4th Hole 3rd Round Jun 1997
Transcription
4th Hole 3rd Round Jun 1997
.' .-,. .- . ..... •••• 1· '----... .. · .. is the ]ournaJ of the British Golf Collectors' Society and is pubJished quarterly in March, June, September and December. The views and opinions printed within are essentially those of the Contributors or Editor and are not intended to represent an official Society viewpoint unJess specifically stated. The magazine is available only to members of The Society and to selected overseas subscribers. No part of this publication, with the exception of book reviews, may be reproduced without written consent of the Editor. The aims of The Society are to encourage and promote an interest in the history of ~Ax~ golf and the colJecting of items connected with 4th Hole that history. We welcome new members but extend Httle sympathy with any 3rd Round applicant who seeks membership for commercial gain. Jun 1997 THE OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF THE BRITISH GOLF COLLECTORS' SOCIETY "CRAMOND'" 8 JULIAN CLOSE' BARNWOOD • GLOUCESTER GL4 3AF THE BRITISH GOLF COLLECTORS SOCIETY 1997 COMMITIEE MEMBERS Captain Tim Smartt 01273814814 Vice Captain Bob Grant 0199851680 Hon SecfTreasurer Christopher Ibbetson 10620 895561 (Tel and Fax) Brian Bowness 0163548929 David Easby 0181 9970039 Peter Heath 0121 472 2740 Alan Jackson 01452612849 (Tel and Fax) John Pearson 01904 628711 Graham Walters 01942874059 John Wilson 01424843636 Editor Hono rary Secretary and Treasurer PO Box 13704, North Berwick, East Lothian EH39 4ZB formed BGCS. The response brought us 90 members by the time of the 21 st May meeting, and the 1988 Directory lists 122. By then we had invited David Easby to become our first Secretary (now back on the Committee following a long stint abroad), David White to be our first Editor of the proposed newsletter, and Joe Murdoch to be our first Honorary Life Member. The BGCS is 10 years aid! It is particularly pleasurable for me to proclaim our tenth birthday and to congratulate all of you, our members, on the achievement of th is first milestone in what hopefully will prove to be a very long history. As a Society focused on the history of the game of golf, which is itself already some six hundred years old, I can easily envisage our members (or perhaps the Alistair Johnston) of 300 years hence looking back and noting the accomplishments of the Society af ter its very first decade. And so we launched the BGCS and embarked on the journey that has taken us to where we are today. From those modest beg innings in the early months of 1987, I am happy to say that we now have a thriving, growing, sound and successful Society. Congratulations are due to all those who we re involved at the start, and especially to those members who have put in countless hours over the years since:- many successive Committee members, our previous and current Secretary, past and present Editors and of course all members, new and old, without whose support we could not have reached this stage. The month of May marks the 10th anniversary of the first Committee meeting held following the formal establishment of the Society - 21st May 1987. There had in fa ct been two previous meetings earlier in 1987, namelyon 19th February and 18th March when the five "Founders" of the Society met. These five we re to become our first five Captains: the late Ray Gossage, Tony Hawkins, Philip Truett, Peter Crabtree and the current incumbent. We held these first meetings in the backgammon room (but I don't think any gambling took pi ace) of the Naval & Military Club, otherwise known as the "In and Out" owing to its imposing entrance and exit gates, thus inscribed, on Piccadilly. From this rat her auspicious venue for our birth, we moved our subsequent meetings th at autumn to my office in Godstone, Surrey, a former 18th century hostelry, perhaps more in keeping with inaugural meetings of the very early golf Societies. We have grown from a couple of meetings in our first year to five regional sections and some 18 events th is year. Through The Green has flourished since its first issue of 8 pages - th is one has 40 - and has become for many the eagerly awaited linch-pin of the Society. Dur membership, now around 450, continu es to attract new and diverse members from the entire spectrum of golf and indeed from all over the globe. This I think is one of the Society's special characteristics and indeed one of the things th at distinguishes it from many other golf Societies and clubs. We have a membership drawn from all walks of life and all sectors of the golf world, from the humblest collector to some eminent figures in golf. Each has a part to play, a sharing of a specialist interest or knowiedge. The common bond is the respect and pass ion for the history and traditions of the game, and early artefacts connected with it, and a collective will to further explore and preserve these. At those first two meetings it was decided to form "The British Golf Collectors Society" - there had been some uncertainty as to the future of the GCS in America at that time and it seemed an appropriate moment to form the BGCS as there we re many GCS members in Britain. Consequently a letter was sent out (after several drafts) on 27th March to these GCS members inviting them to join the newly Indeed as time goes by, it will become 1 ever more important for us as a Society to offer our support to the world of golf in general as a custodian of these values. ,. ,. . ,. new event will give many of our members who cannot make the annual pilgrimage to Gullane, the chance to enjoy a similar meeting in England. At the same time we would certainly hope to tempt both our Scottish (and Welsh, Irish and European) members and our Overseas Associates to participate, just as so many of our English members travel to Scotland to support that marvellous event. ,. To mark our tenth birthday, the survlvmg four "Founders" wish to present the Society with a trophy, the Founders' SII/ver, to be played for annually in a new event, the Eng/ish Hickory Chllmplonship. It may be possible to hold the first one this autumn, otherwise it will be in 1998. The venue will probably change each year, but we hope that the inaugural one will be played over the links of Rye on the Sussex co ast, where three of our Founders are members. Wh o knows, our 25th birthday may be marked by a Grand Slam of Hickory Championships! With th at thought, I look forward to seeing as many of you as possible in July at the Open meeting at Western Gailes near Troon - a wonderful venue, please make every effort to come. What better way to start the BGCS's next decade? The Scottish Hickory Championship will always continue as our oldest fixture and one of the best in our calendar (witness the splendid occasion earlier th is May), but we hope that the Can any one identify the people in this card or say where and when the picture might have been taken? The gentleman on the right is wearing a sweater with a diced neckband of dark and light colours; perhaps the Oxford-Cambridge Society? Any thoughts to the Editor, please. The details of the special commemorative cover(opposite) have been sent in by Stuart Mackenzie. However since sending it, Stuart has phoned to say thay there wjll not be a Mobile Post Office at the Open. Apparently the PO thought th at the proposed rent for the facility was too much. Either the PO is getting mean or the Open organisers are getling too greedy. Something wrong somewhere. However it is believed the covers will be on sale at the Information Desk. 2 The 126th Open Golf Championship [T eH - --~~ --- - ROYAL TROON GOLF CLUB The Open Champ1onsh1p returns tO ,Royal Troon tor the seventh time Stuart R. MacKenzie Once again a special commemorative cover and handcancel have been comm1ss1oned for the 126th Open. It depicts a panoramie scene of the Eighth Hole, known as the postage Stamp. This is the shortest hole of ' all' the Open Championship courses, and ' the most infamous. It has ruined many a good score, one competitor taking 13 strokes to complete the hole, while in·the 1973 Open Gene Sarazen aged 71 holed in 1 (he won the 1932 Open Championship). Covers will be available on course during Championship Week. The Mobile Post Office will again be in attendance for selling stamps (Golf stamps unavailable) and posting of the special cover. The 126th Open Golf Champion5hi~ THEI0PENj' CHAMPIONSHIP ROYAL TROON GOLF CLUB 1997 The Open Championship - 1997 Commcmor<llivc Cover TROON AYRSHIRE TROON, on(!'of the premier holiday resorts on the ho'est coast and 0 mccca for golfus wirh ilSljive J8-hole golf courses situared in the lown, including three Municipol and Iwo Priva/e, One being the POr/land and 'Irot olher the Open Championship Course, RoyaJ Troon, TH! OPl.N CIfAMrIO!'iSIIII" HISTORV. In.chuttd by ProlwKk Golf Club In 1160 ,,:"11 pl&yW over PrcSlwkk Illuil 1110. In II7Z I ntW tropl'ly In Il\c lhlpc of thc prcWIL cup wu lubKnlKd fOf,bY the Pratwkk Oub thc Rora! IIId Ancienl GoIr Club and the- Honour.blc Com\HIny,lIId lhc ChlmpKlnll'lIp wu pl.red In .;";CU$lvl rUil over Lhe lintl or IhCK cluN \Intil 11'). In L19~ Lhe links or Rora! Livcrpool Md Ro)'a! St . ütor.c·J. WCIC added 10 the r04l. In 1909 Oeal WIU Lh~ wcnuc; 1/1 192.) TI~ ; In 1926 Roy~ L)1ham and SI. Anna; In 1931 CanlO,ut;': In 19S1 Portll,uh. and 11'1 19H Il'Ie a.amp.on~lp wou held I1 ~O)'al8Ltlldalt, neh rOt Ihe i'inllLmt, Tht Aib. Cou,w ar. Tutnbcrry wu hOK orlhe a.~PlOn~lr In 1971 rot lbc fint limc. Sinu 19191he ClIampion~lp hu \Men Of.anl~ br the Royal and Anetent Col Qub of St.4Mr~. 3 As a holiday resorl, Troon hps (WO mi/es of sands and is on idea/ touring cenlre for {he Burns country and the many Qllractiolls of the surrounding dis/rier. f Th e SE gather at Woking, one of Bernard Darwen's 'best', on Friday 10th act Allcorners are welcome 50 contact John Wilson or Tom Heduan. Following the Winter hibernation, the season has sprung to life with a series of meetings in quick succession. The SE started us off on 4 April at Copthorne with a round of golf and a J H Taylor evening to follow. President's Day was next in grand style, followed closely by the SW day at Newbury and Crookham. A quick dash up the M6 for a' go at the guttie' on Musselburgh and the Scottish Hickory Championship at Gullane and the then a more leisurely drive back down for the Droitwich Centenary match on the 16 May. Contrary to the old adage, you cannot get too much of a good thing. Full reports follow. A reminder that there will be a Society Hickory match against Aberdovey on Saturday lSth November. More details will be in the next Issue. SCOTIISH MATCHPLAY CHAMPIONSHIP The first round of the Scottish Matchplay Championship has been completed successfully. The results are: FORTHCOMING EVENTS Hamish Ewan lost to Tom Tew 1 up Graeme Lennie beat John Kiernan 3 & 2 Edward Sherry beat Barry Kerr 2 up Chris Ibbetson beat John Still 3& 1 1 up Erick Davidson beat John Rigg Jake Davidson beat Robert Thompson Jim Colville beat Tom Gowans 5&4 Bill Tanner lost to Archie Baird WO A NEW FIXTURE is another Centenary Match, this time against Sandwell Park on Friday 4 July. Such was the success of the match with Droitwich th at getting a place in the team will be a cut-throat affair. The Moral? The Deil taks the hindmost! The indefatigable John Moreton is our team manager and his number is shown above 50 don't say you have not been told. Weil do ne the Scots, always in the lead when it comes to enterprise and originality. Maybe, just maybe, the sleeping giant in the South will awaken next season! You are now much too late for The Dpen Meeting since your entry should have been with Robert Thompson before the end of May. However, if you suddenly have an overwhelming desire to attend, his number is 0141 889 1860 although I have no idea what the position will beo I would try, mind you. COMMrITEE NEWS Graham Walters has been co-opted on to the Committee to fill the vacancy created by the appointment of Bob We have a rest until 28 Aug when the MlD LANDS hold their Autumn meeting at Sandwell Park, this time with steel shafts. The meeting is, of course, open to all and you will be most welcomel. Who is in charge? Would you believe John Moreton? Grant as Vice Captain. STOPPRESS A video containing all the footage taken by BBC Scotland of the Foursomes at Musselburgh will be available in the near future. It will be professionally edited, will run for about 40 mins and cost around [12.50. If you want to reserve a copy, please call John Rigg on 0131 440 1385 as soon as possible 50 ~ experience of the season is on 12 Sep when the SW are organising their Autumn meeting at St Enedoe in Cornwall. We know it is a long way and that it will probably mean an overnight stay, but this course really is a gem and it should be on your battle honours .. The Welsh Wizard, Eiron Morgan is the contact on 01639 896773. 4 .GET WELL SOON Tbree of our members bave not beeo enjoyiog 'be best of bealtb receotly. Ilodoey Hawkins, Edwin Walker aod Stoart MacKenzie. We seod tbem our very best wisbes aod bopes for 'beir speedy improvemeo'. Uaste ye back. to Alan Walker on being appointed this year's Captain of the Professional Golfers Association. Weil Done, Alan . Fran the Editor Havin;J had to postpone a long-planned family holiday to Canada in the past t= years, we are at last really goin;:!. Regrettably, the arrangenents have to be such that I will be away fran mid-August until 12 Septerrber and 50 will be unable to complete work on the next issue of TTG until I return, which will make it s omewhat late in reaching you. I can hear the rrutterings already rut you c ould help keep the delay to a minimum by sending in your articles as early as possible 50 that I can begin work on thern before I go or im:nediately I return. By my last reckoning, I am awaitin;:! copy fran the other 437 rrarbers who have !lOt yet contriWted! LATE DATES ENGLAND v SCOTLAND 1997 HICKORY MATCH The annual England v Scotland hickories match returns to Gullane on Friday 12 September, when Scotland will be keen to avenge their unexpectedly heavy deleat at Silloth last year ( it pains me each time I write this). Dinner will be in the clubhouse afterwards. The respective team organisers are lor England, John Pearson on 01904 626711 and Archie Baird lor Scotland on 01875 870277. If you enjoy keenly lought match-play, don't delay - th is is the one lor you . V EAGLESCLIFFE Society member Alan Sowerby is Captain ol Eaglescliffe this year and has invited the Society to a return Hickories match on Friday 26 September. The match will be lollowed by a talk on 'The Golden Years ol British Golf' and a 'show and teil' by Society members. Team members will recall a tight match over this Braid-designed course on a beautilul October day in 1995, lollowed by a hospitabie evening in the clubhouse. Ring John Paarson on 01904 626711 il you wish to play or attend MEMBERSHIP We welcome the lollowing new members and associates: 477 476 479 460 461 462 463 464 EM295 Tim Morrison lan Connon Mark Fairhurst John Spink John Hawkins Richard Bayliss Donaid Goodman Michael Neary Michael Weyermann Maybole Falkirk Wigan Hassocks S Nutfield Wrexham Stourbridge Blackrock, Ireland Kreuzau, Garmany 5 Balls, Scorecards, Yardage Charts Art, Open Memorabilia Books Books, Clubs anything related to Dorking GC Books Art, Clubs, Photographs Books, Autographs Clubs, Books ·<<::~:r*-~·"'·YJt? "<<- ·.....x·mw.- PRESIDENT'S 4lDAY players (twenty Foursomes). including guests. Whilst the 'Draw' was technically a random one , some sensible adjustments had to be made to match Members with Members, Guests with Guests, to qualify lor the respective prizes . This resulted in th ere being twelve pairings in each ol the President's and Captain's teams. With a total ol 438 (Stablelord) points John Behrend's team beat Tim Smartt's with 408 points, the losing pair in each Match buying the winners Port (the practicalities of this apparently simple scheme were not as easy either to administer or explain I). The winners of the Society's First Prize engraved Silver Medallions once aga in kindly donated by David Kirkwood - were Michael Harris (8) and Archie Baird (1 5) with 44 points. A most commendable score . Second Prize - engraved Bronze Medallions , again given by David- was won by Charles Wade (9) and Alan Jackson (16) with 40 points. Third prize (golf baiis) went to John Sherwood (2) and Manlred Schotton (18) who had 39 points. In his Winners 'speech' Michael Harris recalled how his lawn started lile as Sandy lyle's Augusta Masters-winning divot, which also explains how he became a Collector. In the 'Guests' Section David Myles (22) and David Pealing (19) took the First Prize (Books) with 41 points whilst S. Barton (10) and H. Seymour(18) were second with 39 points which earned them golf balls. There was an excellent turnout and, following Morning Coffee, then an excellent lunch, everyone enjoyed a most convivial round of golf on one ol the world's most prestigious courses lor an extremely lavourable fee - thanks to the cons ideration and support ol Royal Liverpool Golf Club. PRESIDENT'S DAY GOES WITH A SWING - ANOTHER LUCKY 18TH AT HOYLAKE 'Wow!! (to borrow Tom Lehman's 'Open' euphemism) ... what a day'. Or should I say 'few days' for some, like Toni Kammerer and his guest Bernhard Schmidt who made a golfing week-end ol it by coming over Irom Garmisch in Southern Germany . So too did Jurgen and Hannelore Kienie, from Bad Wildungen . Even further alield, Walter and Gloria Bielstein came with the ir guests , the Patillo's, from San Antonio; Norman Burnett Irom Colorado; Joseph Tiscornia Jnr and Jenn ifer Perry Irom New Jersey; Brian Siplo , another 'reg ui ar ' allender, I rom Massachusells and Kurt Fredrixon Irom Renton WA. This was a truly international lield, as the variety of colourlul Ilags on the 'Top Tabie' rellected. But, to go back to the beg inning, Members will recall that Friday, the 18th April 1997, should have lollowed the normal 'Chester Meeting' format ol morning Foursomes at Hoylake lollowed by Auction Viewing p.m. and rounded 011 with the A.G.M. and Annual Dinner in the evening at The Queen Hotel. It is history now , and well-documented elsewhere, but suffice it to say that, when (lor a second time, at even shorter notice) Phillips decided to move both the date and the venue ol their Spring primary Auction , the Society was, to put it mildly, left with a dilemma. For a few days, the telephone and postal system we re under pressure as the Committee tossed around the possibilities. In the end it was ag reed that we would 'soldier on regardless' and so I approached our President , John Behrend to discuss the ramilications of a possible change in schedule at Royal Liverpool. 