Bethany Hamilton

Birthday February 8, 1990

Birth Sign Aquarius

Birthplace Lihue, Hawaii, U.S.

Age 34 years old

Nationality United States

Height 5 ft 11 in

Weight 154 lbs

#8182 Most Popular

1990

Bethany Meilani Hamilton (born February 8, 1990) is an American professional surfer and writer who survived a 2003 shark attack in which her left arm was bitten off and who ultimately returned to professional surfing.

Hamilton was born on February 8, 1990, to Tom and Cheri Hamilton in Lihue, Hawaii.

She has two older brothers, Noah and Timothy.

After learning how to surf at the age of three, Hamilton began surfing competitively at the age of eight and gained her first sponsorship by age 10.

Hamilton was home-schooled from sixth grade through high school by her mother, a housewife, while her father was a waiter at a town café.

2003

On October 31, 2003, 13-year-old Hamilton went for a morning surf along Tunnels Beach, Kauai, with her best friend, Alana Blanchard, as well as Alana's father and brother.

While Hamilton was lying on her surfboard stomach-down and talking with Alana, a 14 ft tiger shark attacked her.

It swiftly bit off Hamilton's left arm, which was dangling in the water, just below the shoulder.

The Blanchards helped paddle Hamilton back to shore, then Alana's father fashioned a tourniquet out of a rash guard and wrapped it around the stump of her arm.

Hamilton was rushed to Wilcox Memorial Hospital.

By the time she arrived there, Hamilton had lost over 60% of her blood and was in hypovolemic shock.

Hamilton's father, who was scheduled to have knee surgery that same morning, was already there, but she took his place in the operating room with the same doctor.

When the news of the shark attack broke, a family of fishermen led by Ralph Young presented to investigators photos of a 14 ft tiger shark they had caught and killed about one mile from the attack site.

It had surfboard debris in its mouth.

When measurements of its mouth were compared with those of Hamilton's broken board, it matched.

After Hamilton taught herself to surf with one arm, she returned to surfing on November 26, 2003, just 26 days after the attack, and entered her first major competition on January 10, 2004.

Hamilton now uses standard competitive performance short-boards.

The shark-bitten surfboard that she was riding during the attack, as well as the swimsuit she was wearing, originally a gift from ocean photographer Aaron Chang, are on display at the California Surf Museum in Oceanside, California.

Since the attack, Hamilton has appeared as a guest on numerous television shows.

Her manager, Roy "Dutch" Hofstetter, who went on to produce the film Soul Surfer, managed Hamilton's rise through the media from shark attack victim to inspirational role model.

The television shows she has appeared on include The Amazing Race, The Biggest Loser, 20/20, Good Morning America, Inside Edition, The Oprah Winfrey Show, The Ellen DeGeneres Show, The Today Show, The Tonight Show and Dude Perfect, as well as in the magazines People, Time, and American Girl.

Additionally, Hamilton was the cover story in the first issue of NiNe magazine.

Hamilton has participated in multiple public speaking events and is "motivating audiences worldwide to live their life with more tenacity, courage, and faith".

2004

She wrote about her experience in the 2004 autobiography, Soul Surfer: A True Story of Faith, Family, and Fighting to Get Back on the Board, which was adapted into the 2011 feature film, Soul Surfer, in which Hamilton attributes her strength to her Christian faith.

In late 2004, police officially confirmed that it was the same one that had attacked her.

Despite the trauma of the incident, Hamilton was determined to return to surfing and did so a month later.

Initially, Hamilton adopted a custom-made board that was longer and slightly thicker than standard and had a handle for her right arm, making it easier to paddle, and Hamilton learned to kick more to make up for the loss of her left arm.

In 2004, Hamilton won the ESPY Award for Best Comeback Athlete and also received the Courage Teen Choice Award.

That same year, MTV Books published Hamilton's book, Soul Surfer: A True Story of Faith, Family, and Fighting to Get Back on the Board, which describes her ordeal.

That same year, a feature film Soul Surfer, based on her 2004 book, was released in theaters.

Hamilton was portrayed by actress AnnaSophia Robb.

She performed all the one-armed surfing stunts in it.

Hamilton also appeared on the TLC series 19 Kids and Counting the same year, in the episode titled "Duggars Under the Sea", when the Duggar family visited her in Atlanta, Georgia.

Hamilton plays herself in the film Dolphin Tale 2, which revolves around the baby dolphin Hope's story.

2007

Hamilton's story is also told in the 2007 short subject documentary film Heart of a Soul Surfer.

Described as a "faith-based documentary", the film addresses her devout Christianity and the courage and faith in Jesus Christ in the aftermath of the shark attack and follows her quest for spiritual meaning.

2009

In 2009, Hamilton was a contestant on Are You Smarter Than a Fifth Grader? and won $25,000.

2010

In 2010, she appeared on an episode of ABC's Extreme Makeover: Home Edition.

2011

In 2011, Hamilton appeared in a video for the Christian organization I Am Second, telling of her struggle after the shark attack and how she trusted in God to get her through it.

2018

Hamilton was also the subject of a 2018 documentary, Bethany Hamilton: Unstoppable, which discusses her marriage to Adam Dirks and how marriage and motherhood have affected her professional surfing career.