
Leamington
& County Golf Club will be celebrating it’s centenary
in 2008. Here we present a potted history of the club through
the years.
Golf in Leamington goes even further back in time as prior
to 1890 two clubs were playing golf in the town. The Royal
Leamington Spa Golf Club and the Royal Leamington Spa Ladies
Golf Club were located on the Campion Hills and Lillington
Road Links respectively. Neither of these proved to be permanent
abodes. In 1904 the men moved to the Old Butts, Milverton
and by 1907 some of the ladies were turning their eyes towards
a new development. It was in that year that some citizens
and town councillors, prompted by the desire to add a fitting
amenity, formed the Leamington & County Golf Club and
the new course was planned. It was this project which caught
the ladies’ interest and began the demise of their own
club. Then from the Old Butts the original men’s club,
eventually known simply as Leamington Golf Club, moved in
1909 to links in Guys Cliffe Fields. There the game was played
on a nine-hole course until 1930 when it increased to 18 holes.
In 1935 the neighbouring Brookhurst House and grounds were
purchased and the house converted into the clubhouse. The
Club’s activities were halted in 1939 by the war but
restarted after hostilities ended. It was in the early post-war
period that some of the men, as the ladies had done earlier,
sought membership of Leamington & County Golf Club. After
a relatively short-survival period Brookhurst and the course
became victim of the surge in property building.
The first steps, in relation to the creation of Leamington
& County Golf Club, was the convening of a meeting in
Leamington Town Hall on 10th October 1907. Supported by the
judgement of Mr L Gourlay, Coventry Golf Club professional,
the proposal was to obtain the lease of 80 acres of land on,
the then, Shrubland Hall estate. The rent and rates would
be £250 per annum and permission would be granted for
the construction of proper bunkers and for play on Sundays
after 2pm. Unanimous approval was given for the formation
of the golf club on that site, and a provisional committee
was set up to promote the scheme.
One of the first acts of the committee was the drafting of
a circular with a view of raising £1000. A donation
of £50 would ensure life membership, one of ten guineas
would bestow membership at an annual sub of two guineas and
one of five guineas bestowed annual membership at two and
a half guineas.
The raising of immediate funds was imperative as the laying
of the course and erecting a clubhouse was estimated at £3000.
On 23rd December 1907 the secretary reported that 112 applications
for membership had been received £414 and 10 shillings
had been donated and debenture commitments had reached £1560.
A motion was put forward that the club be formed and this
was duly carried. The name of the club was to be considered.
two titles were put forward these being Leamington Priors
Golf Club and Leamington & Mid-Warwickshire Golf Club.
With the steering executive committee satisfied that a golfing
future was assured they carried out their last business …
that of dissolving itself.
So the first General Meeting of the Club assembled at the
Town Hall on 6th January 1908 with Henry Hickman in the chair.
The search for a Club name was initiated by the submission
of the steering committee’s recommendations. These however
were withdrawn to be replaced by ‘The Leamington &
District Golf Club’ which in turn was withdrawn on a
further proposal of ‘ Leamington & County Golf Club’
This was carried with near-unanimous support.
The first committee meeting followed immediately and elected
Gordon Bland to the chair and appointed the Greens, Finance
and House committees and authorised the
drawing-up of rules for the Club.
In June the Warwickshire Union of Golf Clubs invited the
club to take up membership and this was accepted as from 1st
January 1909.
As membership numbers began to grow there was much confidence
that the maximum of 500, set out in the Articles of Association,
would be reached.
A visual identity was deemed essential so design for a Club
badge was sought. The accepted design acknowledged that the
Club was in the ecclesiastical parish of St Margaret’s
Whitnash, by showing the Saint in conflict with a dragon.
With sights now firmly set on the construction of the course
expert advice was secured in the shape of Willie Park (Jnr),
the first of the businessmen professionals of the day, twice
winner of The Open Championship and a designer and course
constructor.
His report was unfavourable towards the Shrublands Hall Estate
and he found Mollington Hill land far superior and recommended
the construction of an eighteen hole course of about 6,200
yards plus a ladies course of nine holes. Negotiations for
the land proceeded and agreement reached for the lease of
194 acres for 21 years at 17/6d. an acre (87 pence as we know
it today).
Park’s assessment of Mollington Hill’s potentialities
may have been first-class but his fees of one hundred guineas
and ten per cent on the outlay for planning the course and
overseeing the layout were too high for the Committee. Mr
Colt of Sunningdale Golf Club and Jack White, professional
at the same Club and 1904 Open Champion, were approached and
terms agreed for laying out the course at just five guineas
a day, plus expenses.