'leave it with me and 1'11 come back to you' said John. When he did (having in the meantime had discussions at the Club), what he suggested was almost unbelievably good news . So that's how President's Day came about : like a Phoenix rising Irom the ashes ! Here's wh at actually took pi ace. Goil at Royal Llverpool First ol all, those who wished to play in the morning - and thirteen did - could do so (at the extremely concessionary lee ol EI5), and this lacility was also extended to the previous dav. Starting at 2 p.m. the Match proper, President's versus Captain's Team, took pi ace. All told, there were almost eighty The Dinner Then followed the main item on the dav, Ihe Presidenfs Dinner, which was held in the Club-room . In all, eighty-eight lad ies and Gentlemen were present, including Andrew Renison , Captain ol Royal Liverpool, and his wile Susan; Mrs Wendy Robinson, lady Captain of Royal livarpool and her husband (and B.G.C.S. Membar) Roger. Jos Armitage, 'Ionicus' to usa his nom-de-plume, and a Membar ol Royal Liverpool was a guest also. Mrs Robinson kindly presented the prizes. Intentionally, because ol the Auction which 6 followed, there were no official speeches. However, the occasion would have been lacking something without just a few words from our President, and John Behrend did not let us down. His brief address, delivered with unique oratorical expertise, concluded with another verse (or two) from his everincreasing repertoire of self-composed golfing poems. The Dinner concluded with our Captain, Tim, expressing the Society's gratitude both to John, particularly for his extreme generosity in buying the Wine, and to The Captain and Members of Royal Liverpool for the wonderful hospitality afforded to us. The Membars Auction And there's more! One would think that there had been enough excitement for one day but no, the Auction which followed was an added delight. David Kirkwood, ably assisted by Archie Baird conducted the Auctioneering having earl ier in the day , Irantically appraised and recorded over fifty lots. In humorous vein they coaxed, urged, cajoled the 'audience' (a full Dining-room) into parting with sums which, to the vendors at least, must have seemed like manna from heaven. From gross sales of E3,088 a surplus of over E350 was made, including donations, from the very modest commissions of 5% on vendors and buyers, and will go to the 1997 Whee l-chair Fund. This was a most worthwhile effort, despite the not inconsiderable amount of work involved, both during and after the auction wh en Bob and Shirley Grant cheerfully coped with accounting for all the business. The obvious success of the who Ie day was borne out by the fact that few left the Club before the Auction ended, which was after Midnight. Financially, the Society WIII come out with a modest surplus (excluding the Auction), and th is is very definitely due to the wonderful support from Members - wh om I thank wholeheartedly - and to Royal Liverpool, and their Secretary Group Captain Chris Moore, whose generosity enabled us to keep within prices which had been set prior to the changed circumstances. But, thanks in partlcular must be accorded to our President, both for providing the wine and for so helpfully coordinating the whole event. Also, lor another of his splendidly illuminating 'Cook's Tou rs' of the Club's Heritage Collection . Bravo, John! In 1996 the Meeting was held on January 18th, wh en it also was highly successlul but lor different reasons. Eighteen seems to be quite,a popular number in golf; maybe I should change my Loltery numbers! Norman Fox WItUe Norman rlgbtly mentIons varloU8 people lor tbelr contrIbutIons to the day, he completely uoderplays the great amount ol time aod ellort be hlmself expended In maklng tbe flrst Presldent's Day su eb a success, as Indeed he bas done in our prevloU8 meetings at Cbester. Tbank you very much, Norman.. ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING The 9th AGM ol the BGCS was held at the Royal Liverpool Golf Club on Friday 18th April 1997. 45 members were in altendance and apologies we re received from a lurther 23. The main items were: The Hon Treasurer's report and the Accounts for the year ended 31 December 1996 were approved. The Captain gave a detailed explanation for the rationale behind the increase in the annual subscriptions. This was endorsed by the meeting. The meeting approved the following appointments relating to the Commiltee: H R J Grant to be appointed Vice Captain B J Bowness and P Heath to be appointed as members of the Commiltee. A F Jackson and J L Wilson to be reappointed as members ol the Commiltee. D C Moffalt was appointed Honorary Auditor. The Pleasures of Golf are many. Charles Lamb said that he lelt disposed to say Grace on twenty occasions in the day beyond that of his dinner..... So it is with golf. We want to return thanks lor much more than the playing of it; for the Iriendliness of club house and conviviality, lor golfing dinners , for the traditions of old courses, for the exploration of fresh ones. Bernard Darwin, 1956 7 ... · l~;:lIoRNÊ ~~!~;;I:;! ~:$~x:~;:i~Wb.:~:t . . _ .w. The South East opened the 1997 season in grand style. Friday 4 April was a glorious day, sunny and warm as 25 members and their guests, accompanied by the Copthorne Captain and Secretary, thoroughly enjoyed a round on a very interesting course, in excellent condition lor the time of year. The quality ol the golf matched the conditions and some good scores we re posted. Mind you, having to negotiate the A 264 after the first two, and belore the last, holes certainly focussed one's attention on 'J. the matters in hand. The theme of the evening was J H Taylor and after dinner we were had two rare treats, both tapes of 'JH' himself talking about golf. The first, an extract from a larger production, was his tribule to Harry H,' Vardon following the latter's death. JH thought Vardon the greatest golfer he had ever seen. The second, lasting about 15 minutes, was of Henry Cotton interviewing the great man on his eightieth birthday. Even at that age, his commenls we re lucid and discerning and reflected his stalure in the game. John Wilson and Tom Heduan had assem bied a fine display of memorabilia which members could enjoy at their leisure. The results were: Members Tim Smartt 39 pts 1st 2nd John Wilson 36 pts 3rd tan Wood 35 pts Guests 1 st Bob Walker 37 pts 2nd Richard Hewitt 37 pts SW MEETING - NEWBURY AND CROOKHAM producing The Courses of Newbury and Crookham. To support his talk, Brian had a superb display of club trophies and photographs, silver spoons, clubs, books and pictures. It was a splendid presentation. The icing on the cake was Brian's special guest Jack Hughes who had been the club' s prolessional from 1931 to 1977. There were three of his own clubs on display and he was able to give us a detailed account of how they we re made Many thanks, Brian The prizes went to: The date was May 2nd and Newbury & Crookham was the venue for the South West Region's Spring Meeting. The weather was gloriously warm and sunny and there was a profusion of cotour in the trees and witd flowers which bordered the fairways and hotes on this very undulating and challenging course. What more could a golfer ask for? Good company and there was plenty of that too. Our Captain, Peter Gompertz could only make the dinner as he dashed South after his unsuccessful attempt to be elected as an MP the day before. We wo nt mention the colour of his rosette but had he stood for the "Free Golf For All" party (and we don't mean the Green party!), he might have been more successful! Better luck next time, Peter. Our speaker was Brian Bowness who spoke on the researches he had undertaken in 1 st 2nd 3rd Members David Easby Bob Grant 37 pts 33 pts arian Bowness 31 pts Guests Cyril Arnold 41 pts ClEANING ANO REPAIR OF alO CLUBS Philip Bowden will clean and repair your old clubs at a very moderate charge, Irom 1:2.50 per club. Irons Clean head Woods Feed and clean shaft Re-Iay loose grips Replace loose whipping Contact Philip at 36 Lower Queens Road, Buckhurst Hili, Essex IG9 6DN or on 0161 505 1974 6 DROITWICH HICKORY MATCH ww JarvlS Lady Captain Mrs S.Gr4y ColptaJn Mr Frillay May 16th lQQ7 DROITWICH GOLF CLUB WELCOME THE BRITISH GOLF COLLECTORS SOCIETY 'l bc c;:ovcr of tbc men us. dcsigned and made by tbe Droilwich l.adies Section 13 loyal men and true. and 3 lovely la dies, Rosemary Barnie-Adshead, Jenny Heath and Ros Weston, assembied at Oroitwich to defend the honour of the Society in a match against Ihe home club, the opening event of il's Centenary year. Appropriately accoutred, Jenny and Ros bath bearing a creditable resemblance to Lady Margarel Scolt - the illiterati should refer to the first th ree years of the Ladies Amateur Championship - and the team certainly looked the part. Unfortunately, they we re not quite sa good at playing the part. Part of the problem lay in our leniency during the handicap negotiations which, for future attention, must be rigorously contested to ga in the maximum benefit for the wood-wielders; there must be less of the gentlemanly conduct and more hard bargaining. The rest of the problem lay in our own hands' Nonetheless, It was a grand day with the threalened thunderstorms holding off until we had finrshed. After a very tasty dinner. we we re able to repay our hosts by holding an "Antiques Raad Show", to which club members were invlted to bring along their golling artifacts, and which was weil received by the audlence. On such occasions the score is quite Irrelevant and certainly same of our team are glad it is sa. However, for the record, the 'Moderns' beat the 'Ancients' by t7 holes up. Oroitwich did us proud, their hospitality being most generous. There is na doubt that these fixtures do credit to ths Society and sa deserve to be well-supported . With a minimum of effort you can look the part and with a little patience you will find you can wield the hickories with same satisfaction. Sa, if you have not beon to one, why not have a go; you will certainly enjoy the day out. Playing at Mosely with John Moreton and Walter Mechil i in preparation for the malch, Terry Stace (t 0) holed in one Ihe 295 yds 17th with his hickory driver He used a Ladies 80 compression bali and had a light following breeze. The club, with a steel insert in the face bul the maker's name na langer visible, does not have a bubble shaft. radio active components nor does it bear the name of a generously proportioned lady. Sa Much for technology . Weil done, Terry 9 ; HICKORY CHAMPIONSHIPS REFLECTIONS OF A NEWCOMER Although a member ol the Society lor some nine years, it has been a source ol much regret that I have, hitherto, not taken part in this the longest established ol BGCS Championships. I realise now wh at I (and many others) have been missing! Alter the reports (principally Irom my old pal, David Gower who stayed in England with some la me excuse) ol last year's modest breezes and the occasional shower which drove certain renowned participants Irom the delightful Gullane No 3 course, I approached the occasion with some trepidation because, as lor everyone else, the 'pencil' bag provides very limited storage space lor carrying protection against the elements . John Rigg's reassuring words were , however, sullicient to ensure that all but one ol the lorty eight entrants appeared, possibly enticed by the prospect ol a predominantly liquid lunch in the Old Clubhouse Pub. Such a good time was had at th is hostelry that some ol us would have been quite happy to linger longer. This and the strange disappearance ol all but one ol the draw sheets resulted in the lirst teeing 011 time passing without too many realising. However, the redoubtable Archie Baird (did I hear relerence to a Regimental Sergeant Major in hushed tones?) was soon to the lore, cracking the proverbial whip , particularly with an unnamed Captain, and some semblance ol order was restored. What a grand sight it was to see everyone resplendent in period golling gear, none more so than the quintessential (Mr) Philip Truett in truly splendid blazer ( and other accoutrements!) If there had been a prize lor sartorial elegance, Philip would have been most people's nomination at the start il not the end ol the round wh en the rain had done its damnedest and the adjective bedraggled readily sprang to mind For those ol us taking part lor the lirst time, there was a certain nervousness on being reminded that the Championship was Medal and not Stablelord lorrnat but Gullane No 3, subtIe certa inly but not too long, is an ideal choice ol course on which to test one's skilIs, actual and imagined. The scores detailed elsewhere suggest that certain ol us play just as weil , il not better, with ol der and lewer clubs. Sadly, despite the initial euohoria with the MUSSELBURGH FOURSOMES At 8.30am on a beautilully sunny May morning, 36 intrepid souls assembied lor a Iriendly set ol Foursomes over the Old Links at Musselburgh. More people than usual but otherwise the lamiliar start to the Scottish Hickory Championships - or was it? Wh at was the big green BBC Television van doing outside the Old Links clubhouse? Ol course! They we re th ere to witness probably the lirst lormal competition played with wooden shafted clubs and guttie balls lor at least 90 years and on a lamous old course to boot. The balls were manulactured by David Hamilton in the traditional manner and right weil they looked in their pristine condition although that was not to last lor long! Most ol us lind it dillicult enough playing a modern bali with hickories but the guttie was a dillerent proposition altogether. Because David had been unable to allow the balls to season, usually lor about six months, they did not !ly as lar, perhaps around 60-70% ol the normal and very lew discovered the technique lor getting them up in the air. There were a lair number ol casualties, with balls splitting, usually the result ol an air pocket, and a number showed their scars at the end . All in all, it was an experience not to be missed and it certainly makes one appreciate just how good players we re a century and more ago. Playing 011 hall the combined handicap, the winners ol the George Colville Memorial Trophy were the Anglo-Scottish partnership ol John Mullock and John Still with ten and a hall points which equated to slightly better than net bogey. The meeting certainly got good media coverage. BBC Scotland had a live minute slot during the 'Reporting Scotland ' programme in the evening on BBC1 , the commentary being both inlormative, complimentary and amusing . The Glasgow Heraid had a substantial article on the lollowing Wednesday replete with a good picture 01 Graeme lennie look i ng appropriately quizzical as he lollows the !light ol his balI. I have not seen the article vet which (I think) should have appeared in the local Musselburgh paper. Such publicity is a good thing lor the Society although I am not sure that it ever actually brings in any new members. 