St Andrews Golf Club Explained

Golf Facility Name:St Andrews Golf Club
Pushpin Map:Scotland Fife
Pushpin Relief:1
Pushpin Mapsize:200
Pushpin Map Alt:Fife, Scotland
Location:Links House, 13 The Links, St Andrews, Scotland.
Type:Private club. Public link courses
Owner:St Andrews Golf Club Limited
Website:thestandrewsgolfclub.co.uk
Course1:St Andrews Golf Club clubhouse
Embedded:
Embed:yes
Designation1:Category C
Designation1 Offname:13 The Links, Links House, St Andrews Golf Club with Boundary Wall and Railings
Designation1 Number:LB48319

St Andrews Golf Club, originally known as St Andrews Mechanics Golf Club, is a private members' golf club located in St Andrews, Scotland. The club is one of the oldest golf clubs in the world, having been established in 1843.[1]

The club does not own its own golf course, instead, members use the seven public golf courses in St Andrews, who are owned by the St Andrews Links Trust, they include; the Balgove, Castle, Eden, Jubilee, New, Strathtyrum and the Old golf courses.[2] [3] The courses are all shared with members of the St Andrews Golf Club, members of the public, and also a number of local golf clubs, including the St Andrews Thistle Golf Club, The New Golf Club, the Old Course (15th century) Golf Club, the St Andrews International Golf Club, Strathtyrum Golf Club, Jubilee Course Golf Club, St Regulus Ladies Golf Club, The St Rule Club, and The Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews.[4]

Former members of the club have won The Open Championship, including Old Tom Morris and Young Tom Morris who both won the title on four occasions each. In total 11 members have won the title with 20 victories.

History

The St Andrews Golf Club was established by 11 local tradesmen on 29 September 1843 as the St Andrews Mechanics Golf Club.[5] The founding members were: William Ayton (Cabinet maker), John Keddie (Joiner), George Morris (Butler) elder brother of Old Tom Morris, Alexander Bruce (Cabinet maker), John Lynn (Tailor), Robert Patterson (Slater), Alexander Carstairs (Cabinet maker), Adam McPherson (Plasterer), David Todd Junior (Painter), James Herd (Mason), and James McPherson (Dancing Master).[5]

In 1851 it was proposed by the then club captain, James Howie, that the club should change its name to St Andrews Golf Club or similar name. On 22 September 1853, the Fifeshire Journal reported that the Mechanics Golf Club had changed its name to the St Andrews Golf Club.[6] In the second half of the 19th century the St Andrews Golf Club was the strongest golf club in Scotland, with members such as Allan Robertson, he is generally regarded as being the best golfer in Scotland from 1843 until his death.[7] However he never had the chance to play in The Open Championship.[8] When Robertson died, no one knew who the best golfer was, and so a tournament was born to determine the name of the champion golfer of the year.[8]

Other members included Old Tom Morris, who was a long-time memberof the club, Young Tom Morris and many others, who built the club's reputation in challenge matches, the early Open Championships and team games. The following members won 18 Open Championships in the 19th century, and a further 2 in the 20th century: Old Tom Morris (1861, 1862, 1864, 1867), Young Tom Morris (1868, 1969, 1870, 1872), Tom Kidd (1873), Bob Martin (1876, 1885), Jamie Anderson (1877, 1878, 1879), Willie Fernie (1883), Jack Burns (1888), Hugh Kirkaldy (1891), William Auchterlonie (1893), Sandy Herd (1902), and Jock Hutchison (1921).[6] [9] [10] Club members have also won U.S. Open titles too, with James Foulis (1896), Fred Herd (1898) and Laurie Auchterlonie (1902).[6]

Allan Robertson and Old Tom Morris of the St Andrews Golf Club were an intimidating challenging team, occasionally called "the invincibles". Large sums of money for the matches was put up by sponsors, with the players who won also getting a percentage, but they also made their own bets too. Team matches are a tradition within the St Andrews Golf Club. The first match that was arranged was against Leven in 1849 with teams of 6 players on each side.[11]