No time was wasted, a plan of the course was printed and
circulated to the members and work went ahead. Greens and
tees were built with much of the work being done by voluntary
labour. Progress accelerated throughout the summer of 1908
and by September the first six holes out and the three last
inward holes were almost completed.
The formal opening would not take place until all eighteen
holes were ready, but the committee felt it politic to decide
that ‘The nine holes that have been prepared be available
for use of members on and after 1st October until further
notice’.
Four months later the first Annual General Meeting of the
Club a report showed that expenditure on the construction
of the course amounted to £1,780.
Second only in importance to the creation of the course was
the building of the Clubhouse and supply of services to support
the facilities. The speed at which those tasks were accomplished
in parallel to all the others was quite staggering. For in
just eight months from the first committee meeting held in
January the Clubhouse was built and in service by the end
of September 1908.
Since January 1909 the Committee had been planning the official
opening of the course. The Opening Meeting was finally arranged
for Thursday 20th May continuing through the 21st, 22nd and
24th and ending on Tuesday 25th .
James Braid, the Open Champion, and Harry Vardon, the ex-Open
Champion, had agreed to play exhibition matches and would
be joined by two others, professionals Fred Robson, sixth
to Braid in the 1908 Open and George Duncan, fifth in the
1907 Open. The Meeting would also include the Open Amateur
Competition for the Leamington Town Bowl and a series of competitions
for men and lady members.
As for the proposed Ladies Course the men of Leamington and
County took little time to decide that for the good of the
Club and peace generally, the ladies should use the men’s
course and be consulted on the positioning of their tees.
The intention and drive of the ladies was quickly apparent
when the opportunity to advance presented itself. They held
their first General Meeting in the Town Hall on the 18th March
1909. Soon they were as established as the men playing their
own competitions and inter-Club matches and supplying representatives
in the County Ladies team. In 1910 they joined the Ladies
Golf Union.
The outbreak of World War I and the immediate post war period
was a difficult time for the club. In 1916, for instance,
some of the Club’s horses were commandeered by the Army,
six holes were closed, the professional left and the Clubhouse
needed to be further insured against damage by the emerging
threat – airships.
A month after the cessation of hostilities in 1918 the Committee
was recommending the overhauling of the twelve holes kept
in play and the re-opening of the six holes closed for two
years.
The worst winter conditions on record were experienced in
1925, but a new lease of the course for 21 years was signed
and the Spring of 1926 found the course and greens in excellent
condition.
If the weather of 1925 and then 1931 were bad enough to prevent
Saturday or Sunday play 1932 showed no sign of improvement.
There was extensive flooding throughout the country in May
of ’32 resulting in diminishing income. To offset this
the Ladies organised bridge parties enabling Club facilities
and furnishings to be improved. An interesting occurrence
in the year was the appointment of F.T. Summer, assistant
professional for four and a half years at Leamington and County,
to the post of professional at the newly-opened Gulliman’s
Golf Course in Tachbrook Road.
A new Amateur Record for the course was set in 1934 by Mr
Buckley, a well-known Midland golfer, who played a round of
71. The excellent score prompted, that July, for Mr Colt,
the course architect be asked to inspect and make adjustments
and alterations to improve the course and work begun that
winter.
The Second World War did not affect the Club greatly at first
but in view of unrest the Club thought it fit to let 57 acres
at the far end of the course for grazing. Nearby greens and
bunkers were fenced off for protection. Times were difficult
and naturally membership decreased and expenses needed to
be reduced but in 1942 there was some improvement in circumstances
for the Club as some members of the Milverton Club were welcomed
in joining Leamington & County. As the War dragged on
more acreage was lost to ploughing which reduced the holes
in play to eleven.
As in 1919, so in 1945, release from the immediate cares
of war encouraged members to assess the position and seek
to re-establish the domestic and playing facilities of the
Club. A move giving reality and confidence to such thoughts
came with the securing of the land on which the Clubhouse
was standing, it was purchased for £600.
With the war overand the Clubhouse secured, the course once
more became the focus of attention. The lease was renewed
as from the 25th December 1946 for 21 years with the option
to terminate after seven years. This option was deemed necessary
because of the possible difficulties in re-possessing land
for the rebuilding of the course.
It was recommended that Mr F.W. Hawtree a leading course architect
be engaged to advise on the future of the course. He came
to the Club and submitted a report and presented a plan for
a new layout.
His plan envisaged the re-designing to create two loops of
nine holes. The scheme was not tackled immediately but repairs
to tees and bunkers were put in hand, and enquiries made regarding
the purchase of a triangular plot of land next to the Clubhouse
plot. This would ultimately accommodate the ninth green. Meanwhile
only eleven holes continued to be playable.
