On this day … 5 November 1892

The Preston Guardian reported the formation of Preston Golf Club, not at the present Fulwood site, but on a new nine-hole course beyond the cemetery on New Hall Lane, where there used to be a Pleasure Gardens. The Hesketh Arms served as the club house.

A wonderful website, Golf’s Missing Links ‘the internet’s most comprehensive guide to the golf courses of yesteryear’, included the following cuttings from the Lancashire Evening Post:

Monday 14th November 1892:
‘The Preston Golf Club, situated next door to the Pleasure Gardens, has now been in full swing for two Saturdays. Its convenient situation immediately at the tram terminus, and the eminently “sporting” nature of the course, will probably attract quite as many members as the course will conveniently accommodate.

‘Already the club numbers nearly 80 members. There are nine holes, and the length is about a mile and a half, making an average of about 290 yards from hole to hole. Away to the right of the course is a miniature Himalaya, which, however, does not trouble the player, and on the left a small lake, the course compares very favourably with other inland greens.

‘It is for the most part well above the level of the road, and should prove fairly playable even after rain. The putting greens are, if such a thing is possible, too good and fast. George Lowe, of Carnoustie, the green-keeper of the Lytham & St Annes Club, who laid out the ground, on Saturday played the first hole in three, and went round the course in a low figure.’

16th November 1892:
‘Golf is spreading. By some it is regarded as an aristocratic game, but it is a game which is rapidly growing in public favour. It is not so easy a game to play as it looks and requires a good deal of practice to make perfect. The formal opening of the new links took place on Saturday and was witnessed by a number of visitors and members.’

The officers of the club included some of the most prominent members of Preston’s public and social life, as the 16 November article reveals:

‘Several gentlemen met a few weeks ago in Preston, at the suggestion of Mr Nicholas Cokshutt, Dr James Rigby and Mr W S Edelston, and it was decided to [?] for a golf club at Preston. The following are the officers – president: Sidney A Hermon; vice-presidents: Mayor of Preston, Sir Matthew White Ridley, Bart. M.P, W E M Tomlinson, M.P, R W Hanbury; captain: Nicholas Cockshutt; hon. secretary: W S Edelston; hon. treasurer: Dr J Rigby; council – Dr R Trimble, J Eccles, jun., J P Musprat, J J Johnson and E C C Firth.’

When a competition for the captain’s prize was played the following September, the paper reported that ‘Mr Johnstone, the professional, had very much improved the greens. The long grass which had been a great inconvenience had been cut, and the course was in great order’.

The club was there for only a short time. After another club opened on the present site in Fulwood in 1895, the two clubs merged and George Lowe from the Lytham and St Annes Club was again called on to design and layout the course.

The Preston Golf Club website describes those early days:

‘The administrative business was conducted from the pleasant confines of convenient hostelries nearby and in the town centre. The players changing facilities were not however, as pleasant, restricted as they were to a hut, which had been inherited from the Ribbleton course.

‘The acquisition of Fulwood Old Hall eventually resolved one of these problems but members had to continue to use the old hut to store their belongings and change their attire! The Old Hall had been the home of the Clayton family since 1551 and the massive studded oak door of the current Clubhouse, is thought to have been part of the original building.’

Preston Golf Club - doorway
The datestone over the doorway of Fulwood Old Hall, now the club house.
Preston Golf Club - early players
‘In these early years the Club enlisted the help of some very eminent golf players to design and to shape the course, notably Harry Vardon, James Braid, Alistair Mackenzie and Sandy Herd and much of what they suggested is still in place today’: https://www.thegolfguide.co.uk/golf-guide-golf-clubs/preston/
Preston Golf Club - wet day
An early image featured on the Preston Golf Club website. Can anyone supply a caption?

Sources
Golf’s Missing Links: https://www.golfsmissinglinks.co.uk/index.php/england/north-west/lancashireaiom/472-lancs-preston-golf-club-lancs
Preston Golf Club: https://www.prestongolfclub.com/club/club-history/


Discover more from preston history

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Leave a Reply