10 • benign conditions, the heavens eventually opened with only the first few out escaping a drenching , but it could have been worse as it seemed, from the Hili, that Edinburgh suffered an even wetter afternoon. It was , therefore, a re lief to be able to repair to the Club house - one of the most inviting and comfortabie retreats one can think of - where the organisers had arranged the customary and delicious carvery buffet , the popularity of which created a line-up most of the way down the venerabie staircase although , on a no names basis, one has to report some not so crafty queue jumping . The dining room was eventually full to capacity and , alter vet another marvellous grace by Archie Baird from his seemingly inexhaustible repertoire, everyone settled down to exchange the inevitable hard luck stories of their round with the consoling thought that there is always next year to look forward to. Two professionals, entrants from the US. (although Brian Siplo is reputed to be thinking of British citizenship), Finland and mainland Europe, quite apart from a goodly number of infiltrators from south of the Border, all made for a marvellous cross section of the Society and, once John Rigg had completed the not inconsiderable task of establishing the gross and net winners, Captain Smartt regaled us with a very amusing account of some educational howlers he had seen in his publishing business before the patient Alison , his wife, who had travelled all the way from Sussex to present the pr izes , charmingly discharged her responsibilities which included receiving the net runner up who was none other than Tim! The fact th at I was fortunate enough to play with the most congenial Wayne Aaron and our esteemed Editor is not the reason for this sudden and, some may say, uncharacteristic, burst into print but, without wishing to make the event next year a logistical nightmare, the Scottish Hickories is, without exaggeration, the epitome of all that is best in the Society. Peter Heath • • • As Peter suggests, Gullane No 3 is a good course for hickories. It is not too long or too difficult. Nor should it be . A long and difficult course would exaggerate the different skilIs whereas No 3 encourages closer competition and th at makes it better for all. But it is no push over since you have to think if you stray and there is always a breeze to contend with once you get 'up the hili'; and wind and hickories can be a great levelIer. The results reflect a good day's battle. Scottish Hickory Champion and holder of the Royat Troon Club 2nd 3rd 4th Brian Siplo (12) 67 Tim Smartt(10) John Rigg(16) Peter Heath( 11) 68 69 70 Scratch Champion and holder of the Sam Sharp Swinger Chris Homer 78 2nd Scratch H'cap Graeme lennie 79 Lady Guests Jenny Heath( 19) 85 Gentleman Guests AIIan Dawson 72 lan Mackay( 13) Dave Balchin( 12) 68 70 As always our sineere thanks to John Rigg and Archie Baird who, year in year out, lay on such a good dav for us , and, on th is occasion, to David Hamilton in particular for making this good dav into a unique dav Alan Jackson A FtNAL THOUGHT Atolerable dav, a toierabie green, a toierabie opponent, supply, or ought to supply , all that any reasonably constituted human being should require in the way of entertainment. With a fine sea view, and a clear course in front ol him, the golfer should lind no difficulty in dismissing all worries Irom his mind, and regarding golf, even it may be indifferent golf, as the true and adequate end ol man's existence. No inconvenient reminiscences ol the ordinary workaday world, no intervals of weariness or monotony interrupt the pleasures ol the game. EARL BALFOUR 11 David Hamilton - Guttie moulder extraordinaire - gave those of us at Musselburgb a most interesting moming's golf playing witb gutties. By way of a follow-up, be bas penned tbe following comments on the bali and its manufactUTe. :.: ~ .. Gulla percha is obtained Irom Malaysia, still lormed as crude bricks in the manner ol the nineteenth century. The gulla is weighed to approximately the amounts required, and is then softened in hot water and lormed roughly to shape trying to avoid any internal air bubbles. This sphere is then moulded in an antique, original gutta press used to make The Chaf/enger bali, on loan to me Irom Archie Baird. Considerable pressure is required to lorm the bali, extruding a 'Iin' ol th in gutta, which is cut ofl, though the base can still be seen. It has three layers ol modern paint. The Bali This makes not so much a replica but a rea I gutta bali, made out ol real gutta percha and lormed in a rea I press Irom the gutta era. Guttie balls deteriorated due to oxidation alter about one year and they we re no longer usabie because ol this chemical change. Even il the risk was taken to play with a precious bali Irom the guttie era, it would probably split, and would certainly not perlorm as ol old. This new bali is the only way ol recreating the traditional game ol golf ol the late 1800s. Historical The gulla or guttie (gutta with additions) bali was the standard bali in golf Irom about 1850, when it replaced the leathery, to 1904, wh en the Haskell rubber core bali lound lavour. The change-over was less sudden at these times than is sometimes suggested, and lor many years thereafter there were trials ol one bali against the other. Traditionalists prelerred the older bali, which had to be hit with an athle tic swing, but the Haskell bali lIew lurther and the game was more easily learnt by the new wave ol golfers. Though obtained Irom natural sou rees, gutta percha is a single chemical substance, which becomes malleable with modest heat. The balls were rolled by hand and hand-hammered at lirst, then a rolling machine was introduced to mechanise the notching. Later, the balls were produced in one stage by compression in clam-shell moulds. Thereafter other compound balls we re experimented with, and cork or metal or other materials added. Literary sou rees suggest that most players preferred the simple gutta balI. Even so, the balls we re variabie. Both Willie Park's book The Game ol Golf of 1896 and Everard's Golf in Theory and Practice of the same year ag ree that in selecting a bali it should bounce weil on testing and that it should float in water. The floater therefore seems the natural bali, rather than one with less dense additions. Seasoning Freshly made balls we re put aside for six months before painting (th ree layers of enamel paint) and only then used on the links. Both Park and Everard describe that the mature gulla bali then starts to lose performance after a few months. Though the bali could be remoulded to resto re its markings, the gutta was slowly changing chemically to a less useful form; one remoulding alone was desirabie. This change in the bali was oxidation rather than only drying out process, and seasoning ol the gutta bali gives slight loss in weight. The deterioration after one year should discourage any use at present of original gutta balls surviving Irom the 1800s. Apart Irom the expense ol playing with an antique bali, the bali wil I not perlorm weil, and would have been discarded by the owner one year or so alter manulacture. Gutta balls have to be used when young. The lavoured weight of bali was about 27 and a half pennyweight in Troy weight which is about 42 grams, and this was probably the weight belore seasoning and painting. These modern guttie balls weigh about 40.5 gms belore painting, rising to about 41 gms after painting . TheGum Gulla percha was, and is, collected in Malaysia by locals from trees ol the Palaquium genus (Iormerly ca lied Dichopsis). Gulla does not run Irom incisions in the trees like the lamiliar spirals used on rubber trees. For gutta collection, it required that the tree be lelled and circular cuts made through the bark, into which the gum and resin slowly accumulated. This was then heated by the gatherers, removing much ot the resin and the tairly pure gulla allowed to set in little blocks tor sale to local Malaysian merchants. These bricks were exported and further treated by the British bali makers, mainly to 12 bali is topped . It can split, particularly il an air bubble persists inside. Even one round makes the bali rather scruffy and literary sources suggest that keen players would change the ir bali during a round and presumably remoulded or traded in the tired balls regularly. These gutties lIy about 6070% ol the modern bali distance and are difficult to get into the air lrom a close lie. Nearer the green the bali has more attractive leatures, since approach shots will seltle on the green and it tends to hug the surlace when putting . Play with them can be an exhausting experience and the reasons lor the lull , older, athletic swing with a lIying bent right elbow can be appreciated. Our BGCS outing at Musselburgh with hickories and guttie balls was historically correct but most ol the players returned afterwards in reliel to the modern balI. Haskell had something. remove stones and vegetable contaminants, but there may have been chemical treatment to reduce resins present, since many ol the late nineteenth century advertisements make a point ol emphasising the purity of their gutta. Thus it seems that the gutta balls were very variabie and hence the individual testing mentioned by Park and Everard. This variation arose Irom the complexity ol the gutta wh en passed to the merchants in Malaysia, the surlace oxidation on the blocks during transit, the secondary purilication process by the manulacturers and the seasoning period. Moreover, some manulacturers bought back old gutties, and may have added some ol this oxidised material to the Iresh gutta percha lor their next batch ol balls. Making the gutta bali was not an exact science. In Play The dark unpainted bali is difficult to lind. The painted bali loses Iragments ol paint quite quickly and the surlace can be marked il the BOOK CORNER David Hamilton Kilmacolm t 997 I lound the book most enjoyable and weil presented . Copies can be obtained Irom the President ,Baltusrol Golf Club, P 0 Box 9, Springfield NJ 07081, USA. A limited edition leather bound version is available lor $75.00 or a lirst edition cloth bound for $50.00. The prices include shipping and handling and sales tax if applicable. It is also available Irom Grant Books. continued Irom Page 32 Christopher Ibbetson writes Although the centenary ol the Club occurred in 1995, I have only recently 100 received my copy ol BALTUSROL YEARS. THE CENTENNIAL HISTORY OF BAL TUSROL GOLF CL UB. It is a lovely production with some 450 photographs many ol which are in colour. The book contains a number ol very inlormative sections not only on the personalities involved over the years but also the architecture ol the two courses and includes accounts ol the triumphs ol Jack Nicklaus in the US Open in 1967 and 1980. However perhaps more importantly there is detail ol how the club was created in the late 1880s by Louis Keiler, lounder ol the Social Register in the USA, and apparently therelore the sole arbiter ol social acceptance in that country. Keiler owned land which had previously been larmed by Baltus Roll and because ol his apparent wish to become part ol the golf playing trend in the USA decided to create a golf club ol which a number ol his Iriends were invited to become members . The club quickly became identilied with the United States Golf Association and in 1901 held its lirst national championship. the US Womens Amateur . Thereafter Baltusrol very soon became a venue lor the other major competitions held in the United States. The following clubs have released information concerning histories in association with their Centenaries: Brodick will be producing a soft-backed book of approx 80 pages which will be available in October/November at ~6 plus p&p Irom the Secretary, Brodick GC, Brodick, Isle ol Arran KA27 8DL. Theydon Bois . A soft-cover 68 page A4 format with colour and b&w photographs. Available now Irom the Secretary at ~1 0 plus ~1 p&p. Con 9 leto n com mented "U nfortunately certain golfing publications and magazines have got their information wrong regarding the club's Centenary and, in lact, the club will be celebrating its Centenary in 1998. 13 ~ ~:x: ··. """ ·tHR. ,:::::~::::::::!:: ::::::, "'" o%.~» ,.,.,,;.:::;:;:,m;~~~:;:;}i<»<"X' by Tom Heduan .{~ ;y;. ,,*...,..:Û;:~;';:;;;'::::'.• ,>::;:;::=-~';:;:':;;:;:::::=i ::.;.~:(;. LONDON AND lTS PART IN THE DEVELOPMENT AND GAOWTH IN THE GAME OF GOLF 1800-1930 empire. The courses themselves varied in many ways . Some had established country style mansions as club houses with 36 holes of golf laid out, in many cases, by the prolific Tom Dunn . Others were smaller, more compact 9 hole courses with pavilion style club houses. Mostly, the courses were built on clay based ground, certainly not the best for golf as often many courses we re closed for the winter months and suffe red very dry exposure in the summer period. Some courses we re more fortunate, with the ground being gravel or loam based, and play was available all year round - Mid Surrey and Walton Heath being two such courses. Many courses attracted members of the same profession, for example, Northwood (9 holes at the time) attracted the medical profession, whereas Woking had many lawyers and barristers as members. London also attracted the leading players of the dav. Braid , Taylor and Vardon all had well-known assoei at i ons with clubs and the development of the game in the London area. Taylor, in particular, with the opening of the courses at Richmond Park a nd Ihe slarl of Ihe public golf It cannot be claimed that London's part in the growth in the game of golf can be ranked alongside the development of the golf bali, the expanding railway system or the mass manufacturer of golf equipment but it did play a very important role nonetheless. London had the country's largest population concentrated in one area and, in the late 18005 to the 1930s, this population grew at an alarming rate. It was a population that had increasing spending power and more free time available to it and golf was certainly high on its priority of spending, both time and money. This population helped fuel the golf explosion, both at home and abroad, with astrong desire to play golf and to enjoy its social side. The number of courses grew from just half a dozen in 1888 to over 50 by the turn of the century, to 155 by 1913. All we re weil within a 25 mile radius of the centre of London and this was at a time w hen courses were being laid out with only the THE ~qoF OF A GARAGE FOR GOLF . PRAtTICE: A GENERAL bas i c course as we VIEW OF THE PICCADJLLY .. COURSE. ·' know it loday. mechani cal Th.ls novel open.alr golf practice co urse was opened last week. and wlll be aids being of interest to all London (olfers. It hu been erected on the Joof of a garage It was the In St. ldarnn', Lane, and has an arel. of 7tiOO ft.- {P.ol ...... S/l(WI 4114 WPlNaJ, J var i ance of available . London was courses in Ihe also a base for the manufacturer of golf clubs London area Ihal made il so different. From ils beginnings at Royal Blackhealh (1768) 10 and balls, with over 20 different factories established by the 1920s and numerous wellmembers' clubs such as Aclon(which 'feil' 10 known retail establishments were not only developers in 119, less Ihan 4 miles from Hyde Park Comer, 10 Ihe grandeur and selling all the requirements to pay the game but were installing practice facilities in the opulence of Ihe Ranelagh Club al Barnes, again centre of the city. The gutty bali was less Ihan 4 miles from Hyde Park. manufactured in London and when it arrived The Ranelagh Club was cerlainly different early in the 1900s the Haskell was imported and distributed via London all over the 14 Irom other clubs. It boasted 18 holes ol golf with 5 pract ice holes , polo playing l ields,cricke t pitches and croquet lawns. lts up to 1936, prior to the club's closure. The 18 holes with their lengths and Bogey ligures are as lollows: D1RD'S-EYE, VlEW Oi" RANELAGH SHOWlNG THE I.AKf.S. POLO GROUND5. CLUCHOUsa. Al'JD GARDfNS ~ cl,,~l • ,...I.. ,..,..,,01 Ît ti.. ~ .... rktd ".,Jol ,r-'.·· O' ... ...t.;.!he ....",I.m' ","vII;. I.eed 10)' u.., "'7.1 I'-',,;Ii ... club house was a 17th century country man sion. In 1912 it had ove r 2,300 members, some 800 ol whom were goll playing members. The entrance lee was 30 guineas lor gentlemen (10 guineas lor officers ol the Army or Navy on active list) with an annual subscription ol 10 guineas. These costs were certainly the most expensive in the London area, attracting affluent City bankers as weil as astrong membership Irom the officer classes ol the Army and Navy. Quite often Maharajas on state visits Irom India would be seen attending the club lor prestigious polo matches. The club opened in 1890 and, although the course was only 4,152 yards long, it had a difficult layout with water, ditches, roads and pits as natural hazard s and, interestingly, it had wicker baskets instead ol Ilags. The lowest score achieved over the course was by Mr C C Aylmer, the international player, and was 56 lor 18 holes. The club also held an international ladies competition, which lasted Irom 1901 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. tr.~ !...nc!.l•.....! D........ 0, 'I u .... T\e Me.. Ut '1."1 pi..:"". ..... Re serv oi r 238 yds 4 Pavi lion 295 yd s 4 Towing Pa th 187 yds 4 Lodge 240 yds 4 Racecourse 440 yds 5 The Chutes 100 yds 3 Punch Bowl 290 yds 4 Beverley 102 yds 3 Crescent 300 yds 4 (OUT 2,192 yds, 34) 10.Cedar Tree 316 yds 4 11.Long Water 230 yds 4 12.Gate 266 yds 4 13.Plane Tree 310 yds 4 14. Gravel Pit 140 yds 4 15.New 120 yds 3 16.Pond 105 yds 3 17.Avenue 240 yds 4 18. Kit Cat 233 yds 4 (IN 1,960 yds, 33) Tota l 4,152 yds, 63 The course gave way to development in the late 1930s and, despite polo being played for a lew years alter its closu re in 1937, the coming ol the Second World War put an end to 15 its lavish style. The land was eventually taken over by the local council for playing fields and for many years in the t 960s I used to tramp these fjelds in cross country events for my school, oblivious to the area's previous usa. There is na evidence of golf visible on the playing f:-========:::==---l fields today and, in fact , na real feel at all to wh at taak part over the land in previous days . Ranelagh was just one of the scores of courses that have passed in time to a forgotten era but in their day, along with London, played its part in the growth and development of the game of golf. GOLFJNG JN ST. MARTIN 'S LANE: HARRY VARDON ORIVINC AT THE TARGETS OF THE NEW PICCADILLY OPEN-AIR G0l;F PRACTICE COURSE. by Alan Jaekllon By way of a follow up to Tom's artiele on London, here is a list of th ase London clubs which na langer exist. The first date is that of formation, the second the first mention I have come across, and the third the final mention I have found. I do not claim the list is exhaustive because I have not completed in-depth research, but it does add strength to Tom's argument. ACTON BALHAM BELLINGHAM BEULAH HILL CHISWICK CLAPHAM COMMON COLINDALE CRAVENPARK EALiNG CASTLEBAR EASTSHEEN ELMSTEAD ENFIELD MUNICIPAL FIRS FOOTSCRAY R)XGIUJE 1896 1894 G!HNRJRl 1912 1922 1900 1920 1896 MITCHAM VILLAGE MORDEN PARK NEASDEN N8NELTHAM r-.oR8URY NORTH SURREY NORTHWICK PARK 1912 1917 1907 1938 1913 1892 1873 1928 i'CRMXX) 1895 1898 1891 1907 PARK ROYAL POLLARDS HILL PRINCE'S RANELAGH RAYNESPARK SELSDON PARK SOUTHALLPARK ST OUINTON'S STREATHAM SUTTON TOOTINGBEC WAFFRJN WALTHAMSTOW WEMBLEY WEMBLEY PARK WEST fI.CJR'MXX) WHITIONPARK WILLESDEN 1897 1930 1938 1947 1924 1933 GREYSTOKE HANGERHILL HANGER HILL N8N 1895 HERMITAGE HILL 1924 HONOR OAK & FOREST HILL HURLINGHAM LONDON aJUNTRY LONDON FLYlNG MERTONPARK 1915 1930 1912 1938 1895 1938 1947 1920 1919 1933 16 1938 1893 1893 1894 1933 1947 1934 1930 1933 1938 1914 1917 1938 1930 1947 1924 1913 1913 1911 1892 1890 1893 1933 1920 1894 1892 1947 1896 1888 1938 1903 1896 1912 1927 1947 1925 1927 1922 1923 1897 1891 1897 I ~ S U E N U M B E RON E JUN E 1 98 7 l' 11 ROU G 11 th~ l' HEG R EE N ••••••• is Lhe official Jourllal oC Briti8h Golf Collectors Society &nd 101111 be published quo rterly in June . SilpteOlber , Ueceaber Bnd Knch. Il will ~ r ovlde B forua for [he e.thanie of ld~bs Bnd information ai.ed at indlvidual collectors Bnd hi.. türians.ln partlcular ...,e hop!.: [hat through these paSes yO\l will 1ncresse your knowl~d8e Bnd wnderstunding of the rieh history of golf, make nBW (r1end5 end cement oid fr1endshlps.We hop~ you anjoy [his first ever issue Bnd warmly welcome Bny conLributiona,comment e or sug&eBl~Ons you ~ay havè. T 11 ROU G H T HEG REE N EDITOR Da vid Whiee SECRI:.'TAtlY & ... 