The clubhouse

Historically golfing societies and clubs would normally meet in either a local hotel or member's house close to the golf course. Official clubhouses became popular in Scotland from the mid-nineteenth century as the game's popularity increased. The St Andrews Golf Club's first purchased a clubhouse in 1905 in nearby Golf Place. In 1932, the club decided to purchase Links House for £2,700. It cost a further £2,000 to convert it to a clubhouse. The new clubhouse was officially opened on 20 July 1933. It was built at the end of the 19th century, and overlooks the 18th green on the Old Course at St Andrews and across from the Royal and Ancient clubhouse. It was listed as a Grade C building on 12 December 2001. The club has used Links House as their clubhouse since 1933.

Membership

Membership of the club has grown over the years from 11 at its foundation in 1843, to 535 in 1927, 1,013 in 1947 and to over 2,000 members in 1998.[12] The main fee that is required to pay to become a member is $200,000 and after that first fee there is an annual payment of $28,100. This fee seems very expensive but it does not compare to Liberty National Golf Club that has an initial payment of $500,000.[13]

Honorary members

Bobby Jones became an honorary member in 1958.[6] He was a winner of 13 major golf championships and the only man to have won the Grand Slam, winning the U.S. Open, U.S. Amateur, the British Open, and the British Amateur Championship all in the same year of 1930.

Jack Nicklaus became an honorary member during the 1978 Open Championship whilst he was still halfway through the event at St Andrews.[6] He is the winner of 18 major golf championships, including 3 Open titles, 4 U.S. Open titles, 6 Masters titles, and 5 U.S. PGA Championship titles.

Sir Michael Bonallack became an honorary member in 1990 having won The Amateur Championship on fives occasions and Paul Lawrie became an Honorary member on 6 October 1999 having won the Open Championship in the same year at Carnoustie Golf Links.[6]

Name of the club

During its existence there have been slight differences in the club's name:

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Ayton Brothers of St Andrews. Integrative Golf Design. 2 November 2020.
  2. Web site: St. Andrews Links. leadingcourses.com. 31 October 2020.
  3. Web site: The Club & Links. The R&A. 2 November 2020.
  4. Web site: Fife. Mediadrive . 2 November 2020.
  5. Web site: St Andrews Golf Club-175th Anniversary in 2018: Part 1-The formation and setting the scene. AGS Golf. 3 November 2020.
  6. Web site: Our History Timeline. The St Andrews Golf Club. 3 November 2020.
  7. Book: Bradbeer . Richard . Morrison . Ian . The Golf Handbook . 1-86147-006-1 . Abbeydale Press . 2000 . registration .
  8. Web site: How Allan Robertson inspired The 1st Open. R&A Championships. 3 November 2020.
  9. Book: W. W. Tulloch. The Life of Tom Morris: With Glimpses of St. Andrews and Its Golfing Celebrities (Classic Reprint). 7 December 2017. FB&C Limited. 978-0-331-91332-3. 271.
  10. Book: W. W. Tulloch. The Life of Tom Morris: With Glimpses of St. Andrews and Its Golfing Celebrities (Classic Reprint). 7 December 2017. FB&C Limited. 978-0-331-91332-3. 271.
  11. Web site: St Andrews Golf Club has its 175th Anniversary in 2018: Part 3 - The Glory Days. AGS Golf. 3 November 2020.
  12. Web site: St Andrews Golf Club has its 175th Anniversary in 2018: Part 4 - 20th Century and More. AGS Golf. 3 November 2020.
  13. Web site: Goodley . Alvin . 2021-09-27 . 10 Most Expensive and Exclusive Country Clubs in the World . 2022-10-03 . Rarest.org . en-US.
  14. Web site: St Andrews Golf Club Limited. Companies House. 2 November 2020.
  15. Book: St. Andrew's Golf Club: Officers, Constitution and Rules, Also List of Members. 1910. St. Andrews Golf Club.