[Pg 1]
GOLF AT HOME
The happy golfer—A beginning at Jersey—The Vardon family—An anxious tutor—Golfers come to Grouville—A fine natural course—Initiation as a caddie—Primitive golf—How we made our clubs—Matches in the moonlight—Early progress—The study of methods—Not a single lesson—I become a gardener—The advice of my employer—"Never give up golf"—A nervous player to begin with—My first competition—My brother Tom leaves home—He wins a prize at Musselburgh—I decide for professionalism—An appointment at Ripon.
I have sometimes heard reasonably good golfers sigh regretfully, after holing out on the eighteenth green, that, hoping for the best of circumstances of health and duration of life they cannot expect more than another twenty, or thirty, or, with great luck, forty years of golf. They are then likely to sound a bit bitter about the good years of their youth that they may have "wasted" at some other less fascinating sport.
Golf Training Aids
When a golfer's mind turns to thoughts such as these, and it will... sooner or later... you may be sure that it has been one of those special days of golf when everything has gone right and nothing wrong, and the supreme joy of life has been experienced there on the golf course. That little white ball has appeared on that day to be possessed of a soul... a soul full of kindness and the desire for doing good.
Even the clubs have seemed endowed with some subtle qualities that had rarely been discovered in them before. Their lie, their balance, their whip, have appeared to approach, nay, reach the ideal, and such command[Pg 2] has been felt over them by the golfer, as over a dissecting instrument in the hands of a skilled surgeon.
To make it all perfect, just perfect, the sun has been shining and the atmosphere has sparkled when, the skillful golfer (at that time) drives cleanly from the tee, the rubber-cored golf ball has been sent singing and winging through the air. The drives have all been long and straight, the brassy shots well up, the approaches mostly dead on, and the putts have taken the true line to the tin.
Hole after hole has gone down on the score card as a bogey. Here and there the common enemy has been beaten by a stroke. Perhaps the day's result is a record round, and, so great is the enthusiasm for the game at this moment, that it is with sadness our happy golfer realizes that the sun is setting and there soon will be no more light left for play.
These are the times when the golfer's pulse beats high and strong, and he, or she, feels the remorse of an individual with a misspent youth because he, or she, was grown up and age was settling in limbs before ever a ball was teed up.
At last I can say that I have not missed much of the game that I love with a great fondness. I played a sort of prehistoric golf when I was a bad lad of seven, and I have played it off and on ever since. It was fortunate for me that the common land at Jersey was years ago the ideal place for a golf course, and that, in time golfers from abroad found out its secret, as they always do. If they had not done so, I might still have been spending my life in horticultural and agricultural pursuits. For I was born (May 9, 1870) and bred in Jersey, at that little place called Grouville, which is no more than a collection of scattered cottages and farmhouses a few miles from St. Heliers.
Both my parents were natives of Jersey, and my father, who was seventy-four on the 5th of last November, has been a gardener there all his life, holding the proud record of
having changed his place of employment only once during the whole period. There was a big family of us—six boys and two girls—and all, except one of my sisters,
are still alive. My brothers were George, Phil, Edward, Tom, and Fred, and I came fourth down the list, after Edward. As most golfers know, my brother Tom,
to[Pg 3] whom I owe very much, is now the professional at the Royal St. George's Club at Sandwich, while
Fred is a professional in the Isle of Man. In due course we all went to the little village school; but I fear, from all that I can remember, and from what I
have been told, that knowledge had little attraction for me in those days, and I know that I very often played truant, sometimes for three weeks at a stretch.
Consequently my old schoolmaster, Mr. Boomer, had no particular reason to be
proud of me at that time, as he seems to have become since. He never enjoys a
holiday so much in these days as when he comes over from Jersey to see me play
for the Open Championship, as he does whenever the meeting is held at Sandwich.
But when I did win a Championship on that course, he was so nervous and excited
about my play and my prospects that he felt himself unequal to watching me, and
during most of the time that I was doing my four rounds he was sitting in a
fretful state upon the seashore.
I was a thin and rather delicate boy with not much physical strength, but I was as enthusiastic as the others in the games
that were played at that time, and my first ambition was to excel at cricket. A
while afterwards I became attached to football, and I retained some fondness for
this game long after I took up golf. Even after my golfing tour in America a few
years ago, when quite at my best, I captained the Ganton football team and
played regularly in its matches.
