"Golf in the early days as it became organised was very much the preserve of the wealthier classes, professional and military men and the landed genry who not only had the time to play but the wherewithal to afford the cost of early equipment, particularly feather golf balls which were incredibly expensive. The first golf club members were therefore gentlemen of substance and it was not until the arrival of the much less expensive gutta percha ball in 1848 that the game had a chance to expand into the wider community. As it did so the demand for more courses and for teachers became imperative, and golf began to see the emergence of the professional. These men who made golf their business arrived from the ranks of the caddies, who had previously carried the clubs of their gentlemen employers, and from the ball makers like the first professional, Allan Robertson, who kept the gentlemen players supplied with their expensive feather balls. Golf was able to cross the barriers of class as in no other walk of life. Great matches were played between sides composed of gentlemen players and professionals. Allan Robertson and Old Tom Morris and Willie and Jamie Dunn of Musselburgh often did battle with huge sums of money resting on the outcome. Large crowds used to follow the matches and betting was often heavy on the result. As the game expanded quickly in the second half of the nineteenth century, money matches, and eventually tournaments, were eventually held for professional players only. The first of consequence was the Open Championship of 1860, restricted to professional players with caddies who had to be supervised by gentlemen 'markers' to ensure that the rules of golf were strictly adhered to. When the gentlemen players were allowed to play in the event the following years, the professionals were still required to have markers, but the gentlemen players were trusted entirely to conduct themselves appropriately on the links."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Malcolm Campbell, Glyn Satterley, “The Scottish Golf Book”, (1999), p. 33
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Golf
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Golf
22 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Golf →
Related Quotes
"As the game developed, separate teeing grounds were eventually established and the golf course in the form we know it…"
"There were no club makers of course in the early days of the game but golfers found that the skills of the weapons ma…"
"In the beginning the golf ball was made of wood, probably of beech, but the feather ball, or 'featherie' came into ex…"
"The game of golf as we know it today did not really emerge from its crude beginnings on the east coast of Scotland un…"
"Today golf is an international game played in every corner of the world. It owes that popularity to the pioneering ef…"
"Wherever they traveled Scotts took their favorite pastime with them. They set up courses and founded golf clubs. None…"
"Although there is no written evidence so far traced of golf before James II's Act of Parliament of 1457, there is no …"
"The first Scot who tried to influence the game to any real extent did not attempt to do so for the betterment of the …"
"Scottish women have made a significant contribution to the development of golf since the middle of the nineteenth cen…"
"Golf? Nuts! I never did see any fun in a game, where if I hit a ball, I had to chase it myself."