1d EI:i!>by I Tt::i.ASLJRI::R 1'ony Hawk1nri C\PT/.IN CC::XJ I"n'.E i'eLer CratJllee Kdymon d G"SB8gi! Tony IIBwkln ~ 'fj:a S!lla rtr l-hllip Tluetl ();;~Îll W:lltc HHTI)H lAL hOPl(f.~S: \3 CkEAT COLLIc:GE ST1<1:.ET. KEMP'I'O'wN , tUOCUTON I'IN2 lIlJ EAST SUSSEX , Ten years ago this month the first issue of Through The Green appeared, 8 single-sided sheets of A4 paper, side stapled logether. There were notices for the Open meeting at Gullane and for the 1988 Open meeting at St Annes aid links on one page logether with a \wo-verse poem . A full page Letter From America by 'Martini' who turned out to be 'The Grand aid Man' himself, Joe Murdoch. Another full page reported on the 3rd Annual Scottish Hickory Championship run by the "Scottish section of the GCS (now fully integrated into the British Golf Collectors Society)" and won by a much younger member sitti ng. not far from this keyboard. There we re two pages of 'The Bookshelf' , a one-page 'Portrait of a Collector' - (the late) Sam Sharp, and a page containing seven miscellaneous small items. Page 1 was a very large cartoon and a small editorial, both by David While. The theme was that seventeen years previously the GCS had been formed and now the BGCS was laking wing on its own beha I!. David heralded the first issue of TTG with ils modest size and hoped that, with a steady input from the members, so necessary if a journal is 10 be a vibrant and interesting, th at in seventeen years time a future scribe would turn to the first issue and observe thaI the Society began on the right course. Weil , ten years, not seventeen, later il seems 10 me th at our founders did indeed pave Ihe way for a flourishing and and very friendly society. Extra 1 AN EDITOR'S REFLECTIONS or RALLY ROUND THE FLAG, CHAPS Scouting through past issues, it is interesting to see how TTG has evolved, increasing in size and in breadth ol contents. As with the lirst issue, book reviews now get substantial coverage but th at is not surprising since weil over hall ol us claim to be book collectors. As the Editor loretold, the scope has broadened and the contents have become more interesting as you, the members, have become less reticent in putting pen to paper and have kept up a steady input. It is not su eh a daunting task as some imagine. Most ol us write passable enough English and anyway it is the content which is important. Ol course you do not have to write yourself. Many ol the most interesting artieles are those which someone has spotted and sent in to be reproduced as is. This supports one ol my l irm beliels: If you I;nd jt ;nterest;ng the chances are that others will. So, please keep the artieles, snippets, space-lillers coming . Size is not important. Some ol the most difficult space to lill are the small ones. In this way we can look lorward to still more expansion. And now a lew ol mv. selections Irom the early days which you may not have seen, or have lorgotten. September 1987 IOth Tee AT THE BEMCH ***********************:4.******'**************_*************** ••• ***************************** We ackno\o.'ledge end thank Patriek Kennedy of Burlington I Vermant U. S . A. for tne opport unity to reissue his sp!endid illustration which demonstrates the skill of applying whipping on a golf club. It first arpeared in 1973. TO START, PLACE eND ALON6 SHAFT (START AND FINISH ON UNDERSICE OF SHAFT) ANC WIND ON WHIPPIN(, IN A CLOCKWISE DIIl.ECTION A5 you LOOK. DOWN '!HE SHAFT - AFTEIl. At30lIT:3/ö" T.lh" CUT OFF EXceSS MlD CON"CINUe; WINDING- Pt.ACE LOOP Al.ON6 SHAFt:- CON"tINUE WINDlNb TO ~TOPPIt"b PoIIJt. - PUICE LOOSE END lHI\OV(,H lOOP - PULL LOOP DIJT- ISH: AB OUT 3/8 TO 1/2INCH FROM TIiE Go POINT FeR.M A loOoP- MAKINe:, IT LARGE / F·",r,ur" ... 1"0 GO oVE~ CLUB HEAD PLUS 1\-iE AMoul,rC FINISf-I· PULL 1..00SE" END THR,OU6 H- Extra 2 September 1988 SeooodTee THE DEVIL OF GOLF by HENRY LEACH There is an aid saying which you hear sometimes up in the north to the effect that driving is an art, iron play a science, and putting is the devi!. Just that - the devi!. I agree entirely, and I have ascertained that such worthy exponents of the game as Harry Vardon , James Braid , J H Taylor, and others of that kind are in sympathy with the suggestion. Weil may the writers of text -baaks of the game Ttu::> IS 0ne \-~ riel \" deciare, when they of lhe C'enHt'-sh:;.fted pUll~r. come to the chapter on putting, that th ere is really nothing to say, and that they must leave the reader to find out the whole business by instinct and practice , as there are na rules to be laid down for his guidance . What would ;\ 1'(1 lh l~ is a ~ \\ :HI' be the use of their n ('Ckl:d c'l lllph'-.lln'IJ, l1gIH l!II{.:d .ll 11H: lUI.: pretending th at they ;md lied. can really teach _ _ _ _ __ putting when, they had to hole a six-leet putt lor a championship, the odds would be slightly against them? In June , 1905, while I was smoking my pipe on the top of the bank The 1Jther of th is pUllU was lhe s lem on the lar side of the of a ShlP , and the home green at St. mother a s 1 e ct g eh:iUltner. Andrews, I was being provided at interva' o of na great length wi h much jood for reflection and philosophy, better than which na man who ever talks or writes - ______ _ _ _ _ .J golf could wish for. "j'Li~ i ~ the !:!;npl~, t The Open Championship !"ltll 'j! l il:: ,,>W.llLwas being played for, u,·,t, ;1:,,1 1.:1':> and there duly came 111\ f' I . 1 I C~(~ along Vardon, Braid, Taylor, and Herd, all more or less favourites for the event in progress, and it is a solemn fact that of these four men th ree of them missed pulls at this home hole of Ie ss than a yard. I think the average length was about eighteen inches; one of them was not more than a foot, and the way the bali was worked round to the far side of the hole without going in was wonderful just wonderfu!. It will be noticed th at I give four names and mention only three misses. This is because even the greatest players are sometimes very tender on th is subject of missing short putts, and to spare them any annoyance I do not name the particular individuals who failed . It is enough that one of them, and one only, did not. The history of every man's golf is covered with metaphorical gravestones as the result of all the short putts he has missed. Every season the whole course, and the result of almast every event of importance, would be changed if one or other of the parties did not miss same of these apparently un-missable putts. One need go na farther back than the last Amateur Championship meeting. I saw Mr. John Graham miss a two-feet putt in his match with Mr. Robb, on the fourteenth green. This was the all-important match of the whole tau rna ment, and in the light of what happened afterwards it was made to appear that the missing of this putt cast Mr. Graham the best chance he ever had in his hard and deserving gol1ing lifetime of winning the blue ribbon of the game. Mr. Robb himself fancied that Mr Robert Andrew would be the ultimate winner of the championship that time at Hoylake, but on the eighteenth green in one of his rounds Mr Andrew missed a putt of less go than a foot for the match, and then had on to the . 'eteenlh hole where he \ dS a well-beaten man. And in the final tie ot all if Mr Lingen had never missed a short putt who knows but what he would have been the champion of the year after all ? Therefore, we may take it as established that the very greatest players cannot do the very shortest pulls with anything approaching to certainty, when it is of the very greatest importance th at they should do Extra 3 They are na better al Ihis game Ihan quile moderale players, and Ihe chances ollheir holing such pulls decrease according la Ihe imporlance ol Ihe occasion - Ihal is la say, Ihe more necessary il is la hole Ihe putt in order la pramale one's success in Ihe encounler in progress, Ihe less likely is one la do 50. This is one ol Ihe lundamenlal principles ol Ihe Ihing. Any body can hole a putt ol lour or live leel when il doesn'l matter, and when Ihere is na parlicular credil in doing it. II is when il does matter Ih al you cannol do it. The hole is lour and a quarler ins wide, and Ihe bali is aboul one and a hall ins in diarneler. You may use anything Irom an umbrella la a lawn roller in order la putt Ihal little bali inlo Ihal huge pil, and yel al Ih al dislance of Ihree or lour feel you cannot do it - Ihal is as aften as you oughl la do. Training and praclice are na use. Do nol beginners always do Ihese putts weil? ThaI is because Ihey do nol know how difficult Ihey are. They will by and bye, and Ihen Ihey will begin la miss Ihem. AI home I have a lillIe baby girl, and somelimes she gels one of my puIters oul of Ihe corner, and begs for a laan ol Ihe magic bali on Ihe manlelpiece, one wilh which Vardon and Taylor worried Braid and Herd in Ihe second slage of Ihe big 1:400 loursome al Troon. Make a sarI ol hole on Ihe carpel, or even go oul on la the lawn and play al a real hole in Ihe real way, and Ihat little thing will hole Ihe pulls of a yard She never and Iwo yards every lime! bolhers aboul any parlicular slance or anything of Ihal kind, and takes na counl of Ihe blades of grass or wh ere she oughl la be looking al Ihe much-Ialked-of ·momenl ol impact.· She jusl putts, and down goes Ihe bali every lime! II is wonderfui, one of Ihe mosl wonderlul Ihings in sporIlhal I have ever seen . Here she does Ihal, and I who know 50 much aboul Ihese Ihings, la say nolhing ol Vardon, Braid, and all Ihe olhers, cannol do Ihem - al leasl, nol wilh Ihe same cerlainly. Here is anolher point. II may need only an exceedingly delicale slroke la putt a bali properly , yel if you lake Ihe clumsiesl, horniesl-handed labouring man - say a roadmender or a railway navvy, who had never eilher seen or heard ol goll belare - he would never miss Ihose three la five-Ieel putts. Again il is because he does nol know really difficull Ihey are . II is said Ihal a mighly hunIer of greal renown, a man who had bagged all Ihe big game of India in great variety, once declared in agony ·1 have meI 50. all manifold peri Is ol Ihe jungle, I have Iracked Ihe huge elephanl la his relreal, and I have slood eye to eye wilh Ihe man-ealing lig er" All of which was quile Irue - he had. Then he added : •And never once have I Irembled until I came la a shorl putt" I have Ihoughl Ihe whole Ihing out, and I know Ihe reason. It is one ol Ihe prettiesl poinls in Psychology thaI one will encounler in Ihe whole ol a long lilelime ol Ihe mosl carelul Ihoughl and sludy. You don'l really wanl any brains, or any mind al all for putting purposes. The whole Ihing is 100 simpie, and inslead of a mind and brains being any use lor Ihe purpose in hand, Ihey are a posilive disadvantage, and are conlinually getting in Ihe way. Consciousness when putting is absolulely lala I, and il is Ihe conscience making a coward of Ihe man Ihal makes him miss Ta hole a his puIt. Ihree feel putt over a Ilal piece ol green is really one ol Ihe easiesl Ihings in Ihe world; Ihere can be na doubl aboul it. But while Ihere is ene ridiculously easy way of doing Ihe putt, Ihere are about a dozen, more or less, ways ol missing il, and Ihese dozen are uppermosl in Ihe mind of Ihe golfer when he Extra 4 .-\n cst.llJlishcd favonrilc - the Or.:uo~tlll s ,lluminiLlIll. WI th \\ hlCh c h.lm pioll~hips h.lVC been WOII. A combinalloll of the l'ow:tn-neck ..IIU.1 thc .lluminhllll. Th~ IIk.I hCH~ h 10 help ,'uu tIJ Llr,' the cluh prnperl)" In the linc of the pUIt. .-\noth\!r ch allf.::c nlfL~ 011 lhe pnnclple of thc centre-;;h;Jft. Thh putler madt' :w 1t 1:> tI,C LUl\IHL::' S,'hell('( l.HI y cpt\lh. 1I~1 .h hy fr.\Vb. ~Ir. Hel c thc idc.l is th.lt til" ", .. ~ I'lItt{,f I th:rc I~ Ihl: t,t'u,-r' Tin' q''' I'HI 11. dl, L I"H I' I ., ~ 11-"'.\ [,\ ~ lt. ~ L d"h.ll IL ilt, h: .C. , .ï , I ...IlId \'IIJll~. OIJes! of a ll, "t hc gr . md old wouden p u tte r stl\l lx'lon·tI by t he oltl ::.chool. 111\: wr\'-n er\>cd PUl.tIl .g ckek - { l lll IC ;j f.l \'uufLlc. SorncthinJ; IJkt ,he f1ht o f .tI!, l.ll:t ;1 bq! bloei-: of a l Ulnll\ltll1l ~nd ~hahèd :,c ... r .... r the hed_ • \ T his is a cross between the ScheDect ;;.tl\' <tod the celltrc . ~hJ.ft, lI Here we have a COn - f ;lee - a \" Cl \. dari,n.l; c xpt:ri nH.'1l 1.' ::.J Vt comes to his eftort. Thus missing the short putt represents the greatest triumph of matter over mind that is to be found in the whole range of sport, or, sa far as I know, in any other pursuit in life. But why should a man be given to these morbid thoughts of the ways of missing, and why should he not be of hopeful, courageous disposition. and attack the hole boldly and confidently, instead of remembering these dozen ways of missing? That is wh at non-golfers ask. It is an easy question to set; but th ere is another factor that has to be mentioned . here is the sen se of responsibil ity, and th is sense of responsibility is probab ly greater in a man when he is making a putt of from three to five feet than it is in the case of any other man at any time in any other sport, because he will never, never have the chance again that he has gat this time. If he putts and misses, the deed is i rrev o cable , the stroke and the hole or the half have been lost, and noth ing that can happen afterwards can rem ave the loss. If a man makes a bad drive or if his approach play is weak, he can atone for these faults by being unu sually clever with the subsequent stroke in the play to the hole, and he thinks he wijl. But the shorl putt is Ihe very last stroke in Ih at play, and if it is missed there is na possible atonement to be made. Thus Ihere is somelhing of the awfui, of the elernal, of the infinite about the putt; the man is awe slricken; he knows il is easy, bul he is conscious of Ih ase dozen ways of missing. Sa he misses . I have put Ihe queslion to a number of the best-known players of Ihe day as la whal we re Iheir precise Ihoughls -if any - when Ihey came la making the final putt of a great match, which in many cases gave them a championship. Their answer almosl universally was Ihat Iheir thoughl was, ' Whal a faal I shall look if I miss Ihis puit!' Thus Ihey knew Ih al Ihey ought nol la miss il, bul they we re burning with consciousness of the fa ct Ihal they we re lerribly liable la do sa. Sa matter Iriumphs over mind. Can anything in a mechanical sart of way be done to overcome th is awful difticulty? I fear not, though one or two new putters are invenled every week, and same of Ihem are acclaimed as being Ihe philosopher's slone for which we have been looking . The golf world has begun la buzz as if ils mainspring had gal loose wh en Mr Travis won the Championship at Sandwich wilh Ih at Scheneclady putter the most epoch-making putte r of all. Bul where is it now? Very few people use it. Putters have been made of every conceivable shape, and of every possible material. Same of Ihe shapes are shown alongside. They have been made wilh the heads bent forwards, backwards and sideways. Same of Ihem have very thin blad es, and others have had thick slabs instead of blad es. They have been fashioned like knives, hammers , spades, croquet mallets, spoons and riddles, and same even like putters; Ihey have been made of iron , gun-metal, steel, aluminium , nickel, silver, brass, wood, bone, and glass . I have here beside me a putter made in nickel, and consisting of a large roller, running on bali bearings! It is na good. The simplest are Ihe besl . We cannot obtain wil I-power by machinery or mechanical appliances. Mr James Robb tells me Ihal Ihe putter he always uses is an ordinary cleek which he gal when a boy. His sister won it in " penny raffle and, having na use for il herself, gave il la him , and he has putted with it ever since. Three times has he putted his way to the final of the championship, and once he has won it. Again, Mr John Laidlay conveys the informalion la me that when he was a boy al Loretto School he came by the firsl golf clubs he ever had 'in his life in his second or third lerm, Ihese being a cleek and a brassie . Thai cleek-head has been his putter ever since, Extra 5 the very lirst time in his lile the Schenectady , which , after one successlul trial , was lorthwith commissioned tor Sandwich . Wh at a Th i s is a r n 11 t' r subject lor a great flutter. I h,I\'C ""C tof lhc VNV few th.tt historical painting to wcrc 1II .1t1f' . 