Jack O’Neill, Founder Of Iconic Surf Brand, Dies At 94

The Santa Cruz surfer is credited with inventing the modern wetsuit and elevating the sport of surfing.

Jack O’Neill, a pioneer in wetsuit technology and founder of the iconic California surf brand, died of natural causes Friday at the age of 94, the Orange County Register reported.

Friends of the Santa Cruz local confirmed his death to Monterey news station KSBW 8 on Friday.

For those who don’t surf, O’Neill’s name is still recognizable as the popular surf brand with a wave-like logo seen on T-shirts, sweatshirts and board shorts, usually worn by anyone who can appreciate a beach-centered lifestyle. 

For those who do surf, however, O’Neill was an innovator of the sport and a true soul surfer. He was known as the eye patch-wearing pioneer (his eye was injured in a surfing accident) who created one of the first neoprene-based wetsuits, which allowed surfers to remain in cold water much longer, according to the O.C. Register.

While others have claimed to have invented the wetsuit, it is O’Neill who is widely credited with expanding surf culture into the colder coastal areas of the world.

In 1952, O’Neill opened a small surf shop at Ocean Beach in San Francisco ― a first for the area ― and looked for ways to stay warm in Northern California’s chilly waters, San Francisco Gate reported. While working on the neoprene-based wetsuit, O’Neill moved his shop south to Santa Cruz.

“I thought that I’d have a little shop on the beach and some people to surf with. But I kept up on the neoprene wetsuit and I soon got letters from around the world ― people who were interested in staying warm in the water,” O’Neill said in a 2012 interview with surf news site Surfline.

“Nobody is more surprised than I am how it’s grown,” he said of his invention.

Surf brands and wetsuit makers still use neoprene. O’Neill, as a brand, has branched into men’s and women’s athletic wear, lifestyle clothing and swimsuits. In 1996, O’Neill, the surfer, founded the O’Neill Sea Odyssey, a youth program that teaches environmental and marine conservation.

In an interview with RedBull TV published in December, O’Neill revealed what he values most: “The three most important things in life are surf, surf and surf.”

O’Neill celebrated his 94th birthday on March 27. He died at home surrounded by family, according to KSBW 8.

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Before You Go

Vintage Surfing
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A Native Hawaiian with a traditional surfboard standing on a beach in Waikiki on the Hawaiian island of Oahu. (1890) (credit:Hawaiian Legacy Archive via Getty Images)
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Three native surfers ride their boards with ease at Waikiki Beach, with Diamond Head in the background, Honolulu, Hawaii, 1920s. (Photo by Underwood Archives/Getty Images) (credit:Underwood Archives via Getty Images)
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A surfer at Waikiki Beach stands on his head as he rides a wave into the shore, Honolulu, Hawaii, circa 1925. Diamond Head is in the background. (credit:Underwood Archives via Getty Images)
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Sun bathers on a beach near Southampton, Long Island, USA, greet a trio of surfers pulled along the beach by an all-terrain vehicle. (credit:Evans via Getty Images)
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Surfers in Hawaii. (1940s) (credit:ullstein bild via Getty Images)
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Surfers of Sydney, Australia, carry their boards across the beach. (1933) (credit:Fox Photos via Getty Images)
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Surfers on the way to the water, circa 1930. (credit:Imagno via Getty Images)
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Water ski champions demonstrating their skills as they ride the wake of a boat without a tow-line in California. (1965) (credit:Keystone-France via Getty Images)
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These cars, also known as "Woodie Wagons," were an integral part of the American surf culture in the 1950s and 1960s. (credit:Car Culture via Getty Images)
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A group of surfers running on the beach at Sydney carrying their surfboards. (May 1931) (credit:Fox Photos via Getty Images)
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Surfers in the water in Hawaii. (credit:Toni Frissell via Getty Images)
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A poster for the movie "The Endless Summer," made by Bruce Brown Films, 1966. The film follows two surfers searching for the perfect wave. (credit:Movie Poster Image Art via Getty Images)
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Surfers Jeff Hakman, Bob Conneeley and John Day ride the small waves on a Pacific beach. (1970) (credit:John Titchen via Getty Images)
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World surfing champion Linda Benson at Hermosa Beach. (1970) (credit:Joe Kennedy via Getty Images)
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A group of youngsters enjoy a day at the beach reclining next to the US Rubber Custom VW Volkswagen Bus and their surf boards. (credit:The Enthusiast Network via Getty Images)
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A group of surfers posing. (credit:Dennis Hallinan via Getty Images)
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John Calvin (left), John Fain (2nd from right) ride out with other surfers to catch a wave in a scene from the film "California Dreaming," 1978. (credit:Michael Ochs Archives via Getty Images)
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View of three surfers silhouetted against a sunset, as they surf back to the beach. (1960s) (credit:Jack Tinney via Getty Images)
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A group of surfers running along the shore. (credit:Tom Kelley Archive via Getty Images)
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Six surfers riding a wave, circa 1955. (credit:Mac Gramlich via Getty Images)
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View of a group of surfers on the sand under the pier at Surfrider Beach, Malibu, California, January 1966. The photo was taken as part of a fashion shoot for Glamour Magazine. (credit:Susan Wood/Getty Images via Getty Images)
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Surfers in Honolua Bay on the island of Maui on January 3, 1980. (credit:Waring Abbott via Getty Images)