Het
wordt feest tijdens de W.S.R. Niet
alleen zijn sommige van de beste skateboarders op
aarde in Rotterdam, er is het hele
weekend ook
een
vette Deathbox expositie in de
VIP art gallery aan de Van Vollenhovenstraat
15. Deathbox is bij oudere skaters
nog wel bekend maar de meesten van jullie kennen het
vandaag de dag als Flip
skateboards. Meer weten hierover?
DEATHBOX – A STORY OF POVERTY &
VICTORY!
With less than £2000, Deathbox started out in
England back in 1987. To be accurate, February
27th 1987. The UK had a miserly youth business
start-up program in those days, known as the “Enterprise
Allowance Scheme,” and that is how the Deathbox
legacy began. The £40 a week for two years that
the government scheme provided was supposed to get
Britain’s youth off the Dole by encouraging
them to start up their own businesses. Jeremy Fox,
Duncan “Wurzel” Houlton
and Graham “Mac” McEachran
had got together in an East End of London pub, and
made loose plans to form what would eventually become
the most notorious company and winning team ever,
outside the American skateboard industry.
The first Deathbox decks were smuggled in through
a friend’s family who lived on an American Airbase
near Oxford. No freight charges, no import duty and
no VAT! The problem was that the first precious shipment
of Wurzel decks got lost on some military airplane
and did not show up until 6 months later. In the meantime,
money had to be made and it needed to come out of
thin air.
Jeremy Fox learned very quickly how
to make skateboard helmets, and copied an old fibreglass
Flyaway design from the late 70’s (on a hunch
that it might make a comeback). Working out of a single
car garage in the Buckinghamshire
countryside, the early days of Deathbox started to
roll along. Decks were shipped in from the USA and
screen-printed by hand, slide rails were cut from
solid plastic sheet and stickers were screened using
aerosol glue to hold them to the work bench! Gradually,
the original Deathbox team started to come together.
Mac joined as the artist and also as the second Pro
rider. His artwork was often controversial and his
bank and freestyle skating were an underground legend.
Mark van der Eng was the next to
join the team, from Uitgeest in Holland. He made a
solo trip to Warrington to meet up with Jeremy, and
made
the decision to join the Deathbox team very soon after.
Then the others riders began to emerge: Alex
Moul, Pete Dossett, Paul “Rocker”
Robson, Rune Glifberg, Davy Van Laere,
Nordien Quatbi, Jocke Olsson, Bruno
Rouland, Andy Scott. And then finally,
Sean
Goff joined later on, and cemented the
team as the most dominating force in European skateboarding
history. The team trips over to mainland Europe were
as frequent as the company bank balance would allow.
Without a care in the world about the business of
making money, the team literally wreaked havoc across
Britain and Europe; more often than not driving together
in the trusty Ford Transit Van (F616 AVV).
Now based in a small (and decrepit industrial complex
in Wellingborough, a shitty little
town near Northampton), the company soldiered on through
endless dramas and laughable business, with the only
real focus to fund the team and manufacture Deathbox
products to sell in order to keep the ball rolling.
Friendships were made that would last a lifetime,
and a family of sorts was formed that would endure
for the next twenty years in various different incarnations.
Skateboarding collapsed in 1990 and the toughest years
for Deathbox were from then until 1994. Radlands opened
up in Northampton and became a second home to the
Deathbox team and Jeremy over these last years. The
company camel’s back finally broke and the then
current team as well as Jeremy Fox and long time helper/troublemaker
Ian Deacon, all jumped on a plane
and flew to America to see if they could cut it in
the world capital of skateboarding: California. The
brand was re-named Flip,
but the spirit remained the same.
Now it is officially 20 years since
the original Deathbox Skateboards began, and it seems
appropriate to get the crew back together in Holland,
together with the help of longtime Deathbox supporter
and friend, Nico van der Wel. This
reunion is dedicated to the memory of Matt
McMullan. A long-standing member of the Deathbox
team, who tragically passed away in January 2006.
Deathbox will never die and we hope that the memories
and the inspirations from the team, and the company,
hold a special place in the hearts of “grown
up” skateboarders around the world.