11 h d be hung in the Temple mcre CU II O~ I t y. ol Golf th at we shall have same day 'Emmett introducing the Schenectady to Travis, 1924.' I think it was Emmett; il it wasn't, it was Byers. Anyhow, goll history was changed in This is indecd .1 highly comr.li ca teu consequence ol that thmg : introduction, lor I am su re that Mr Travis would not have won at Sandwich with his North Berwick putting cleek. It wasn't the Schenectady that did it, but it was the And this is the plainest of all, and, player's then JS mO")1 people thlnk, conlidence i n the the lJeSt - the Rood ·,Id fJ-hiQncl.l put:Schenectady. He had, ir;.t; r!t-d:. lor the time being, gat th at little devil ol goll in chains, and putting had become a great joy. Henry Leach and it is getting sa light with wear th at his Iriends are beg inning to teil him that it will soon do lor him to shave with . Harry Vardon won his lirst championship Two dl!'CS with thc ~h, l h 111 lid W\' ~'II with a putter which r.llher el.lho r,ltc . was not a putter at all, but a little cl eek that he had picked up only the day belare in Ben Sayers shop in North Berwick. He lancied it as a putter, TI1I5 puttHlg cleek and he has never ha~ .l false bcc .uul putted better than on J hlJllow lmedor. that day at Muirlield. He has never used it since, and now he has taken to the aluminium putter. And do you know th at just belare the lamous championship at Sandwich , Mr Travis was using a putting :'\ very small and cleek that he, toa, had ... ~rv squa re hitJe gat at North Berwick, pUller. It came in on thc Schl!ncct;l(.1 y and it was his ro)m. intention to putt with it in the tournament? But he was not putting very weil in practice at St Andrews and one ol his compatriots then introduced to him lor '~ \ lt3f1 ~ GOLF Golf, or Bandy Ball, is much played in ScoUand and tbe Northern partS of England. lt is a very excellent game, baving been probably inb'oduced by tbe Romans. As at present played, any number of persons may engage in tbe game. Each player has a sb'aight-handled asb bat, tbe lower part of which is slighUy curved; tbc object of tbe game is to drive a small hand ball into certain holes in tbe ground, and he who SO(lOest accomplishes tbis, wins tbe game. I am not aware of any set of rules baving been fixed for tbe government of Golf, but according to wbat is generally understood, tbe following is tbe metbod: Two, four, or any Ilumber of players from tbemselves into sides, and tben fIX golf-Iengtbs, wbich often extend over three or four miles, especially in tbe winter time, wben tbe game is played on tbe iee. At various intervals golf holes are hrmed, ioto which !he ball mJst be struck; eacb party, as in foolball, endeavouring lO drive tbe ball in an OppoSilC direction. One l r more balls may be used bUl eacb player bas bis own bandy. You may sec Golf played on Blackheatb occasionally by young SCOlS wbo form an association known as tbe London Golf Club. Some years sillce I was present al a Golf matcb on tbe beatb, and a very exciting sigbl il was, lassure you. Reprinted from THE BaaK OF MANLY GAMES FOR BOYS by CapLaiIl Crawley, publisbed by WiUiam Tegg 1869, printed by WalSon & Hazell, London & Aylesbury Sa much lor the learned Captain! Laurence Viney sent in th is wondrous extract in December 1989 .. Extra 6 Ninth Tee October '89 SOME THOUGHTS ON MUSSELBURGH SCENE OF THE 1989 HICKORY CHAMPIONSHIP by DAVID HAMILTON In Ihe greal days ol Musselburgh in Ihe 1860s, Ihe Edinburgh gollers look Ihe Irain 10 Ihe lown and Ihe cabbies raced each olher 10 gellheir players 10 Ihe lirsl lee lirst. There a sociable queue developed as Ihe members ol Ihese Edinburgh-based clubs wailed lor Iheir lurn 10 play. Musselburgh was al Ihe peak ol ils lame and was Ihe cradle ol Ihe modern prol es sion al game and Ihe early modern developmenls in Ihe business ol goll. On June 2nd 1989 Ihe members ol Ihe BGCS galhered sociably al Ihe lirsl lee al Ihe old Musselburgh links wilh hickories in hand dressed in Iradilional garmenls, jusl as Ihe go liers did 150 years ago . II was as il Musselburgh is in a lime warp. Behind us slill could be seen Ihe neglecled and decaying clubhouses ol Ihe Burgess and Ihe Brunlslield goll clubs ol a lormer day. In Ihe dislance beyond Ihe 3rd hole is Ihe ancienl pub, Mrs Forman's, where Ihe gollers could purchase a relreshmenl al a halch in Ihe wall, wilhoul leaving Ihe course . In lor mer limes Ihe go liers had 10 lind space lor Ihemselves among Ihe olher users ol Ihe links, nolably Ihe racegoers and local youlhlul players. On 2nd June we were doing jusl Ihal, wilh Ihe race course around us and a big meeling coming olf Ihe lollowing day . There was nol a holel room 10 be had in Ihe honesl lown . There were plenly young gollers also 10 be seen, playing lor nolhing, a policy which has raised many a good player. Musselburgh links are surviving, bul only just. The owners are Ihe Dislricl Council and little money is given lor upkeep . The inleresls ol Ihe race meelings come lirsl, and major earlhworks are now disrupling Ihe course even lurlher. The Musselburgh Old Course Club is doing ils besilo prolecl whal remains ol Ihe original course, putting in Iheir own money, and Ihe -greens are increasingly good and some ol Ihe old bunkers are being lound and revived . Musselburgh wilhoul bunkers would be as similar 10 SI Andrews wilhoul sand and Ihe similarilies ol Ihe !wo courses are considerable. Cerlainly il all very pleasanl 10 be able 10 lurn up and play al Ihe home ol Ihe modern game wilhoul lee or lormalily. Cerlainly il is noslalgic 10 lighl your way Ihrough Ihe lences ol a race course and play among local youlhs pressing Irom all sides. Bullhere co me a poinl wh en we musl ask whelher Ihis is genuine benign neglecl, nol anolher example ol Scottish inerlia in Ihe la ce ol obvious need - snalching deleallrom Ihe jaws ol success. II cannol be said Ihal Musselburgh must decay because Ihere are 100 many goll courses in Scolland. Inslead Ihe wailing lisls are lull and lenglhy. II cannol be said Ihal Ihere are no golling visilors, since Ihe Scottish easl coasl clubs 10 norlh and soulh ol Musselburgh are inundaled wilh busloads ol golling visilors and Ihe Scottish Tourisl Board and olhers are blealing Ihal Ihere is increasingly difficully in accommodaling Ihe slream ol visilors. Nor can il be said Ihal Scotland has done so much lor Ihe hislory ol goll already Ihal nolhing else need be done: almosl nolhing has been done. Any nalion wilh Ilair and pride would many years ago have made Musselburgh a place ol homage. Nol necessarily covered Ihe hallowed nine holes wilh a dome , nol necessarily provided a museum and ren lal ol hickories and remade gutties lor play. Nol necessarily relurbished Ihe ancienl clubhouses. The minimum Ih al could have been done would have been 10 reslore Ihe ancienl layoul, lound Ihe old bunkers and provided a Ihoughtful score card and map ol Ihe lown, marking Ihe siles ol hislorical golling inlerest. And could we nol lel Mrs Forman's serve relreshmenls again Ihrough Ihe halch? The answer is Ihe Licensing Acl (Scolland) prohibils serving ol drink in pubs lor consumplion in in Ihe open air. II Mrs Forman's was allowed 10 serve in Ihis way who knows, say Ihe purilans , wh al mighl lollow, even Ihe disruplion ol society. Does Scolland deserve Ihe old links al Musselburgh? Mercifully, matters have improved. The Old Musselburgh Club is now ensconced in one of Ihe 'old clubhouses' and money has been made available for improvemenl of Ihe course. Bul !here is still the feeling thai il is toa little toa late. Extra 7 Fiftb Tee March 1990 A VANISHED PLEASURE by John Moreton A whole generation has established itself on the golfing scene without experiencing one of golf's smaller but very real pleasures, a trivial act in itself but psychologically either a powerful weapon or a heraid of disaster. For the seasoned match player, having observed his opponent re move abattered, much used bali Irom his bag, it could be the means of being one up on the lirst tee, uniess, of course, the wily enemy thought 'he's only got one good bali left.' For the anxious medaIIer it was an act of defiance in the face of The Gods ol Golf. I refer of course to the ceremonious unwrapping ol a brand new, pristine white goll balI. When many readers first played the game, the golf bali came wrapped in a cover ol either loil and paper or a type of plasticised cover. These we re of different colours, depending on the make and quality ol the balI. They were sealed with a gummed sticker and if the wrapper itsell did not quite meet at the crucial point, a small dob of stickiness would invariably adhere to the bali, collecting dirt along the way until the bali bore a distinctive and unpleasant black dot, the very devil to remove. A tremor of anticipation always accompanied the unwrapping ol the new bali on the first tee, together with the careful aim of wrapper into tee box. Some characters - known in every club carefully saved the wrapper in order to rewrap a disgustingly batte red old bali in case they we re challenged to play lor a bali in a bounce game. The unwrapping ritual became more Iraught on our lake hole tee, when one member used to unwrap a new bali and throw it into the lake as a libation to The Gods ol Golf, th is belore teeing an aged pill lor his drive. On another celebrated occasion, a member noted for NEVER using a new bali on the lirst tee, ostentatiously unpeeled one and proceeded to use it happily until, on the third, he failed to carry the severe upslope on the far side of the valley. At that moment a fox sauntered across Irom the woods, snilled the bali , nibbled at it, chewed on it like a Murraymint and spat it out, fortunately still on the fairway. When our hero surveyed the tattered remnant he reverted to his old habits and was never seen to unwrap a new bali - ever againl Presumably modern technology, which has produced the new tough covers ol surlyn & balata, is responsible, as one imagines that the protection allorded by wrapping is both an unnecessary & costly exercise. However, it is just not the same experience to just slide one bali out of a sleeve ol th ree. This same technology accounts also for another lost though unmourned golfing experience, that of finding your bali, in the rough and uncomfortably near to the point of departure, with that evil grin induced by a topped shot! Sometimes it is relerred to as a smile , but there always seemed to me an element ol malevolent glee in the cut - as if to say • that's the last time you'lI mistreat me,' which was probably true until the next practice session, when the smilers, grinners and smirkers we re tipped out again , to produce all manner ol slices, hooks and eccentric flights of unloveliness. One manufacturer did present it's new bali in a smart blue individual box, wrapped in tissue, but it is long gone. Gone too, it seems, is the wager ol playing for a balI. Imagine the pressures on former golfers playing for a new feathery or a slightly used guttie, ( a new, smooth one being Ie ss desirabie until the nicks and chips necessary for aerodynamic llight had been applied ) and the reluctance of the 'rabbit' to part with the last of his Christmas issue Irom his loving offspring. The ballsweep for 'twos' no longer has the same thrill either, with unwrapped balls doled out like milk chocolate Smarties . The inner game - the psychology ol golf demands that we approach the first tee 'thinking positively.' To start a match or medal round equipped with a shining white spheroid, which we are determined to hit all the way round to the final eighteenth cup, is to start positively. Yet we read th at in the recent Ryder Cup Sandy Lyle triumphed using Bernhard Langer's cast-olls! We also learn th at Ben Hogan rejected new balls FROM HlS PRACTICE BAG because they had too much paint in the dimples. Try that on your Sunday morning fourball partner as you miss the crucial putt on the eighteenth ... .' Sorry,old man , too much paint in the dimples - took it past the borrow.' .... Drinks all round for th at one! ' The hole was a bit crowned' is marginally saler, especially if the opposition still have to putt! And vet, despite the new high-tech covers, we still seem to buy - and lose - as many balls as ever. Extra 8 Japanese gentl eman who purchased $30,000 worth of sportswear and souvenirs last year. That, like Tiger's winning margin, is a record which may stand for a while. On the other hand, when Fuzzy Zoelier withdrew from the Greater Greensboro Chrysler Classic in late April it was a sad day for golf. Some mildly off-color remarks spoken in jest after Tiger's Masters win made Fuzzy a casualty at the hands of the press (excluding me of course) and special interest groups who know little about golf and less about a man who has always been everyone's friend and no one's detractor. It is difficult for me to remain apolitical but, ability notwithstanding, I'd take one Fuzzy over a hundred Tigers any day of the week. High tech apparatus can be found everywhere in golf these days. Players' caddies are now regularly seen with Rangefinder laser distance measuring devices during practice rounds . Personally, I don't consider their use in keeping with the spirit of true golf but then my game is so bad no device, laser or otherwise, would be advantageous for me. The latest in PGA Tournament gallery gizmos made its debut in our town during the GGCC this year. Classic Cash Cards are now required to purchase concessions (lood, drink and cigars). At the cash card booth, spectators purchase the card charged with any amount of cash desired. Then, at concession stands the card acts as a bank debit card as purchases are made. The net result is th at service is faster. The long range implication is we have a new collectible on our hands. Better get some now in order to cash in around the year 2050. Perhaps the cash cards will be represented at Kevin McGrath's Sporting Antiquities Auctions in the next century . I doubt if you'lI see any at this year's which is scheduled for June 19-20. If Bob Gowland can move his January affair to May, Kevin says he can move his toD, and it occurs a month later than in years past. Chuck Furjanic held a successful auction sa Ie in March and says he'lI have another in October in the Dallas area. Having just returned from yet another pilgrimage to a weil known golf club in Augusta, Georgia I ask myself, "am I the only golf writer in America not writing about Tiger Woods?" Somehow I managed to avoid the human wake following the boy wonder and just as weil since I am not tall enough to see anyone on the green when standing in the sixth row behind the ropes. For all the drama the Masters Tournament has provided over the last ten years perhaps the most reassuring sight was the dream pairing in Wednesday's practice session: Jack, Arnie and Fuzzy playing the congenial hosts to John "Spider" Milier. the USGA Mid-Am Champion. Nicklaus strode the fairways smiling and frequently wa ving to the crowd, it was pleasant to see him so relaxed. Though Arnie would never be a contender these days the Masters galleries thrive on seeing such past golfing greats year in and year out. The hottest ticket in Augusta is still the Golf Writers' Association of America dinner. The GCS was weil represented again by the presence of such luminaries as the noble Russ Palmer. elegant Dan Bagdade (with son Mike), philosophical John Fischer 111. stately Ross Goodner, smiling Jim Knerr and the erudite Sid Matthew. They we re joined by the usual cads and bounders Dick Donovan and Bud Thompson . I got a glimpse of Alastair Johnston's vapor trail as he offered salutations while zooming by at Mach 2. When the great English writer was posthumously presented with the Richardson Award for service to golf, son Bryan and I waxed nostalgie with memories of dining at last year's dinner with Peter Dobereiner. The big room seemed a terribly empty without him. I know there are many Brits for whom a trip to Augusta is tantamount to arriving at heaven's pearly gates. Yes, you'lI be impressed with the course, you'lI love seeing many of the world's best putters and bali strikers and there might even be a potted azalea trucked in for your photographic use. But the real entertainment is in the apparel and souvenir store. An unusually long queue awaits patrons wis hing to enter and once inside, narrow aisles clogged with aggressive shoppers make for a harrowing way to spend hard earned lolly. Just as legendary as Greg Norman's fourth round collapse IS the 17 There is liltle 10 reporl which could be considered big news. January: drove 900 miles 10 Daylon and back lor sub-zero wealher and Ihe highly successlul Daylon Trade Fair. February: drove 700 miles 10 Hillon Head Island and back lor GCS Carolinas meeling . Goil rained oul bul plenty ol Irading. Mareh: drove 1250 miles 10 Far Hills, New Jersey and back 10 altend Ihe lirsl lour hours ol Ihe GCS Region 1 meeling. You sunbirds mighl wanIlo make amenlal nole as you plan your warm wealher vacalions lor nexl winIer. Jack Rulherlord and Ken SIoIer hosled a highly successlul GCS meeling in Ft. Myers, Florida lasl February. Reporls we re il was weil exlremely weil altended and organized 10 a lee. Ft. Myers is one ol Ihe warmesl pi aces anyone could wish 10 visil in February and is only a Iwo hour drive Irom Orlando Inlernalional Airport. For warm wealher on Ihe olher coasl, Ihere is a GCS Irade meeling scheduled lor Bakerslield, Calilornia Oelober 31-November 3. Wilh any luck, Ihe buIIer will presenl you TTG and Ihe Salurday morning Times on a silver salver one Salurday morning in midJune. Hopelully you'lI re ad my column belore perusing Ihe scores Irom Ihe US Open being played al Congressional Counlry Club in Ihe environs ol our nalion's capilol. I said hopelully . There are olhers who knowand undersland books, goll books in parlicular, lar belter Ihan land il is nol appropriale lor me 10 Iread Ihe walers palrolled by your adepl reviewer. Jusl Ihis once I will venlure lorlh 10 make a recommendalion. Tom Taylor, a mosl erudile bibliophile living in Ihe Delroil area, after counlless years ol research has published his illuslraled guide 10 goll myslery liclion. Anyone who seeks oul good 'whodunnils' will lind Ihis as invaluable a sou ree as will Ihe serious goll book colleclor. I reg rel I can'l say more wilhoul slepping on Ihe loes ol Ihe Masked Marvel Irom Matlock who will pay Ih is lasly lome Ihe lull altenlion il deserves in his book review column. Over Ihe pasl several years, our Sociely has seen respeclable growth resulling in ever increasing altendance al Ihe 'Nalional' meeling. This year promises more ol Ihe same. Nashville, Tennessee is a cily weil silualed geographically lor collectors Irom all parls ol Ihe counlry. American Airlines runs a regular non-slop service Irom Galwick solhere is liltle excuse lor our Brilish cousins nol 10 make an efforl 10 cross Ihe pond. 