Along with plans for the course, schemes were thought up
to alter the Clubhouse, these visions included a new men’s
lounge. Gas was replaced by electricity for added amenity
and economy. The professional was provided with a new shop.
Early in 1950 notice of resignation was received from Tom
Green who had given considerate and worthy service to the
Club as professional and course supervisor. It was agreed
to seek the services of one Derek Ratty, then assistant professional
at Hearsall. This proved to be the beginning of a long association.
The long awaited official opening of the new course came
on 18th October 1953, the first competitions for the newly
presented Presidents Vases were played during that month.
The up-dated course deserved up-to-date treatment. The need
to bring water to the greens was deemed essential and after
much consultation and fund raising the official turning on
of the taps was in the Spring of 1958.
The year 1958 held other significance for the Club, it was
the Golden Jubilee year.
A new idea surfaced toward the end of that momentous year.
It was to create a new 11th hole through the woods at the
top of Mollington Hill. Work on this new project did not commence
until 1960 with designing and clearing of trees. Construction
of the tee, the green and bunkers and by September 1965 construction
and seeding had been completed and the period of maturing
had begun.
The hole was brought into general play in 1968.
An Exhibition Golf Show was another highlight of ’68,
the opening interest and attention centred on Dai Rees and
his Golf Clinic. How to do it and how not to with demonstrations
of common faults and extreme hooks and slices, mixed with
professional banter and Welsh fervour, set the scene for the
main event. This was an England versus Wales fourball encounter,
the contestants being Peter Allis and Bernard Hunt, Dai Rees
and Dave Thomas. Dave Thomas was in great form producing some
of the massively long drives he was renowned for. His eagle
three at the 550 yard fourteenth was just one highlight of
his six under par 66, setting the new professional course
record. The honours for the day went the way of the Welsh
duo.
Derek Ratty’s service as club professional was recognised
and appreciated on completing 25 years and on his resignation
in 1977.
The quest for ownership of the course began as early as 1960
but circumstance and negotiation too often was not ideal and
had broken down. Hope were raised again in 1976 when the Club
were offered the chance to purchase the freehold of the course
and some adjacent land. Things dragged on for a variety of
reasons into 1980 when another offer was made to the Club
for consideration of purchase of the course but excluding
Mollington Hill Farm and adjoining land previously offered.
The offer was for £110,000 with a first option on the
other two items. In November 1981 a contract was signed for
the course at £87,863 with costs, the area was reduced
to 117 acres. Completion was made in February 1982. With the
outlay on the land facing the Club, the means of raising the
capital was a primary concern. A scheme was put to the members
whereby a one-off payment or instalments over 10 years by
each one would ensure the required finances would be raised.
Little time passed before Mollington Hill Farmhouse also
came up for sale. This purchase was completed in March 1983
for the sum of £57,800.
With the knowledge that the course ownership was secured
for the future a very ambitious and extensive programme of
drainage work was initiated across much of the course at a
cost of £14,000.
Further modernisation and re-designing of the Clubhouse has
occurred in more recent times and provides extensive facilities
in terms of lounge, bar and dining, together with extended
and improved changing and locker rooms.
With the Club’s Centenary Year on the near horizon
a special sub-committee has been created with the purpose
of raising funds and planning for events and the developing/building
of at least one commemorating structure.
The long term future, prosperity and development of the Club
may largely be in the hands of the children and grandchildren
of present members just the same way that junior golf has
played it’s part in past years. As long ago as 1917
school boys and girls were encouraged to take up the game
and the Club has produced many competent golfers from the
junior ranks. Caroline Gater and Linda Voss both enjoyed success
in the 1960’s. Caroline went on to captain a very successful
St. Andrew’s University Ladies Team. Pip Elson, commenced
his golfing career at Leamington & County before becoming
a prominent tour professional in the 70’s and 80’s.
Tracy Atkin (nee Hammond) joined the club at 12 years of age
developed her game at county amateur level and higher before
plying her skills on the European Ladies Tour.
Tracy has since returned to amateur golf and rejoined the
Club. In 2005 she added a sixth Warwickshire Ladies Title
to her list of honours. James Cook and Warren Bladon both
developed in the junior section becoming formidable players
in the Club’s successful Mid-Warwickshire League Team.
Cook won the English Boys Amateur Champion in 1986, was captain
of the English Boys International Team and then he qualified
to play in The Open at Royal Lytham in 1988. Bladon won arguably
the biggest prize in amateur golf when he became British Amateur
Champion in 1996 this provided him with automatic entry into
The Open that year at Royal Lytham followed by place at The
Augusta National course for the 1997 US Masters. Bladon now
a professional golfer also qualified for the 2006 Open played
at Royal Liverpool, Hoylake.
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