How the Game Evolved
There is general agreement that the Scots were the earliest of golf
addicts but who actually invented the game is open to debate. We
know that golf has existed for at least 500 years because James II
of Scotland, in an Act of Parliament dated March 6, 1457, had golf
and football banned because these sports were interfering too much
with archery practice sorely needed by the loyal defenders of the
Scottish realm! It has been suggested that bored shepherds tending
flocks of sheep near St. Andrews became adept at hitting rounded
stones into rabbits holes with their wooden crooks. And so a legend
that persists to this day was born!
Various forms of games resembling golf were played as early as the fourteenth century by sportsmen in Holland, Belgium and France as well as in Scotland. But it was a keen Scottish Baron, James VI, who brought the game to England when he succeeded to the English throne in 1603. For many years the game was played on rough terrain without proper greens, just crude holes cut into the ground where the surface was reasonably flat!
Early Golf Organizations
Early golfers played at the game for many years without any thought
of forming a society or club until finally a group of Edinburgh
golfers in 1744 formed a club called the Honourable Company of
Edinburgh Golfers. At this time, the first rules of golf, 13 in
all, were drawn up for an annual competition between sportsmen from
any part of Great Britain and Ireland. A few years later the
Society of St. Andrews Golfers was formed and in 1834, when King
William IV became the Society's patron, the title was changed to
the Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews.
The earliest clubs formed outside of Scotland was the Royal
Blackheath Golf Club of England which came into existence in 1766,
followed by the Old Manchester Golf Club founded on the Kersal Moor
in 1818. 18th century golf in the United States, while known to
exist, did not catch on and it was in Canada that golf first
established firm roots in North America. The Royal Montreal Club
was formed in 1873, the Quebec Golf Club in 1875 followed by a golf
club at Toronto in 1876. It wasn't until 1888 that golf resurfaced
in the United States. A Scotsman, John Reid, first built a three
hole course in Yonkers, New York near his home and later that same
year formed the St. Andrews Club of Yonkers on a nearby 30 acre
site. From those austere beginnings, golf literally soared as a new
national pastime in the United States. A modern jewel, Shinnecock
Hills, was founded in 1891 on Long Island and by the turn of the
century, more than 1000 golf clubs had opened in North
America.
All defined terms are in italics and are listed alphabetically in
the Definitions section.
The Game of Golf consists of playing a ball with a club from the
teeing ground into the hole by a stroke or successive strokes in
accordance with the Rules.