'Music City' is an apl nickname and as Ihe home ol Ihe Grand Ole Opry, il is Ihe high lemple ol counlry and weslern music. Visil Opryland amusemenl park, buy a vinlage 12slring al Gruen Guilar, eal a lew Goo-Goo peanul cl usIers and lor one Irenelic weekend in Seplember (17-20), lalk old golf wilh 300 10 400 crazy Americans and Canadians . We hope 10 see you Ihere. No excuses. you'lI nolice Ih al our meeling is a lull week belore Ihe Ryder Cup giving you plenly ol time 10 cal eh Ihe plane 10 Spain. Never on es 10 lel Ihe absurd go unnoliced, Fiona and Nigel we re norlh ol Ihe border recenlly in Onlario, Canada and send Ihis inleresling anecdole lor your consideralion. A public access goll club in a small lown is offering a new service 10 select palrons, lIama caddies. The Soulh American quadrupeds are apparently very hard workers, lireless and enjoy being oul in Ihe nalural elemenls. The lee is prelty sliff, aboul $30, since Ihere is probably no beer can holder available. Fiona wriles 10 say Ihey will be departing shortly 10 visil Ihe Ihree American golf courses Ih al have won spols on Ihe lislol Ihe world's 10 mosl dangerous places 10 play goll. Nexl lime you are dissalislied wilh your home course Ihink about Ihese altraclive lacililies. • • • Pelham Bay and Splil Rock goll courses, Bronx, New Vork: Pelham's remole location makes it ideal lor dumping unlorlunale sou Is. In a recent lD-year period, 13 bodies were said 10 have been lound Ihere. Scholl Canyon Goil Course, Glendale, Calilornia: BuiiIon a landfill, il ran inlo difficullies when golfers snagged clubs on buried lires and melhane gas rose up Irom Ihe divols. They now pump Ihe gas 10 Ihe local power company. Complon Par-3 Goil Course, Complon, Calilornia: Il you like high calibre excilemenl, Ihis is your place. Home 10 (slreel gangs) Crips versus Bloods, Ryder Cup-style compelilion . II mighl be a long drive bul Nigel has a yen 10 visil jusl one more ol Ihe lop 10. • Losl City Golf Course, Sun City, Soulh Alrica: The 131h green is Iron led by a slone pil lilled wilh crocodiles, some sIreIching up 10 15 leel long. Who says goll is 100 lame a sporl? 18 Pack last accomplished the championship feat. That was 1968; please forget the math , 1'11 forego the vanity act and admit I'm 49. My fixture book shows that my other team of choice will unquestionably be receiving the Premiership trophy .. AGAIN ... May I I at aid Trafford. I'm highly optimistic this will be my transatlantic double, if you will . It would appear ungentlemanly too for me to publicly gloat. 1'11 just say good-bye and offer all of you my best wis hes for successful campaigns of your own on the links this fine summer. Fore! Brown Ale Nigel and Fiona are planning to visit Valderrama this autumn. Please keep an eye put for them. You can't miss them since Fiona's wardrobe is built around lime green . They promise a full report on the Dobereiner room at the Valderrama clubhouse. As you all have learned by now, I save my personal sporting biases for the last paragraph. Since January, t have been basking in the glow of the magnificent Super Bowl victory of the Green Bay Packers. I may not own a 'cheese-head' hat but I've been a Packer fan since my dav of birth in Northern Wisconsin . I was a mere lad of 20 wh en the Ken Shepherd writes: May I send my special salaams to Philip T, Manfred S, Archie B, Dick D, Christopher I, and Bob G who have been good enough to communicate with me in the past. I hope to get to the UK at the end of June and do hope to perhaps meet some of the members. Perhaps you can suggest who I might contact to have a chin wag with about our obsession. The Golf Society of Australia th at I started in 1982 is progressing with great gusto with dinners, golf days, hickory events plus a new group of Australian golf collectors which is gathering strength. We had our first golf auction last December in the dining room of the Melbourne Cricket Club, held by Philips. It developed into a general sports sale but the few 'sticks' and books were worthwhile, although we already have a group of moneyed bods who do not play golf but collect ephemera! My best wishes to everyone in the Society. Ken Shepherd This Summer the Ryder Cup returns to enthral us during it's brief visitation. The old rivalry is renewed but this time with one momentous difference - the venue. The choice of Valderrama recognises the outstanding part played in recent years by those sons of Spa in, Garrido, Canizares, Pinero, Rivero, Ballesteros and Olazabal. But Spanish golf is not just of recent years. The first club was founded in 1891 at Campamento, 3 miles from Gibralter. Las Palmas in the Canary Islands followed in and then La Toja at Arosa, Madrid and San Sebastian . The picture is a mystery. The caption says "Val derrama the Champion of Spa in, who is to compete in the 1920 Championship. " and vet there is no record of is having won either the Spanish Amateur or Open Championships. So who is the gentleman. Can it really be th at the modern course is named after th is early (unsung, or at least unrecorded) hero? \ \1 IW\{I{ \\1·\ 19 Th Swe ish Society ol Goil Historians has completed its lirst year and published its lirst yearbook locused on early goll in Gothenburg, which is the cradie ol golf in Sweden. The lirst goll course in this country was built in 1BBS by the brothers Edvard and Robert Sager who had started playing in England . They built their course on the lamily estate Rylors in the central part ol southern Sweden . But it was the coast south ol the city, where they s ill play on an 1B-hole course. Goil then spread to Stockholm and several other places including Falsterbo in the south wh ere a course was laid out over a stretch of wonderful links land. But Gothenburg remained the centre of golf in Sweden. The point is proven by a picture in the Society's yearbook. This picture shows a group ol boys and girls playing in a children's competition at Hov à s in 1925 . The players in this group later collected eight Swed ish and several Oanish championships. One of the boys in the picture is Finn Sörvik wh o dom inated golf in Sweden in the late fort ies and now describes himself as " the oldest member of the oldest club ". Inthe Society's yearbook Mr Sörvik is j nt e r v i ew e d and tells us about early golf at Hovàs. Nothing really happened to the quality of the game until the Englishman Frank Over ca me over to take the job as professional in 1934. He used to say th at good junior players in the club was his best reference for a future job and he showed Finn and the other boys how goll is played at a high level. Ouring the war and immediately afterwards it five years later in Gothenburg on the west coast that the game caught on. T h e Reverend A V Oespard lrom England lormed Gothenburg Golf Club and laid out a lour hole course . The bulk ol the members ware Britons and when they went home in 1B94 the club lolded. But golf survived. The Reverend had made Viktor Setterberg, a loc a I businessman, see the light and it is thanks to him that golf started to grow in Sweden around the turn ol the century . Setterberg was the driving lorce behind several courses th at we re laid out around Gothenburg in the lollowing years but had to be abandoned. It was not until 1904 that the golfers lound a permanent home in Hovàs, on 20 is the yearbook Golfens Arsbok 1996. This is a massive and comprehensive account of the year that passed and it will make life easier and work more interesting for future golf historians in Sweden. Back in 1979 Anders also edited the book published to celebrate the 75th anniversary of the Golf Federation . This book, Golf - den gröna sporten , is the best source for historical facts and statistics on Swedish golf. In another major commitment members of the Society have started a forma I education on university level in the History of Golf for members of the Swedish PGA. And last _. but certainly not least - the members ol the Society are firmly determined to enjoy themselves during spring and autumn meetings with pleasant golf and interesting speakers. The autumn meeting is set for September 19 at Kevinge which is the oldest existing golf course in Stockholm . If any BGCS members happen to find themselves in Sweden at that time - or any other time - do not hesitate to get in touch with the Society's secretary Anders Janson (who is a BGCS member) or with me. was difficult to get clubs and balls. It is said th at a special ru Ie had to be added, stating that "a bali cannot be considered to have been found before it has stopped". Mr Sörvik also tell s about how fast they played . The rule was to hit your drive while your opponent's bali was still in the air. In his peak years Finn Sörvik won four Swedish championships, beat Cyril Tolley in an international match and reached the third round in the British Amateur. Then he gave up golf for fifteen years but came back to win the Gothenburg district championship in 1971 , a title he won for the first time in 1939. Now, at 80 he is still a good golfer and has the rare distinction of having scored his age - playing mixed greensome with his wife. The Society's president Ake Skeppare writes that up until now Swedish golfers have not been careful to preserve their history. The Society of Golf Historians sets out to change this and its first major comm itment is to open a Golf Museum in the year 2000. Collecting material has already started. The Society's Secretary Anders Janson has put together a Swedish golf bibliography, wh ich appears in the yearbook. It contains 120 titles. The first golf book in Swedish was a translation of Abe Mitchell's Essentials of Golf, published in 1928. Anders, who is a former editor of the Swedish Golf Federation's magazine Svensk Golf, is himself the editor of the latest book on the list, which The yearbook Arsskrift 1997 (to be honest, it is a 32 page booklet, but with plenty 10 read - in Swedish) is published by the Swedish Society of Golf Historians , c/o Swedish Golf Federation, PO Box 84, SE-182 11 Danderyd, Sweden . IN MEMORIAM Jethro Ar_U dled 00 J .. ou .. ry 14th followlog ..0 1110_ boroe wUh eournge und de terminatloo. lIe was a respeeted Su_x solicltor who found time lor m .. o y local lote rests: he was Braoch Presldeot ol the Iloyal Brltlsh Legloo aod Preslde ot of the Lengue ol Frleods ol Dexhlll Hospitai. J e thro speot most of hls 70 years in Dexhlll und at dlffereot times was a member of .. 11 tbree of tbe towo's golf c lubs - ooe of wblch, the old Dexhlll Golf Club, c losed af te r Dunklr k . At Coodeo B e ach Golf Cluh he served 00 all tbe OO'UlUlttees. most reeently lK-1ng mBde I"resldeot aod lIooorary Ufe Member. He w rote the bIstory of bis beloved c lub "'Coodeo Deach Golf Club - Tbe "'Irst 7 5 yenrs" whlC'h was publlsbed in 1987. J etb ro w a s a loyal suppo rtt'r a od be oefactor of tbe Old l.eys lao's Golflng Soelet)', represeotlog tht'm in the Halfom lIewltt in tbe 50s aod 60s Bo d c b _ r lng the m 0 0 lor 4 5 yenrs!. 10 all bis golf be was ao eotbuslastlc mate b-pIByer, lovlog loursomes best ol all. Jet ...... WHS. as he liked to sny of blmsell, a big flsb in a Iittle pool aod ODe ol lile's great cbaracters. 21 ~,._,.,'"W"'K'llMli1: C\r' WAR RULES;;OmrOOIF by Bob Cra~psey »» &. Like many anolher who has lived Ihrough great evenis, I did not at the time appreciate their significance. The great evenl I allude to was World War Two, in the course of which I learned to play golf, if that is not 10 beg Ihe question. Only many years afterwards did I realise the appalling hardsh ips that a Kent or Sussex boy of the same vintage would have under go ne in his altempt to maste r Ihe grealest of games. The present generat ion of golfers , reeling under fast-increasing subscriptions and beset by committees that spring gigantic levies on Ihem wilh ledious frequency, might be pardoned for thinking Ih al they are Ihe most put upon generation thai ever set foot on course. It is with a view to putting the ir tribulations in perspective th at I recommend them to scan the War Aules of Golf, slill extant in 'Ihe Golfers Handbook as formulaled by Major G.L. Edsell, secrelary of SI. Mellons Golf and Country Club, which we re generally adopled. The rules are prefaced by Ihe disapproving remark Ihal during Ihe Battle of Brilain, players were altacked on golf courses by German bombers and fighlers. No doubl Ihey were, I suspecl inadverlently, bul Ihe casual reader of Major Edsell mig hl weil gain the impression Ihal, for Ihe Luftwaffe, nolh ing held grealer priority Ihan Ihe driving of Ihe enemy from Ihe links. One can visualise Ihe scene in Ihe briefing room of a Swabian airfield -'What is our largel today, Herr Aeichsmarchal?' "A big job, lads, Ihree scralch golfers and a Iwo handicap al SI George's, Sandwich. You may weil not co me back.' Beyond queslion, Major Edsell was Ihorough in his efforls 10 Ihwarl such appalling infringemenls of Ihe Geneva Convenlion . Aule I decreed Ihal, 10 Ihe cuslomary replacemenl of divols should be added Ihe colleclion of bomb and shell splinlers from Ihe fa irways, 10 save damaging Ihe mowers. It was recommended thai Ihese splinlers should be allowed 10 cool before being garnered. They were Ihen 10 be given 10 the Minislry of Aircraft Produclion 10 be made into Spitfire fighters 10 slop German bombers attacking golfers. Aule 2 slaled Ihal, in compelilions, bul nol, apparenlly, in bounce games, players mighl lake cover during gunfire or while 1\ ::$.:~:=:: ':.: .~::.« . %. >:.~, bombs were falling, wilhoul pena lty. II was essenlial 10 play 10 the correcl flag al th is period in his lory, because wh al the golfer look 10 be Ihe red flag waving above Ihe ninth could very easily lurn out 10 be, as Law 3 ind icaled , a red flag which marked Ihe location of an unexploded or delayed-action bomb. Such flags were to be placed al reasonably safe dislances from such bombs , bul nol, conlinued Rule 3 cauliously, guaranleed safe dislances . Incidenlally, those bomb and shell fragmenls which were galhered for Ihe Minislry of Aircraft Produclion could be moved wilhout penally, a very fil reward for patriolism . The nexl rule allowed bomb or shell splinlers on Ihe green 10 be likewise moved wilhoul penalty. even if, in a bunker, Ihey caused Ihe bali to be moved accidenlally. AI Ihis sla ge, Edsell clearly feit Ih al he was being altogelher 100 indulgent 10 his golfers, and il began 10 gel savage oul Ihere, boyo ! Take Aule 5 which enacled Ihal a bali moved by enemy aclion - it's fronl-line sluff now - could be replaced wilhoul penally as near as possible 10 where il lay. If a bali was DESTROYED by enemy action -which brings 10 my mind, al leasl, the graphic image of a Heinkei pilol culling a Silver Ki ng in Ihirtytwo wilh superlatively accurale I raeer fire Ihen anolher bali could be dropped wilhout penalty, nol of course nearer Ihe hole. I find il difficull to imagine circumstances in which a golf bali could be deslroyed wilhoul Ihe golfer being likewise bul Major Edsell had clearly forese en su eh a possibilily. He was nol tolally flinl, Ih is major. The sixlh rule enjoined Ihal a golfer could re move his bali from a bomb craler, presumably having salisfied himself Ih al il was not the claw-mark of a passing bronlosaurus. In this singular inslanee , one could drop wilhoul penally provided Ihat care was taken 10 observe Ihe line to Ihe hole. Some of Ihe 1940-41 craters wou ld have needed a fu ll wooden shol wilh Hurricane David whistling behind 10 allow any chance of Iheir be ing carried . II was in Ihe lasl ru Ie, Aule 7, Ihal the gallanl major showed himself mosl delermined thai Iradilional slandards of behaviour should be observed. Nol all of our war-lime golfers displayed the manly forlilude we would have liked 10 22 , see. Rule 7, properly tender towards human Irailty, compassionately showed some leniency towards the go lier whose stroke was affected by the simultaneous explosion ol a shell, bomb or machine-gun lire. I mysell would be prepared to concede that it might weil have been difficult to pronate Ihe wrisls as Vardon, I Ihink, suggesled while Irying at the same lime to side-step tracer The golfer Ihus allected was bullets. Iherelore allowed 10 play anolher bali Irom Ihe same place, bul under penalty ol one slroke, and very apt 100, Ihe craven swine. Like many anolher code, Major Edsell's Rules lolally omitted Ihe mosl importani consideration ol war-lime goll which was quile simply, lind a bali wilh which 10 play. The German Air Force left Cowal Goll Club in Argyll severely alone during my apprenliceship 10 the game, bul whal Ihey lailed to do. rubber quotas almost achieved. Paul Gallico wrote a marvellous short story. 'Goil is a Nice Friendly Game,' in which two American tycoons, manulacturers ol golling equipment, play a grudge match lor the last rubber allotment ol the war, the loser to go out ol business. Things never got quite to th at stage in the West ol Scotland bul we waded the reservoir assiduously and haunted Ihe prolessional's hut againsl the magic day each monlh when he would get some lour dozen or so remoulds. For my generalion, the name Spitfire meant nol so much an air craft as simply Ihe brand name ol Ihese remoulds. Spitfire was a wild exaggeration ol their powers ol !light. They we re great days. Ihose war time summers, and, ol course. largely missed by Ihe men who were out in '39. and back in '45, a lairly creditable round, il you think ol it. The goller - wise men are alike! Loves all good things to pree, Bul most particular he is In choosing a line tee. Far worse Ihan Ihis Ihere is 10 teil; He somelimes takes his heel. 'No wonder,' do I hear you say? 