You might have seen hot shots drop into a bowl at a skate park and glide around a tight corner. But have you ever wondered how skateboarding got started? Or what gave people the idea to create those curvy concrete courses? It's all part of the twisting, turning history of skateboarding, a sport that evolved from surfing.

Sidewalk Surfing Takes Off

Surfing became popular in the 1950s in Hawaii and California. People loved the rush of riding the waves on a surfboard. Sometimes, however, surfers were confronted with a dilemma—what to do when there were no waves. Fortunately for fun-loving thrill-seekers everywhere, they came up with a solution. When seas were calm, some surfers hopped on smaller boards with wheels and rode them on land. The pastime became known as "sidewalk surfing" or skateboarding.

The Wheel Gets Reinvented

Originally, skateboards had slippery, rattling steel wheels. Then, clay wheels came along. They rode more smoothly but still slid around a lot, leading to some serious accidents. Many people therefore began to view skateboarding as a menace to public safety, and some cities banned it. By 1965, the popularity of skateboarding had tumbled.

What turned things around? Better wheels. In 1973, a company started by a surfer named Frank Nasworthy introduced skateboards with wheels made of a material called polyurethane. They gripped the ground for a safer, smoother ride. That propelled the sport forward on a second wave of popularity.

Backyard Skaters Give the Sport a Boost

In the late 1970s, California experienced a severe drought. Because water was scarce, many backyard swimming pools were empty. Where other people saw basins drained of joy, however, resourceful skaters spotted an opportunity for fun. They jumped in on their skateboards and glided along like surfers riding concrete waves, contributing to the creation of a whole new type of skateboarding. Now many skate parks feature concrete bowls shaped like swimming pools where skaters attempt complicated tricks.

Those were just a few of the ups and downs in the early history of skateboarding. Today, the sport is still rolling along, changing with the times. It's safe to say there are plenty more twists and turns to come.

What cause-and-effect relationship is described in this article?

Early skateboarders came up with the new sport because they were tired of surfing.
Early skateboarders had some serious accidents because the wheels slid around.
California swimming pools were used for skateboarding because skate parks were closed.
California swimming pools were empty because skateboarders wanted to use them.

The cause-and-effect relationship described in this article is that the invention of polyurethane wheels led to a second wave of popularity for skateboarding.

choose one

Early skateboarders had some serious accidents because the wheels slid around.