Albert Tillman, Dive Education Pioneer and Author, Dies at Age 76
Albert Alvin Tillman, 76, co-founder of NAUI and the Los Angeles County instructor program passed away January 16 in Seattle, Wash. A massive cerebral hemorrhage was the cause of death. A private family service is planned. There will be no public memorial service.
Albert Tillman was born in Los Angeles in 1928. At the age of 10 on the beach at Palos Verdes, Calif., he took a pair of goggles and took his first plunge beneath the water. This initial plunge led to a 65 year life as a free diver and later a scuba diver and industry leader.
Tillman attended the University of Southern California where he earned his undergraduate degree in Public Administration while playing football for the USC Trojans. During World War II he was drafted and served in the Pacific Theater. Stationed in Hawaii, he continued his diving and took classes at the University of Hawaii. After returning from the war he went to graduate school at USC and Loyola, earning his tuition by working as a professional wrestler.
In 1949 he married his high school sweetheart Ruth McIntyre who preceded him in death in 1994. They had two children during their marriage, Laura and Thomas.
In 1952 he was Sports Director of Los Angeles County and proposed setting up public training for the new Aqua-Lung equipment that was quickly gaining popularity with fellow free divers. In 1953 he went to Scripps Institute of Oceanography with County Lifeguard Bev Morgan to take a course designed for scientists by Conrad Limbaugh. Tillman and Morgan took this basic template and designed the first organized public classes in skin and scuba diving. The following year they implemented the first instructor certification courses in the world. The Los Angeles County program continues as one of the most rigorous instructor programs in the world.
In 1955 Tillman went to work as a Professor at California State University in Los Angles. While there he created the first university degree program in recreation and leisure studies. He also started the first college scuba diving club in the United States.
In 1957 Tillman with Zale Parry produced and directed the International Underwater Film Festivals that closely mimicked the Cannes Film Festival by honoring outstanding underwater photographers and their underwater films.
In 1959 Tillman worked part-time as a contributing editor for Skin Diver Magazine. Working with fellow editor Neal Hess, they created NAUI, the first international scuba diving certification agency. Tillman ran the agency part-time until 1969 and continued actively training dive instructors for NAUI until the mid-1980's.
In 1966 Tillman took a sabbatical from teaching and moved to Freeport on Grand Bahama Island. In Freeport he built UNEXSO, the world's first dedicated diving resort. In 1969 he sold UNEXSO and went back to teaching in California.
In 1970 Tillman drove up the West Coast looking for a new location to build a diving resort. He ended up on Orcas Island looking at the possibility of purchasing Rosario Resort. While on Orcas he purchased a farm out in the Doe Bay Area. Over the years Tillman wrote books on diverse topics such as art, book collecting, recreation and diving.
Several more books are partially done and will be completed by long time friend and fellow diving pioneer Zale Parry and his son Thomas.
In 2001 Tillman was one of the inaugural inductees into the International Scuba Diving Hall of Fame on Grand Cayman, along with other pioneer divers such as Jacques-Yves Cousteau, Hans Hass, Sylvia Earle and Canadian underwater photographer Jack McKinney.
In addition to his Hall of Fame induction, he had earlier been one of the first inductees into the United States Hall of Fame and received lifetime achievement awards from diving agencies worldwide. Tillman was also technical advisor for television and film on stories that related to diving and wrote several scripts for television shows such as "Sea Hunt". Tillman was an award-winning underwater photographer and filmmaker with numerous magazine covers and international awards.
Tillman is survived by wife Patricia of Anacortes, Wash. and her family, son Thomas Tillman and his wife Stephanie of Orcas Island, daughter Laura Winningham and her husband Jon of Anacortes. Albert also had four grandchildren, Zachery and Sabina Tillman of Orcas Island and Michael and Brandi Winningham of Anacortes.
Albert Alvin Tillman, 76, co-founder of NAUI and the Los Angeles County instructor program passed away January 16 in Seattle, Wash. A massive cerebral hemorrhage was the cause of death. A private family service is planned. There will be no public memorial service.
Albert Tillman was born in Los Angeles in 1928. At the age of 10 on the beach at Palos Verdes, Calif., he took a pair of goggles and took his first plunge beneath the water. This initial plunge led to a 65 year life as a free diver and later a scuba diver and industry leader.
Tillman attended the University of Southern California where he earned his undergraduate degree in Public Administration while playing football for the USC Trojans. During World War II he was drafted and served in the Pacific Theater. Stationed in Hawaii, he continued his diving and took classes at the University of Hawaii. After returning from the war he went to graduate school at USC and Loyola, earning his tuition by working as a professional wrestler.
In 1949 he married his high school sweetheart Ruth McIntyre who preceded him in death in 1994. They had two children during their marriage, Laura and Thomas.
In 1952 he was Sports Director of Los Angeles County and proposed setting up public training for the new Aqua-Lung equipment that was quickly gaining popularity with fellow free divers. In 1953 he went to Scripps Institute of Oceanography with County Lifeguard Bev Morgan to take a course designed for scientists by Conrad Limbaugh. Tillman and Morgan took this basic template and designed the first organized public classes in skin and scuba diving. The following year they implemented the first instructor certification courses in the world. The Los Angeles County program continues as one of the most rigorous instructor programs in the world.
In 1955 Tillman went to work as a Professor at California State University in Los Angles. While there he created the first university degree program in recreation and leisure studies. He also started the first college scuba diving club in the United States.
In 1957 Tillman with Zale Parry produced and directed the International Underwater Film Festivals that closely mimicked the Cannes Film Festival by honoring outstanding underwater photographers and their underwater films.
In 1959 Tillman worked part-time as a contributing editor for Skin Diver Magazine. Working with fellow editor Neal Hess, they created NAUI, the first international scuba diving certification agency. Tillman ran the agency part-time until 1969 and continued actively training dive instructors for NAUI until the mid-1980's.
In 1966 Tillman took a sabbatical from teaching and moved to Freeport on Grand Bahama Island. In Freeport he built UNEXSO, the world's first dedicated diving resort. In 1969 he sold UNEXSO and went back to teaching in California.
In 1970 Tillman drove up the West Coast looking for a new location to build a diving resort. He ended up on Orcas Island looking at the possibility of purchasing Rosario Resort. While on Orcas he purchased a farm out in the Doe Bay Area. Over the years Tillman wrote books on diverse topics such as art, book collecting, recreation and diving.
Several more books are partially done and will be completed by long time friend and fellow diving pioneer Zale Parry and his son Thomas.
In 2001 Tillman was one of the inaugural inductees into the International Scuba Diving Hall of Fame on Grand Cayman, along with other pioneer divers such as Jacques-Yves Cousteau, Hans Hass, Sylvia Earle and Canadian underwater photographer Jack McKinney.
In addition to his Hall of Fame induction, he had earlier been one of the first inductees into the United States Hall of Fame and received lifetime achievement awards from diving agencies worldwide. Tillman was also technical advisor for television and film on stories that related to diving and wrote several scripts for television shows such as "Sea Hunt". Tillman was an award-winning underwater photographer and filmmaker with numerous magazine covers and international awards.
Tillman is survived by wife Patricia of Anacortes, Wash. and her family, son Thomas Tillman and his wife Stephanie of Orcas Island, daughter Laura Winningham and her husband Jon of Anacortes. Albert also had four grandchildren, Zachery and Sabina Tillman of Orcas Island and Michael and Brandi Winningham of Anacortes.