'For oft he's known 10 steal.' The tee his caddie often makes, 11 bad - Oh! help the caddie! For through his tee being in a box, He'lI likely box Ihe caddie. Whalever his delects may be, In language he beals all; For, be he dumb as any slone, He can address the balI. When learning oft he gets a coach From some old valiant slriver; Yel whether a coach he has, or none, he always needs a driver. The earth must be benealh his leet, Clad in her greenest robe; Bul should he miss Ihe little bali , He'lI say 'I've missed the globe.' Good Ladies, he should suil you weil. Ac/eek he'lI give you soon; But il you sentimenlal are , Jusl ask him lor a spoon. He does not die when he is dead, This evil he can Ihole; Indeed, he is not near the grave, But only near the hole. Pray do not count too much on him, Or you may get a whipping Here is some counling done by him Tho slrange there is no slip in When some men die, alas! alas' We stretch Ihem on a shutter; Our go lier dead, no help he asks, He only asks his putter. When one is odd, in Highland phrase, Anolher is two more No matter whether one or Iwo, He always shouls out, 'Fore.' When others die, we're apt to say They're nolhing but a name; How strange it is that being dead Keeps up Ihe goller's game. He mostly is a man ol trulhCome, do nol now be shyYel true it is and ol verity, He loves a lirst-rate lie. Composed by Mr John Thomson Glas~ow Golf Club 1890 23 The oldest club on the Continent was founded at Pau, in southern France, in 1856, far ahead of the majority of English clubs. Two Scoltish army officers who had been stationed Ihere during the Peninsular War, and had played golf of a kind with the clubs and balls they always carried with them, loved it 50 much that they returned some years later to play around again and this led to the formation of the club. It was another thirty years before the game became more widespread . Development of golf in Europe tended to follow the resorts favoured by British holidaymakers and 50, generally, spread from the Channel into the hinterland of France, Belgium, Holland and Germany. In Italy, after the centres of Rome and Florence, whose clubs were formed in 1898 and 1899 respectively, it was at "The lakes", 50 weil patronised by the British , where the next surge came with lake Como, Menaggio, Varese and Villa D'Este between 1905 and 1909, the odd one being San Remo in 1905. One of the later arrivals, and a most pleasant course to play, is Rapallo. RXPALLO GOLF · CLUB by Sergio D"UonÎ Fascist heirarchs and in one of his speeches proceeded to be ra te the Golf Club claiming that it's existence was anti-Italian and led to soft livingl To put his rantings into perspective, he also said the club had 22 holes when, of course, it had only 9. There cannot be many clubs which have been singled out for such nonsensical comment. Many famous Rapallo Golf Club was founded in 1931 and, with 9 holes and 4 Tennis Courts, was an immediate success. In 1934 and 1935, while still young , the club won the Italian Championships beating Villa D'Este in the latter year. In it's early days, the Duke of Windsor played a number of times as did Benelli, the famous comedy writer. view f ram tbc 6tb tee There was liltle golf during the war years of 1940 to 1945 and certainly no competitions. Many of the courses we re taken over by the military. A number of important peace and alliance treaties had been signed in Rapallo between 1917 and 1922 none of which Benito Mussolini approved of, and he seemed to bear the city a grudge as aresuit, 50 much 50 that during the war he called a meeting of his personalities have been regulars in later years, King Hussein, King Juan Carlos, Queen Soraya, Rex Harrison, Rita Hayworth and many footballers such as liam Brady, Roy Jepson, Eddie Firmani and others. In 1970 the course was extended to 18 holes and is a challenging test. The weather is mild in winter and warm and sunny in summer. Situated on the coast, the delicate sea breezes make the climate ideal. 24 • 72164-73397 1912 74769-77819 1913 78650-79648 1914 80292-81043 1915 (stopped for duration of Great War) 81618-87578 1919 88425-89786 1923 93056-93179 1924 94544-97384 1925 98811 -200704 1926 201455-203201 1927 204248-205518 1928 206449-207413 1929 208948-209070 1930 213623-213720 1931 216051-217651 1932 223213 1933 We have not yet been able to fully unravel the logic of the alpha-numeric reference numbers so the followlng are examples only: A series 1934-46 B series 1949 G series 1934 H series 1938 K series 1952 L series 1958 R series 1952 There is a fairly common series on the aspects of playing golf which do not have reference numbers. Each shows golfers in a different situation: "Golfing - The Swing", "Golfing - in a bunker", "Golfing - Putting", "Golfing - This for a half" etc. These we re photographed on the Old Course at St Andrews and registered in 1892. The descriptive wording can be in black or red The Valentine archives present a wide ranging pictorial record of social history and the Library intends to record them entirely on a computerised database. It would then be possible to compile a comprehensive list of all postcards produced covering a particular subject, eg Golf. However, on their own admission, this will take a good number of years to achieve. Most of the other major manufacturers have disappeared long since, Photochrom, Raphael Tuck, Frith etc, but one, J Salmon of Sevenoaks, is still in business although it no long er produces postcards. Although it does not have archives which are accessible, a company representative kindly offered to to research the records if I sent in a list of the Salmon postcards in my collection. A very generous offer which I have taken up. One of the uncertainties in collecting postcards is dating them accurately. A postmark only gives a clue to the date the picture was taken since some cards were tucked away in a drawer and only used many years af ter purchase, in which case the date stamp can be positively misleading. Many have never been used postally and so offer no indication of age. Among the most prolific of the early makers was Valentine of Oundee, and latterly also of London and Montreal. Virtually all Valentine postcards bear a reference number and so each can be unambiguously identified. The firm stopped making postcards some thirty years ago but at the time, fortunately, its archives were presented to the Library of the University of St Andrews. With the very kind assistance of the Library staff, I have produced a guide to the dates of Valentine's postcards. The dates shown are the dates the photographs were registered, which can be a some time after they were actually taken. For example, I have a card showing the exhibition match on the opening of the Kingussle course in 1891, but the picture was not registered until 1892. To compound the situation, it was not postally used until 15 Dec 1910. The Librarians have not yet plotted exactly the yearly bands of reference numbers ( there is also a problem with the years 1908- 191 2) and those shown are made up from a selection of cards. However, they give areasonabie enough span from which to work or make a deduction. 15647 16540 18121-18966 20367-21941 22347-23747 25107 25881-27359 28165-29083 31 140-32040 33361-34715 38846-41623 42407-46063 47491-51749 52537-56212 57463-57916 60516-63061 65462 66653-68415 69295-71451 1891 1892 1893 1894 1895 1896 1897 1898 1899 1900 1903 1904 1905 1906 1907 1908 1909 1910 1911 25 lairly correct and that Ihe callers could remember a machine being in a specilic clubhouse. Graham Lennie can remember one in the clubhouse ol the East Course at North Berwick in the 50s/60s. I can remember one in the bar at Ratho in the same period and someone ( I lost the note wilh his name yuk!) is certain Ihal Ihere was one in Dunbar. David Baxter adds a liltIe 10 the tale in that he remembers the plastic "tube" being in the shape ol a bollie. The Sixpence was inserted, the bottIe lurned upside down and the ba lis appeared in the neck. David thinks thaI il Ihe three balls we re white then the prize was three Warwicks. He remembers it in Broomieknowe, in the 60s. Surely there must have been some in England?! II has been lully reporled elsewhere bul lor my money Ihe Presidenl's Day al Hoylake was aboul as good as one could wish lor. The wealher was jusl righl, line bul wilh enough ol a breeze 10 require Ih al little exlra Ihoughl in playing Ihe course. Royal Liverpool's hospilality was mosl generous and Ihe grandeur ol Ihe dining room made dinner all Ihe more pleasurable. All ol Ihis was rounded off by a couple ol hours ol Ihe besl possible cabarel, in Ihe guise ol Ihe auclion. The MC's wil was super and Ihe banIer Irom Ihe Iloor malched il all Ihe way. A Iruly memorabie ouling and 10 my mind Ihis musl become one ol ~ DAYS NOT TO BE MISSED. The use ol basket hole markers has also prompted a good response. Mike Wiggs said thaI Sandy Lodge used them Irom ils openingon an early PC ol the Moor Park clubhouse which is now In my album - thank you Mike. Then Philip Truell sent me a blow-up ol a PC ol Sheringham showing the caddie holding a wicker Ilagslick. This picture was regislered in 1696/99 so this is a very early usa ge. Finally. Tom Heduan in his article slates that Ranelagh also used similar Ilagslicks. So we have taken Ihe story a little lurther in Ih al clearly such markers we re in lairly common use and Irom an early date. Bullhere is still some work to be done. Please keep Ihe commenls coming. The "The Hickories" al Gullane we re as enjoyable as ever. Yel again, Ihe day is weil reporled elsewhere, bul Ihe morning loursomes al Musselburgh were somelhing else. Playing wilh gutties was quile an experience even il I would nol necessarily wanIlo repeal it. In our lour, Ihe impression was Ihal we could give il areasonabie 'bash' wilh a wood or a lull iron bul Ihe 'louch' shols were much more difficul', and Ihe slandard ol putting had nolhing whalsoever 10 do wilh Ihe bali! David Hamilton musl have pul many, many hours inlo making all the balls which were ol a very high slandard. Thank you very much indeed, David. • While on the Iheme ol 'I know it has been said belore', olease supporl Ihe regional meetings. There are a dedicated lew who pul a lot ol their time and effort into organising meetings lor lllilIL benelit and presumably because you, Ihe members, want such days on Ihe calendar. I have been to every reg ion In Ihe country and every meeling has been notabie lor good companionship and Iively 'collecling challer', and usually have been played on some very good goll courses. You don'l have 10 drive hundreds ol miles - just support Ihose in your reg ion or a neighbouring reg ion il within easy slriking dislance. • It is interesting to see wh al stirs a response Irom readers. By and large, you are lairly slow to respond, wilh just the odd commenl here and Ihere. And yet I have now had lour rep lies - a Ilood by normal standards - on Ihe "Bar Goil Bali Machine". Three were to the effecl Ihat the description was Ir you want lO discuss your proposed article, phone 01452 612849 - NOWI 26 Cathedral Village g-307 600 E Cathedral Road Philadelphia, PA 19128-1929 (215)984-8897 4th April, 1997 Dear Alan: He claimed, it is said, that he distances. couldn't use one because one day the shot would "feei" like a six iron; the next day it might lIfeel ll like a4-iron. Again, congratulations on a superb issue. Every page a delight; the whole to be re ad - and re-read - daily for a solid week in order to fully enjoy the entire content. Through the Green is a delight and I consider myself fortunate in being a subscriber. I especially appreciate the artieles you publish on small bits of history which, in my prejudice, I think are important (Donaid Macarthur, Maponite) and the articles of pure enjoyment (Crabtree and "Buried Treasures". On a more personal reflection, the smal I "bit" on Molesey Hurst took me back some years to an extraordinary visit with the late Ray Gossage and his guiding me to the home of Garrick and showing me how one COULD hit a bali through the over-riding bridge and perhaps reach the Thames. With no intention of being "picky", a unique characteristic of a Colonist, I would suggest to Rodney Hawkins that while lagree generally with his opinion of Jack Nicklaus, I think it was Deane Beamon, the former PGA With very best wishes, Joe Murdoch * * * 1 211 Emerald Bay Laguna Beach California 92651 6 April 1997 Dear Editor: Commissioner and, in his amateur days, a top-rank golfer, who introduced him to course measuring. Casting upon a rapidly fading memory, I believe it was at an Amateur Championshlp held at Pebble Beach(1961) when Jack and Deane, playing a practice round together, Jack was first exposed to Deane's meticulous measuring out of the course. I would go further and suggest that it may have been an amateur, Gene Andrews who first began th is practice. Andrews was good enough to be a member of a Walker Cup team and won a Publinx (public course) championship even if he never won a national title. He was a creative type of golfer and is popularly credited with Inventing - if that is the word - the "plumb bob" method of putting. Because I cannot authenticate any of this fading memory, you may not chose to quote me but however shaky my memory, I would offer substantlal odds that I am right on Beamon. I would suspect that Rodney Hawkins shares a common interest in this subject. I always remember the story about Ben Hogan being asked about consuiting a book on In reading your "Letters" section, I noticed the comments by Rodney Hawkins, speculating that Jack Nicklaus was the originator of yardage charts. You may be interested to learn that in the early 1950's, a very fine amateur, Gene Andrews, winner of the USGA public links championship, not only used yardage charts for his own convenience, but also spent hundreds of hours, making up yardage charts of a large number of the best known courses, including among others St. Andrews, Troon, Muirfield and other British golf courses. He loaned these out to friends who were In competition. I know that a number of courses got the idea from Gene and had yardage figures printed, many from Gene's records. It is my recollection that Gene competed against Nicklaus in the U.S. Amateur and it is quite possible that Jack noticed the advantages this gave to Gene and thus started using the system himself. Frank Hardison 27 Sandhills, Lingdale Road, West Kirby, Wirral, L48 500. LA MOYE The La Moye club in Jersey is embarking on the club history to be ready for the centenary. Unfortunately, during the island's occupation during WW2 the clubhouse was razed to the ground and many of the records destroyed. So, if you have any references to La Moye - however brief or obscure - please communicate with Peter Firth at Peter Firth & Co., Communications House, 63 Woodfield Lane, Ashtead , Surrey KT21 2BT. 15th May, 1997. Dear Editor, Your March edition asked for information on the Liverpool Banking and Insurance Golf Club. An informative book was published last autumn - 'Links Along The Line' by Harry Foster - which tells the story of the development of golf between Liverpool and Southport; One of the courses referred to was established by the Liverpool Banking and Insurance Golf Club in 1908. In the 1930's it was feit that the name of the Club was somewhat restrictive and it became the Freshfield Golf Club. The course was sited on the inland side of the railway alongside Formby Golf Club and was requisitioned in 1941 and became Woodvale Aerodrome which it remains to this dav· On being requisitioned, it seems that the members who hadn't gone away to the war were absorbed by local Clubs. The Club house, however, continued to operate for a few more years and Formby members remember it as an imposing building on the other side of the railway, about level with their 2nd green. SCORECARDS Phil ip Howlett is working on a story on golf scorecards but is having difficully in obtaining information on how scorecards originated; the British Golf Museum referred him to the BGCS. The Editor has advised him to write to Prestwick where there are copies of the first Open scorecards. However, this is not much. Anyone who has any information is asked to contact Philip at 21 Flagler Drive, Greenwich, Connecticut 06830-3419, USA. 18 Jinjelia Road Highton 3216 Victoria Australia Yours Truly Dear Sir, Anthony W. Shone I am an avid collector of particularly of golf ba lis but also equipment and memorabilia. I was wondering if any of your members would be interested in exchanging or selling locally made bal Is. I do not have a list but there have been many brand ba lis made in Australia that may be difticult to obtain in UK. I know there are many from UK which we cannot locate here. Thanking you in anticipation Geoft R Wallace ROYAL DORNOCH The Royal Dornoch club is, for the tirst time, taking inventory of its memorabilia and books with a view to displaying them in a more controlled manner. The club has a run of bound volumes of Golf Illustrated magazines with the exception on one - Vol XV-XVI. The volumes are bound in green cloth an measure 10"xI3". If anyone has th is particular volume which they would be prepared to make available to the club, please contact Tom Tew on 01862 811310. CIlANGE Ot' ADDIIESS Sergio F, Balloni MEMORRBILIR snc Uia T Saluini, 2 211122 Milano I taly 28 "It has been inevitabie, of course, that a game such as this should develop a considerable literature. History, humour, curiosities, stories of charnpionships, essays on method - literally by the hundred - are available. And every golfer, I think, owes it 10 hirnself 10 have some acquaintancc with this literature." Bobby Jones In a previous edition of our dlustrious magazine now lost in the aeons of time, I was soundly berated by Herb McNally, a Canadian barrister, nay Q.C., who is a long serving member of our Society. I had been foolish enough to express the opinion that most Club histories we re not only dull and boring but were of interest solely to that particular