One day, when I was about seven years of age, a very shocking thing happened
at Grouville. All the people there lived a quiet, undisturbed life, and had a
very wholesome respect for the sanctity of the Sabbath day. But of all days of
the week it was a Sunday when a small party of strange gentlemen made their
appearance on the common land, and began to survey and to mark out places for
greens and tees. Then the story went about that they were making preparations to
play a game called golf. That was enough to excite the wrathful indignation of
all the tenant-farmers round[Pg
4] about, and without delay they began to think out means for
expelling these trespassers from the common land. A tale of indignation spread
through Grouville, and these golfers, of whom I remember that Mr. Brewster was
one, were not at first regarded in the light of friendship. But they soon made
their position secure by obtaining all necessary authority and permission for
what they were about to do from the constable of the parish, and from that day
we had to resign ourselves to the fact that a new feature had entered into the
quiet life of Jersey. The little party went ahead with the marking out of their
course, though indeed the natural state of the place was so perfect from the
golfer's point of view that very little work was necessary, and no first-class
golf links was ever made more easily. There were sand and other natural hazards
everywhere, the grass was short and springy just as it is on all good sea-coast
links, and all that it was necessary to do was to put a flag down where each
hole was going to be, and run the mower and the roller over the space selected
for the putting green. Rooms were rented at a little inn hard by, which was
forthwith rechristened the Golf Inn, and the headquarters of the Jersey golfers
are still at the same place, though a large club-room has been added. That was
the beginning of the Royal Jersey Golf Club. The links as they were when they
were first completed were really excellent—much better than they are to-day, for
since then, in order to prevent the sand being blown all over the course by the
strong winds which sweep across the island, the bunkers have in most cases been
filled with clay, which has to a great extent spoiled them.
When everything was ready, more of these golfers came across from England to
play this new game which we had never seen before, and all the youngsters of the
locality were enticed into their service to carry their clubs. I was among the
number, and that was my first introduction to the game. We did not think much of
it upon our first experience; but after we had carried for a few rounds we came
to see that[Pg 5] it
contained more than we had imagined. Then we were seized with a desire to play
it ourselves, and discover what we could do. But we had no links to play upon,
no clubs, no balls, and no money. However, we surmounted all these difficulties.
To begin with, we laid out a special course of our very own. It consisted of
only four holes, and each one of them was only about fifty yards long, but for
boys of seven that was quite enough. We made our teeing grounds, smoothed out
the greens, and, so far as this part of the business was concerned, we were soon
ready for play. There was no difficulty about balls, for we decided at once that
the most suitable article for us, in the absence of real gutties, was the big
white marble which we called a taw, and which was about half the size of an
ordinary golf ball, or perhaps a little less than that. But there was some
anxiety in our juvenile minds when the question of clubs came to be considered,
and I think we deserved credit for the manner in which we disposed of it. It was
apparent that nothing would be satisfactory except a club fashioned on the lines
of a real golf club, and that to procure anything of the sort we should have to
make it ourselves. Therefore, after several experiments, we decided that we
would use for the purpose the hard wood of the tree which we called the lady
oak. To make a club we cut a thick branch from the tree, sawed off a few inches
from it, and then trimmed this piece so that it had a faint resemblance to the
heads of the drivers we had seen used on the links. Any elaborate splicing
operations were out of the question, so we agreed that we must bore a hole in
the centre of the head. The shaft sticks that we chose and trimmed were made of
good thorn, white or black, and when we had prepared them to our satisfaction we
put the poker in the fire and made it red hot, then bored a hole with it through
the head, and tightened the shaft with wedges until the club was complete. With
this primitive driver we could get what was for our diminutive limbs a really
long ball, or a long taw as one should say. In these later days a patent[Pg 6] has been taken out for
drivers with the shaft let into the head, which are to all intents and purposes
the same in principle as those which we used to make at Grouville.
By and by some of us became quite expert at the making of these clubs, and we
set ourselves to discover ways and means of improving them. The greater
elaboration of such brassies as we had seen impressed us, and we also found some
trouble with our oak heads in that, being green, they were rather inclined to
chip and crack. Ultimately we decided to sheathe the heads entirely with tin. It
was not an easy thing to make a good job of this, and we were further troubled
by the circumstance that our respective fathers had no sympathy with us, and
declined upon any account to lend us their tools. Consequently we had no option
but to wait until the coast was clear and then surreptitiously borrow the tools
for an hour or two. We called these tin-plated drivers our brassies, and they
were certainly an improvement on our original clubs. Occasionally a club was
made in this manner which exhibited properties superior to those possessed by
any other, as clubs will do even to-day. Forthwith the reputation of the maker
of this club went up by leaps and bounds, and he was petitioned by others to
make clubs for them, a heavy price in taws and marbles being offered for the
service. The club that had created all this stir would change hands two or three
times at an increasing price until it required the payment of four or five dozen
marbles to become possessed of it. But the boy who owned the treasure was looked
upon as the lord of the manor, and odds were demanded of him in the matches that
we played.
