Laurie Auchterlonie Explained

Laurie Auchterlonie
Fullname:Lawrence Auchterlonie
Nickname:Laurie
Birth Date:8 December 1867
Birth Place:St Andrews, Scotland
Death Place:St Andrews, Scotland
Status:Professional
Yearpro:1899
Prowins:2
Majorwins:1
Masters:DNP
Usopen:Won: 1902
Open:T13: 1895
Pga:DNP

Lawrence Auchterlonie (8 December 1867 – 20 January 1948) was a Scottish professional golfer, a native of St Andrews. In 1902, representing the Glen View Club, he won the eighth U.S. Open at Garden City Golf Club in Garden City, New York.[1]

Early life and family

Born in St Andrews, Scotland,[2] Auchterlonie was the older brother of Willie Auchterlonie,[3] who won The Open Championship in 1893. Willie had a son named Laurie, who succeeded his father as honorary professional to the Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews. This Laurie Auchterlonie should not be confused with his uncle, the U.S. Open winner.

Amateur career

Auchterlonie was over 30 before he became a professional. As an amateur he played in the Open Championship when it was played at St Andrews, in 1888, 1891 and 1895. He entered the Amateur Championship for the first time in 1895, when it was held at St Andrews. He reached the semi-finals, losing at the 19th hole to Leslie Balfour-Melville.[4] He entered again in 1897 at Muirfield and 1898 at Royal Liverpool Golf Club. He won the Dundee Evening Telegraph Cup, the unofficial Scottish Amateur Championship, in 1897 at Leven, Fife, beating David Leitch by 2 holes in the final.[5]

Professional career

Auchterlonie's win at the U.S. Open in October 1902 marked the first time that 80 was broken in all four rounds, as he posted a score of 78-78-74-77=307.[1] [6] (The U.S. Open became a 72-hole event four years earlier, in 1898.) He played with the recently invented Haskell rubber-cored golf ball,[7] which was at least partly responsible for the lower scoring. The new ball had first been used to win an important tournament the previous year, when it was used by Walter Travis at the U.S. Amateur and Sandy Herd at The Open Championship in June. It soon became the standard golf ball.

Auchterlonie competed in the U.S. Open eleven times, with seven top-ten finishes. His other victories included the 1901 Western Open. From 1901 to 1911, he was the head golf professional at Glen View Club in Golf, Illinois, a northwest suburb of Chicago; he returned to his native Scotland in 1911.[3]

Death and legacy

Aucterlonie died in 1948 at age 80 in St Andrews, Scotland.[3] [8] He is best remembered for winning the 1902 U.S. Open.

Major championships

Results timeline

Tournament188818891890189118921893189418951896189718981899
U.S. OpenNYFNYFNYFNYFNYFNYFNYFT9[9]
The Amateur ChampionshipSFQFR16
The Open ChampionshipT15T18T13 LA
Tournament1900190119021903190419051906190719081909
U.S. Open4[10] T5[11] 17T424T3T11T21T23
The Open Championship
Note: Auchterlonie only played in the Open Championship, the Amateur Championship, and the U.S. Open.
NYF = Tournament not yet founded
"T" indicates a tie for a place
R256, R128, R64, R32, R16, QF, SF = Round in which player lost in match play

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Auchterlonie is Open champion . Chicago Sunday Tribune . 12 October 1902 . 1, sec. 2.
  2. Web site: Births in the United District of St Andrews and St Leonards in the County of Fife. Statutory Births 453/00 0223 . 17 February 2015 . . subscription .
  3. News: Golfing veteran dead . The Herald. Glasgow . 21 January 1948 .
  4. News: The Amateur Championship – Fifth and Semi-final Rounds . The Herald. Glasgow . 10 May 1895 . 11.
  5. News: Evening Telegraph Cup . The Herald. Glasgow . 2 August 1897 . 10.
  6. News: Open Golf Champion. 26 August 2015 . The Saint Paul Globe . Minnesota . 12 October 1902.
  7. News: Notes on sport . The Herald. Glasgow . 13 October 1902 . 10.
  8. News: The Times . 21 January 1948 . 2 . Death of L. Auchterlonie.
  9. News: The Golf Championship . North Adams Transcript . Massachusetts . 16 September 1899.
  10. News: Vardon Was the Winner - Took the Open Golf Championship at Wheaton Yesterday . 9 April 2015 . Minnesota Historical Society . The Saint Paul Globe . 6 October 1900.
  11. News: Alexander Smith and Willie Anderson Tied for the Open Championship at 331 . 9 April 2015 . Library of Congress . 9 . New York Tribune . 16 June 1901.