAUI) # A 27
*I am the second "A" instructor and one of the oldest NAUI instructors in California; and one of the 5 oldest in the world (age and length of membership).

Professional Association of Diving Instructors (PADI)
(Presented to me by John Cronin, founder of PADI)
Yes, I taught Clive Cussler to dive – Issued a NAUI Basic Diver

And many in rest of the Instructor alphabet

Dive Clubs
Southern California Skin Divers
(See SDM Vol #1 issue #1)

Long Beach Neptunes

Sea Sabers
President for 2 years, first to dive Farnsworth Banks, & Development of UW Signaling. Also, we held the first Christmas Tree Party, which was featured on National TV (US) with John Cameron Swayze.

Los Angles Underwater Photographic Society (UPS)
(Charter member 1957)

Orange County Underwater Photographic Society (OCUPS)
(Co-founder with Gibbs, Roberts and Merker)

Historical Diving Society (HDS)

(Charter Member ~ Founding member, B of D-- Only Director of Sport diving )

Honors
Outstanding contributions to Underwater Instruction - 1963
* I developed and was recognized for the development of the Instructor & diver classification

Over the reef gang (NAUI)

Diving dinosaurs (NAUI)

Who’s who in SCUBA diving (AMSUR)

SSI Platinum Pro 5000 diver (must have made over 5000 dives — I have about 7000)

Father of free diving and fishing 2000
* only about 60 honored world wide- a huge honor!

There once was an era, which existed for only a few short years.
What was then will never ever be experienced again on this earth
A precious few were honored participants of that era and we have rapidly diminished in numbers …for we are

The Fathers of Free Diving and Spear Fishing

West coast legend of diving - "Dive Chronicles"
*First person to be so honored by the magazine

Legend of diving
Scuba Diving and Recreation Center in Northwest Ohio - Portage Quarry
First person selected for the honor
SCUBA Service Award
California diving news

ScubaBoard
First SCUBA Diving Legend


Continued in the next post

 
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