Having taken my Club's membership. punishment without flinching, I immedlately apologised as I feit it wiser not take Issue any further with "my learned friend". Deep down I still considered that I had right on my side, until recently, when two new Club Histories were published. at the USGA Far Hills Museurm. Another club making family, the Grieves, five in all, were Club members and clubs made by them can still be found. These are not considered to be of any great distinction perhaps because the Grieves were probably part-time makers. Ronaid Ross, Alexander Greig, John MeLeod, Thomas Hogg, William Nlven, Charles Brown, John Park (younger brother of Willie Park Snr), John & Frank Dole man, Robert Anderson and Thomas Carruthers were all at onetime associated with the Club and were in some instances bali makers. William Gibson, the well-known cleek maker joined Bruntsfield Allied in 1896 as did James Clark. James and his brother David owned J & 0 Clark the Musselburgh firm of bali and clubmakers .. Another notabie Member of Bruntsfield Allied was George Robb author of Historical Gossip about Golf and Golfers and Manual of the 8runtsfield Links AI/ied Golfing Club published in 1867 and which subsequently became the earliest golfing year book. Bruntsfield Allied has nearly gone out of existence on three occasions but is now happily thriving. Philip Knowies has not only made a valuable contribution the Club In writing its history but also has added to the history of golf generally. Very much recommended. The first of these was A History of the Bruntsfield Allied Golf Club 18561996 written by Philip Knowies, a BGCS member, and published by the Club at i 15-00 in a limited edition of 600. lts sub-title "The Clubmakers' Golf Club" goes someway to explaining my change of opinion. Philip tra ces the Club from its early beg innings in 1856, playing over Bruntsfield Links, which were shared with the Burgess Golfing Society and other Bruntsfield Societies, to its move to Braid Hills and to the present day when Philip believes that it is the oldest Club In existence without a course of its own. This latter pOint might be argued by Old Manchester Golf Club which was founded in 1818. What cannot be disputed IS that the Club must have had the greatest single proportion of clubmakers of any Club and, in Chapter 5, the author Includes many of these. Peter McEwan, the fourth generation clubmaker of this famous family was a founder member as was James Hutchison Snr. and James Hutchison Jnr. who joined the Club in 1870. Francis Bell and his brothers Thomas and Walter were Members, all of whom had been McEwan apprentices and produced fine clubs, one of which by Francis (Frank) is on display The second Club Hlstory IS A History of Golf in Bray by Cyril Dunne and published by the Club. This can be obtained from Michael Neary, a new member of the Society, at Golfing Memories, Par 4 Dublin Road, Bray, Co. Wicklow Tel No 003531 282 7297. Michael will accept most credit cards. As I explained in the last Issue of TTG, Bray has many happy memOries for me as a child but I never have played over their charming nine hole course. The book not only covers the development of the Club over the last one 29 .. pnces ol Ell00, and a t5 page pamphlet Golfiana or a Day at Gul/ane published in 1869 reached its low estimate ol E8000 . Surprisingly, a large paper edition of The Golf Baak of East Lothian made only E550 and another copy lailed to reach its reserve. Another that lailed to sell was Reminiscences ol Golf and Golfers by H.T. Peters published in 1898, which reached E3200, E300 below I wonder whether the its low estimate. various facsimile productions have impacted on the sale of some of these rarities? T h e Chronic/es ol the Blackhea th Golfers made E1150, and that magnilicent book by Garden Smith and Harold Hilton The Roya/ & Ancient Game of Golf, which was tipped a long time ago to be one ol the EI 000 books, finally made it, selling for El050. At the middle level of goll book collecting there we re some bargains. I got a copy ol Golf at G/eneag/es for E260 around E150 below wh at it has gone lor previously. Certainly some of the sparkie lor golf books has faded and lor those who may have considered these in the past to be a reasonabie investment may now leel a little dellated. hundred years but is a social history of this popular seaside resort. There are same lovely reproductions of paintings of the town by various artists th at have found inspiration th ere, but more importantly from a golf historian's viewpoint it proves to me, without doubt, that Bray was the birthplace ol goll in Ireland. A delightful baak and one which I heartily commend to you . An unusual review copy ol a baak came my way via my aid pardner Pete Georgiady Irom North Carolina. His good friend, Tom Taylor, has published Th.. Golf Murd .. rs which contains a synopsis of nearly 200 golf mystery titles and short stories. Tom's enthusiasm lor this genre comes across loud and clear and from a golf book collector's viewpoint it is not only a good read but also a reference book with many rare dust jackets illustrated. Whilst I was aware that many well-known authors have included relerences to goll I certainly did not know that these included live by Agatha Christie in addition to Murder on the Links and The Limbo Line by Victor Canning . Perhaps the most collectabie author is Herbert Adams, who wrote eight golf mysteries and whose books are seldom found with their dust jackets. The synopsis of Ted Dexter and Clifford Makins Deadly Putter, which is set in the context of the annual President's Putter held at Rye in January each year is perhaps the most unlikely scenario. Our President, John Behrend, is weil acquainted with th is particular tournament and might consider it murderous enough at that time of the year without the complication of several lictional murders. Now for the bad news! The book at $150 dollars is rather pricey but it is published in a limited edition ol 400 in elegant imperial bonded leather and signed by the author. It can be obtained Irom Bob Grant at E90 plus postage and packing or direct Irom Tom Taylor at Golf Mystery Press, PO Box 8539& 0396 Westland , MI 48185, USA for $150 plus $3 dollars postage and packing. Rather than linish this on a downbeat note the good news is that David Hamilton, I am told Irom the horse's mouth, is due to burst into print in time for the Open with a book entitled Golf Scotland's Game with end papers manufactured from grasses from Leith Links, and that, il past experience is anything to go by, will be weil worth waiting lor! John Moreton writes Links of Hes ven by Richard Phinney & Scott Whitley; Baltray Books, at E12, from Grant Books. Described as 'a complete guide to golf journeys in Ireland', 'Links ol Heaven' concentrates on the great links courses which encircle one ol goll's most perfect holiday venues. The authors write with authority and Ilair on both well-known and hitherto unsung links, drawing on localoral history. Thus, John Moriarty describes the development ol Ballybunion course, which has become the destination lor many a goller's pilgrimage. Pat Ruddy and the late Eddie Hackett are given appropriate recognition, men who have built links courses within the last decade, Hackett's course at Belmullet, known as Came, being one ol his last and best. Nowhere else in the world are 'authentic' links courses being constructed and this is why the authors take so much delight in both old and Changing the subject rather abruptly, as is my wont, the lirst auction of the year took place at Phillips Sale Rooms in Edinburgh on Saturday 10th May 1997. Generally the estimates given in the catalogue were found to be reasonably accurate. The scarce titles, as always, sold and these included Cundell's Ru/es of The Thist/e Club which went for E4800, two copies ol R Clark's Poems on Golf published in 1867, which reached identical 30 ambience ol the various accommodations in which he stays, although some ol the detail is slightly gratuitous. Finegan covers very similar ground including the almost obligatory obeisance to Ruddy, Hackelt and Mulcahy, but as he has been a more Irequent visitor than the other two his experiences go back quite a long way. Take his advice and you will not play on a bad new creations. There are detours to Killarney and Mount Juliet but the authors dis miss some ol the newer inland courses as 'golfing theme parks', not without justi/ication, lor one feels they could be anywhere, lacking the essential 'Irishness' which the travelling gol/er appreciates so much at places like Enniscrone, Narin and Portnoo and Dooks. The book was originally aimed at golfers lrom the American Continent, so some ol the suggested itineraries will not be too relevant lor Brits but nevertheless offer use/ul guidelines. One ol Ihe joys ol peripatetic goll in Ireland is stopping at promising looking venues lor a game and completing a round euphoric at the 'discovery'. Phinney and Whitley lelt th at way about Portsalon, lor example. One serious criticism, however, must be made. The writers comments on Irish lood are patronising, ill-in/ormed and, in lact, downright rude. Modern Ireland boasts scores ol excellent eating places and precious lew MacDonalds. Readers are advised to ignore the chapter on lood and equip themselves instead with John and Sally McKenna's 'Bridgestone Irish Food Guide'. As weil as listing restaurants it includes larms, markets and the best lood shops, so those on a self-catering jaunt will lind it indispensable. The authors do rather belter on drink but then, one would expect that in th e home ol Guinness, Jamesons and Bushmills' Other aspects ol Irish culture are discussed and a bit ol history thrown In to proteet the reader Irom too many gaffes. All in all, a satis/ying read and Invaluable guide but do make your own discovenes about the loodl course across the water. In Blasted Heaths end Blessed Greens Finegan does the same lor Scotland. He started the round trip ol I reland at Shannon; in Scotland the pilgrim sets out Irom Edinburgh and travels clockwise Irom the capital eastward, then across to Southerness, up the Tumberry and Troon and visits all the expected destinations until he linishes in St. Andrews. As in the Irish volume other cultural leatures are not neglected, lor Mr. Finegan, though no mean golfer, is interested in more than golf and lood. Twenty-/ive years ol experience are distilled within these volumes, which are both thoroughly recommended, not only to those planning trips but to those nostalgically reliving holidays past. Both books are available Irom Grant Books at E16 each. (John Moreton is a regular contributor to 'Golf Club Management') CLUB HISTORIES wlth the Editor and fT/ends A couple ol surprises to lead olf this time, both ol which came out ol the blue. The lirst is The History of Hedley Wood and has been produced to mark the club's 75th Anniverary. As is the case with so many clubs, the minutes and records up to 1967 are missing and lor th is reason the manager decided th at a history should be produced as soon as possible. The author has thus done weil in the circumstances. The club hit the headlines in 1939 as the "Goil Club that gives away tee pegs" when it did so as being more economical than providing sand in sand boxes! The book is available Irom the Pro/essional's shop at Hadley Wood Goil Club, Beech Hili, Barnet, Herts EN4 OJJ at E17.50 inc pap. Another which you may have missed last year because, again, it was produced lor the 75th Anniversary is Sudbury Golf Club The First 75 Yeers. Sudbury was lormed directly out ol the old Acton GC in West London. Available lrom the Secretary, ' J A Gol/ers planning their Irish goll pilgnmage, as James W Finegan describes it, should pack Emerald Fairways and Foamimg Sus in their bag gage. Like Phlnney and Whitley, Finegan's chiel delight in Ireland is the links courses, though he does occasionally stray inland to sample such courses as Mullingar and Killarney. He writes weil, but at one sitting, hole by hole descriptions ol each course can become a tri/le wearing. His big advantage over the "rival authors' is th at he likes his lood and course by course descriplions are sometimes quite mouth-watering Nowhere is he as rude and patronising as Phinney and Whitley and so his recommendations can be regarded as sound judgments He also delights in the 31 same land lord . John Hawkins, a recent recruit to the Society, has produced a very readable account. All the hard backs have been sold and only soft backed copies are left. It has 128 pages, with 81 photographs, and is available at E7.60 Irom John Hawkins, Honorary Secretary, Dorking Ge, Chart Park, Deepdene Avenue, Dorking RH5 4BX. Smith, 67 Princes Gardens, London W3 OLR for E7 inc p&p. When writing, do ask for the potted history of the Acton Club. Dick has already reviewed A History of the Bruntsfi"ld Alli"d Golf Club 1856-1996 but as a historian rather than a book collector my perspective may be somewhat different. Although not a large book, 116 pages, it is virtually all very informative history concerning not just the Allied Club but of golf itself in one of the cradles of the game, the Bruntslield Links in Edinburgh . The (golfing) poli tics of the times on the Links, the problems of trying to establish equitable handicaps long befare they became structured , and life in general are included and all are most relevant to any study of the development of the game. Then, if you are a 'club' man, there are the 20 or so original members already mentioned. I could go on but far better that you read the book yourself. Produced in hard back with a colourful dustjacket showing Ewebank's "View of Bruntsfiled Links", with the castIe in the background, th is is a'must' John Pearson writes Shiskine Golf and Tennis Club Centenary History Visitors to the village of Blackwaterfoot, on the South West comer of the Isle of Arran, will be familiar with the short stretch of linksland along the share on which is situated the unique and picturesque twelve holes of the Shiskine Golf and Tennis Club . Founded in 1896 by summer visitors from Glasgow, it still has astrong holiday membership from the mainland . The relationship between the locals and vi sitors is one of the recurring themes ol the centenary history of the Club, written by Colin Bannatyne . No great champions have learnt their goll in this club; no major tournaments have been But the held over the 2990-yard course. Club and course have a very special place in the hearts of anyone lucky enough to have played there. The course has had a lot to do with i1. Laid out originally by Willie Fernie, and extended and improved a lew years later by Young Willie Park, (whose letter of account is preserved in the bar), the holes are short and tricky, with nine of the twelve needing blind approaches. There are glorious views over the Firth of Clyde and it would be just the place lor a hickories match. This litlle gem was recognised by its inclusion in Golf World's top 100 UK courses in 1994, and by the thousands of visitors who find their way there every summerthe Firth of Clyde and it would be just the place for a hickaries match . This little gem was recognised by its inclusion in Goil World's top 100 UK courses in 1994, and by the thousands ol visitors who lind their way there every summer. Colin Bannatyne's history consists of 62 pages, wire stitched with card covers and is available Irom the Hon Sec., Mrs F Crawford, Braeriach, Blackwaterfoot, Arran , KA27 8EX Also still for a modest E5.50, inc p&p. available is the exquisitely-produced calendar for the centenary year, each month with a picture of one of the holes. Priced at E4 inc p&p . continued on Page 13 On" Hundrt.d Y"ars of Golf marks the centenary of the FiI"y GC. As with Hadley Wood, the early minute books and records ol the club are no long er in existence, the first continuo us minutes dating from 1947. The Ladies, on the other hand, have managed to preserve their records from 1903. Despite this total absence of in-house information the author has made a creditable effort to chronicle the club's early days. One interesting fact is the all the club's professionals until 1952 were Channel Islanders and representatives of the Islands' famous golfing families, Vardon, Gaudin and I n soft back, with 100 pages, it is Beck. available from the Club Secretary. Chart Park 1897 to 1997 is the history of Dorking GC, a rarity in it's part of the country in that it is a 9 hole course, though none the worse for that. James Braid was responsible for the major changes and his courses are always good golfing tests. It had close associations with Guildlord and Reigate Heath in its formative years, in respect of course layout and adoption of rules. It also had a close association with the old Clapham Common club, and still plays annually or the Clapham Cup, and Betchworth Park with whom it has always shared the 32 Fnmk Owel! Salisbury. ([ 87 ~ - [962). Sallluel Ryder. 1859- 19 36. circa [927. Oi[ on canva~ TRADITIONAL SPORTS, GOLF , CRICKET & FOOTBALL AUCTION LONDON, 1l JULY 1997 HI STO RI C GOLF CLUBS. BALLS. PAINTINGS. BOOKS & RELATED WORKS OF ART. 10 AM SOTHEBY'S Enquiri es: Jon Baddcley or David Neec h in London on (0 17 1) 408 5202. Ta orde r catalogues please ca ll (0 17 1) 3 144444 or fax (0 171) 408 5909. 34-35 Ncw Bond Streel. London W I A 2AA }', /\ Mahogany kneehnlL: dc,k :md annl'hair. owneJ hy J H laylor anu presL'JlIL'U 10 IIim by tbc Artisan (;olkrs of(in:alilritain in Ikcembcr 1025 hl nl~~) ['I~K) EARLY GOLFING EQUIPMENT AND MEMORABILIA AUCTION : GLASGOW, Monday 14 July 1997 at 11.00 am VIEWING Friday 11 July -lO.OOam - 4.00pm Saturday 12 July -10.00 am - 4.00 pm Sunday 13 ]uly -1.00pm - 4.00 pm ENQUIRIES: Edward Monagle (0141 332 8134) CATALOGUES (7.00 or (8.50 (Post Paid) CHRISTIE'S 164/166 Bath Streel, Glasgow G3 4TG Tel: 0141 332 8134 Fax: 0141 332 5759