Montrose

from £35.00

Size: A5 with 1 inch border.

It is known that golf has been played on the links of Montrose for more than four hundred years making it one of the very earliest and important venues in the history of the Royal and Ancient game.

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Size: A5 with 1 inch border.

It is known that golf has been played on the links of Montrose for more than four hundred years making it one of the very earliest and important venues in the history of the Royal and Ancient game.

Size: A5 with 1 inch border.

It is known that golf has been played on the links of Montrose for more than four hundred years making it one of the very earliest and important venues in the history of the Royal and Ancient game.

To a young Montrose lad by the name of James Melvill goes the credit for recording the existence of golf at Montrose as early as 1562, more than twenty years before Mary Queen of Scots, golf's first lady player, met her unfortunate demise. James Melvill was a gifted lad who entered St Andrews University when only 15 with not only academic gifts but a keen interest in golf.

His diary records that while he was a boy in Montrose he was taught from the age of 6 to play many different sports including archery "and how to use the glubb for goff". James was born in 1556 so it is established that the game was being played in the town on, and very probably well before, 1562.

It was not until 1810, however, that the golfers of Montrose formed themselves into a club.

Early records show that they might not have bothered even then had it not been for the threat by the Town Council to build a school not only on their course but almost on the 1st tee. The golfers had been under threat from encroachments on their links on a number of occasions. As early as 1785 a Petition was sent to the Sheriff Depute complaining about the ploughing up of part of the common links by a tenant and it is possible to argue that in fact by so banding together in defence of their golf facilities they constituted a club. The 1785 date can be verified and this would move the club up the "league table" of the world's oldest clubs by a couple of places.

The Royal Albert Club, founded in 1810, ranks among the top ten oldest clubs in the world and had a close association with Royal Blackheath, which according to tradition was formed in 1608, although no documentary evidence is available before 1787.

What Montrose can claim uniquely, however, is to have had at one stage in its history the course with the greatest number of holes.

At a time when Musselburgh had 5 holes, Montrose had 25 and although they were not all played on every occasion they were used for a unique event in 1866.

Two Open Champions entered following an advertisement in the national press for a "Open Championship to be held on Montrose Links over 25 holes, being One Round of the Golf Course". Willie Park of Musselburgh, winner of the first Open Championship, finished second with a score of 115. Andrew Strath from Prestwick, the reigning Open Champion, finished on 119 as did the young Jamie Anderson of St Andrews who was to win The Open three times in a row from 1875.