A Brief History of Golf
How the Game Evolved
There is general agreement that the Scots were the
earliest of golf addicts but who actually invented the game is open to
debate. We know that golf has existed for at least 500 years because
James II of Scotland, in an Act of Parliament dated March 6, 1457, had
golf and football banned because these sports were interfering too much
with archery practice sorely needed by the loyal defenders of the
Scottish realm! It has been suggested that bored shepherds tending
flocks of sheep near St. Andrews became adept at hitting rounded stones
into rabbits holes with their wooden crooks. And so a legend that
persists to this day was born!
Various forms of games resembling golf were played as
early as the fourteenth century by sportsmen in Holland, Belgium and
France as well as in Scotland. But it was a keen Scottish Baron, James
VI, who brought the game to England when he succeeded to the English
throne in 1603. For many years the game was played on rough terrain
without proper greens, just crude holes cut into the ground where the
surface was reasonably flat!
Early Golf Organizations
Early golfers played at the game for many years
without any thought of forming a society or club until finally a group
of Edinburgh golfers in 1744 formed a club called the Honourable
Company of Edinburgh Golfers. At this time, the first rules of golf,
13 in all, were drawn up for an annual competition between sportsmen
from any part of Great Britain and Ireland. A few years later the
Society of St. Andrews Golfers was formed and in 1834, when King William
IV became the Society's patron, the title was changed to the Royal and
Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews.
The earliest clubs formed outside of Scotland was the
Royal Blackheath Golf Club of England which came into existence in 1766,
followed by the Old Manchester Golf Club founded on the Kersal Moor in
1818. 18th century golf in the United States, while known to exist, did
not catch on and it was in Canada that golf first established firm roots
in North America. The Royal Montreal Club was formed in 1873, the Quebec
Golf Club in 1875 followed by a golf club at Toronto in 1876. It wasn't
until 1888 that golf resurfaced in the United States. A Scotsman, John
Reid, first built a three hole course in Yonkers, New York near his home
and later that same year formed the St. Andrews Club of Yonkers on a
nearby 30 acre site. From those austere beginnings, golf literally
soared as a new national pastime in the United States. A modern jewel,
Shinnecock Hills, was founded in 1891 on Long Island and by the turn of
the century, more than 1000 golf clubs had opened in North America.
Early Equipment
The very earliest club makers were thought to be the
skilled craftsmen who produced bows and arrows and other implements of
war! The first authentic record of a club maker was in 1603 when William
Mayne was appointed to the court of James I of England to make golf
clubs for the king and his coherts! Two Scottish club makers are
recognized from the late 1600s, Andrew Dickson of Leith and Henry Mill
of St. Andrews. These clubs featured carved wooden heads of beech, holly,
dogwood, pear or apple and spliced into shafts of ash or hazel to give
the club more whip. Improvements were made by filling the back of the
head with lead and by putting inserts of leather, horn or bone into the
club face. In time, skilled blacksmiths of the day took on the challenge
of forging iron faced clubs, initially without grooves, to provide more
loft for shorter shots. The earliest balls were hand stitched leather,
painstakingly stuffed with boiled feathers! In 1618, James I of England
commissioned James Melvill and an associate to make feathery balls for
the court. It was an exclusive grant for 21 years with the balls stamped
by Melvill and any other ball found in the Kingdom not bearing his
trademark were confiscated! You may well be surprised at the distances
achieved by these feathery balls. In dry weather, a well struck feather
ball could travel 180 yards (165 m) but when wet only about 150 yards
(135 m). However, the feathery ball remained king until the middle of
the 19th century. In 1848, a golfing clergyman from St. Andrews, the
Reverend Adam Paterson, experimented with a substance from India called
gutta-percha. It had been sent to him as padding covering a gift and he
found that the material could be softened with heat and then molded into
a hard ball. The gutty as it was known was not an instant success as the
smooth ball tended to duck in flight. Players soon found that its
performance improved at the end of a round when the ball received some
nicks and scratches. Therefore, newly molded balls were scored all over
with a saddler's hammer with such good playing results that the demise
of the feathery was certain.
The gutta-percha ball lasted for approximately 55
years until succeeded by the Haskell ball in 1903. An American dentist,
Dr. Coburn Haskell, ran some experiments by tightly wrapping a liquid
filled rubber core with strips of elastic then covering it with a gutta-percha
casing. North American golfers began to take the new ball seriously when
Walter Travis, originally from Australia, won the 1901 United States
Amateur Championship using the Haskell ball. When Alex Herd won the 1902
British Open Championship again using the Haskell ball, golfers
everywhere dropped the gutty and clamoured for the Haskell!
Modern balls have a more durable cover of balata or
surlyn and various solid core balls with new synthetics have become
popular. As well, we have seen the art of club making go from the
original wooden clubs, to forged irons, then steel shafts and finally
all manner of metal heads with many types of synthetic shafts.
Technology has done wonders for the average golfer but practice,
dedication and raw talent still remain a factor as witnessed by Greg
Norman's amazing 63 at Augusta on April 11, 1996, during the first round
of the US Masters Championship.
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