Born in New Jersey, Catri [pronounced CAH-tri] moved to Miami as a boy. Upon graduating from high school in 1957, he began working as a beach attendant where he met a stunt diver named Jack “Murph the Surf” Murphy, who later achieved infamy for stealing the Star of India, the world’s largest sapphire. The California native introduced Catri to surfing in the winter of 1957, and together they experimented with building boards and took surfing adventures through Florida and California. While Murphy and Catri’s escapades were far from pure, they never reached the level of grand larceny that Murphy did with his jewelry heist in 1964. By that time, Catri had already spent three seasons in Hawaii and was on his way to becoming a North Shore fixture, surfing everywhere from Pipe and Waimea to Makaha and working at Dick Brewer’s factory.
In the spring of 1964, Catri went back to Florida to quench the East Coast’s thirst for surfing. As the East Coast rep for Dick Brewer’s Surfboards Hawaii, Catri opened a shop in Satellite Beach and established a team of greats that included Gary Propper, Mike Tabeling, Bruce Valuzzi, Fletcher Sharpe and Mimi Munro, who soon ruled surfing contests along the Atlantic Seaboard. When Hobie made him a generous offer in 1966, the team switched labels and continued trouncing the competition. Catri was not only captain and coach for the Hobie squad; he remained a competitor and attended several U.S. championships. He was also inducted into the 1966 International Hall of Fame, represented the United States at the 1968 World Contest in Puerto Rico and surfed in the 1967 Duke Kahanamoku Invitational. His personal life was also winning during this period. He married his second wife, Shagg, and named a store after her in Indialantic. Though they later divorced, the couple had three daughters and Shagg’s Surf Shop still remains in its original location.
The rise of the shortboard movement in the late ’60s transformed Catri from a seller of West Coast brands to an East Coast manufacturer. After parting ways with Hobie, he started Catri Surfboards and became Clark Foam’s first East Coast distributor. More importantly, the ’70s marked Catri’s benchmark days as a contest promoter. Besides running the annual Easter Surfing Classic event he founded in 1965 with John Griffin (now a 36-year tradition known as the Cocoa Beach Easter Surfing Festival), the partners established the Sundek Classic and a new association, American Professional Surfing (APS). Over five years, the APS grew to become a 14-event tour with its own world tour stop, the $25,000 Florida Pro. It churned out East Coast talent like Matt Kechele and Charlie Kuhn before being eclipsed by the ASP in the early ’80s.
Soured by the experience, Catri once again focused his attention on coaching local amateurs, helping produce another crew of East Coast heroes, including WCT pro Todd Holland, Florida standouts Scott Bouchard, David Speir and Sean Slater, as well as Slater’s 7-year-old brother, Kelly. If it sounds like Catri’s direct influence stayed concentrated near Sebastian Inlet, it did, and rightfully so. Catri was one of the first to surf Sebastian, and when conflicts between fishermen and surfers resulted in a blackball ordinance, he successfully helped fight the law until it was repealed in the early ’70s. This preserved First Peak for future generations to fight over.
Today, Dick Catri enjoys a semi-retired lifestyle with his wife Terri just
miles from Sebastian. When not organizing the annual Easter Festival, Captain Catri stays near the water by running fishing charters and, like every respected godfather, speaks his mind about surfing, especially when it comes to his East Coast territory. — Matt
Written by Matt Walker
Taken from thesurfbus.com
Additional Resources:
You Tube Dick Catri Part 1
You Tube Dick Catri Part 2
http://encyclopediaofsurfing.com/entries/catri-dick
https://www.surfguru.com/surfing-hall-of-fame/dick-catri-ec-surfing-hall-of-fame-profile
Hi Dick…went to Cocoa Beach this weekend to pay tribute to Gary Propper….I used to work on the pier back in ’67 and started private surfing lessons there and at the Islander Hut….Hung out with Gary quite a bit and met Hobie several times back then…Mostly at Shags Surf Shop…had one of the first Hobie shirts…lol. Wonderful memories…Gary did well for himself..talented man and seemed to do well at most everything he attempted to do…remember on Wild World of Sports I the 70’s, I was watching him “try” to surf some hellish waves in Hawaii….and paddled out then turned his board around and hung it up…announcers freaked out…not quite like the small waves at Cocoa Beach or Satellite…although the best waves for long boards…was up on the pier for the first time since Westgate bought it….shame they took down all are old pictures from back in the 60’s….I donated a bunch to them, oh 20 years ago…that the surfing magazine photographer gave me before I enlisted to go to Nam. Sean O’Hara called me up back in ’98 and wanted me to come over and do a story on the Islander Hut and my starting surfing lessons there and at the pier… I’m from Southern California and Iowa originally….lived with my aunt and uncle on Merritt Island after I graduated from High School…he worked on the Survayor Space Craft and would drop me off at the pier every morning and pick me up late at night…great memories….I live over by Tampa now and retired as I finally got my 100 percent disability from the V.A for what I went through and witnessed in the Marine Corps….just finished a book about all of that…its at the publishers now…just wanted to give a shout out to you and thank you for helping Gary with the Hobie Team and all…God Bless…Larry (Mac) McDonald….