We practised our very elementary kind of golf whenever we could, and were
soon enthusiastic. I remember particularly that many of our best matches were
played in the moonlight. The moon seemed to shine more clearly at Jersey than in
England, and we could see splendidly. Four of us would go out together on a
moonlight night to play,[Pg
7] and our little competition was arranged on the medal system by
scores. Usually a few marbles were at stake. To prevent the loss of taws one of
us was sent ahead to watch for their coming and listen for the faint thud of
their fall, while the other three drove from the tee. Then the three came
forward while the watcher went back to drive, and I am sorry to say that our
keenness in those days led us to disregard certain principles of the sportsman's
code of honour which we appreciated better as we grew up. What I mean is that
the watcher was often handicapped in a way that he little suspected, for when he
went back to the tee, and we went forward and found that our balls were not
always so well up as we had hoped, we gave them a gentle kick forwards; for in
the dim light we were able to do this unknown to each other. But in legitimate
play we often got a 3 at these fifty-yard holes, and with our home-made clubs,
our little white taws, our lack of knowledge, and our physical feebleness all
taken into consideration, I say we have often done less creditable things since
then.
After such beginnings, we progressed very well. We began to carry more and
more for the golfers who came to Grouville; we found or were given real balls
that took the place of the taws, and then a damaged club occasionally came our
way, and was repaired and brought into our own service. Usually it was necessary
to put in new shafts, and so we burnt holes in the heads and put in the sticks,
as we did with clubs of our own make; but these converted clubs were
disappointing in the matter of durability. It happened once or twice that
golfers for whom we had been carrying gave us an undamaged club as a reward for
our enthusiasm, and we were greatly excited and encouraged when such a thing
happened. I used to carry clubs about twice a week. I remember that Mr.
Molesworth and Dr. Purves, both well known in the golfing world, were two
players for whom I very often carried, and only the other day when I saw the
former at the Professional Tournament at Richmond, watching[Pg 8] the play, I was able to
remind him of those times and of a particular shot he once played. We young
caddies were very eager to learn the game thoroughly, and we were in the habit
of watching these golfers very closely, comparing their styles, and then copying
anything from them that seemed to take our fancy. I may say at once, in reply to
a question that I am often asked, and which perhaps my present readers may
themselves be inclined to put, that I have never in my life taken a single
golfing lesson from anyone, and that whatever style I may possess is purely the
result of watching others play and copying them when I thought they made a
stroke in a particularly easy and satisfactory manner. It was my habit for very
many years after these early days, until in fact I had won the Open
Championship, to study the methods of good golfers in this way, and there are
few from whom one is not able to learn something. I cannot say that the play of
any one man particularly impressed me; I cannot point to any player, past or
present, and declare that I modelled my style on his. It seemed to me that I
took a little from one and a little from another until my swing was a
composition of the swings of several players, and my approach shots likewise
were of a very mixed parentage. Of course when I took a hint from the play of
anyone I had been watching it required much subsequent practice properly to weld
it into my own system; but I think that this close watching of good players, and
the borrowing from their styles of all information that you think is good, and
then constantly practising the new idea yourself, is an excellent method of
improving your golf, though I do not recommend it as the sole method of
learning, despite the success which I personally have achieved. However, this is
a matter for later consideration.
As we were such a large family and my father's means were very limited, there
was the necessity which is common in such cases for all of the boys to turn out
early in life and do something towards helping the others, and accordingly[Pg 9] I went to work when I
was thirteen. Some time afterwards I became gardener to the late Major Spofforth
of Beauview, who was himself a very keen golfer, and who occasionally gave me
some of his old clubs. Now and then, when he was in want of a partner, he used
to take me out to play with him, and I shall never forget the words he spoke to
me one day after we had played one of these matches. "Henry, my boy," he said,
"take my advice, and never give up golf. It may be very useful to you some day."
Certainly his words came true. I can only remember about these games that I was
in the habit of getting very nervous over them, much more so than I did later on
when I played matches of far more consequence. I joined a working men's golf
club that had been formed, and it was through this agency that I won my first
prize. A vase was offered for competition among the members, the conditions
being that six medal rounds were to be played at the rate of one a month. When
we had played five, I was leading by so very many strokes that it was next to
impossible for any of the others to catch me up, and as just then my time came
for leaving home and going out into the greater world of golf, the committee
kindly gave me permission to play my last round two or three weeks before the
proper time. It removed all doubt as to the destination of the prize, which has
still one of the most honoured places on my mantelpiece. At that time my
handicap for this club was plus 3, but that did not mean that I would have been
plus 3 anywhere else. As a matter of fact, I should think I must have been about
8 or 10.
By this time my younger brother Tom had already gone away to learn
club-making from Lowe at St. Anne's-on-Sea. He played very much the same game of
golf as I did at that time, and it was his venture and the success that waited
upon it that made me determine to strike out. While Tom was at St. Anne's he
went on a journey north to take part in a tournament at Musselburgh, where he
captured the second prize. Thereupon I came to the conclusion[Pg 10] that, if Tom could
do that, then I too with a little patience might do the same. Indeed, I was a
very keen golfer just then. At last Lowe was summoned to Lord Ripon's place at
Ripon, near Harrogate, to lay out a new nine-holes course, and Tom wrote to me
saying that they would be wanting a professional there, and if I desired such an
appointment I had better apply for it without delay. I did so, and was engaged.
I was twenty years of age when I left home to assume these duties.
Preface - Table of Contents - Some Reminiscences