By Clare Ablett, Rachael Telford, and Conor Heffernan
Published in The International Journal of the History of Sport, January 2026.
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Abstract

While surfing in Ireland is a sport on the ascendancy, both in terms of recreational and competitive participants, a great deal more work needs to be done on the sport’s origin within the country. This is especially the case for women’s surfing on the island. Irish women entered surfing from the 1960s onwards, with the role of geography, family networks, and equipment access shaping participation patterns. Women’s entry mechanisms into surfing was historically entrenched in masculine cultures. Irish female surfers have navigated, challenged, and reshaped the boundaries of this sport in many ways, delineating how Ireland’s surfing narrative, whilst rooted in its distinct coastal communities, has been part of global surfing cultures. Women who successfully entered Irish surfing navigated informal barriers, revealing mechanisms of exclusion that operated differently from institutional prohibition while demonstrating how Ireland’s peripheral position necessitated immediate engagement with global surfing networks.