Features | Invention Mysteries | Announcements | Honors & Awards
The Chamber Report | Economic Development Council | Main Street Corner News | Job Hunt
Classifieds | Calendar | Lottery Numbers | Business News Elsewhere | Tech News Elsewhere
  

Features

Invention Mysteries TM
Self-syndicated weekly newspaper column

Now that Annika Sorenstam has competed on the PGA Tour

Find out how golf was invented
nearly 500 years ago

By Paul Niemann

"It is no coincidence that the people who invented golf also invented Scotch."

-- Bruce Manclark, 1999

[MAY 29, 2003]  The sports media were abuzz over Annika Sorenstam making her debut on the PGA Tour last week. She's the first woman to play on the tour since Babe Didrikson Zaharias first did it in 1945 -- 58 years ago. Watching Sorenstam play, I remembered reading somewhere that the word "golf" is an acronym for "Gentlemen Only -- Ladies Forbidden."

Seeing Sorenstam play against the men after some of them complained that she should not be allowed to play, combined with last month's story of Augusta National Golf Club's refusal to accept women as members, would make the acronym very interesting -- if it's true.

Not knowing whether it was fact or folklore -- after all, I had read it on the Internet -- my curiosity got the best of me and I decided to investigate. In the process, I found that there are several competing versions as to when and where golf was invented.

In baseball, there are those who say that the game was invented by Abner Doubleday, whose descendents now run the New York Mets. Others claim that Alexander Cartwright invented it. Either way, there are only two competing versions.

 

Like baseball, the origin of golf has never been clearly established. Unlike baseball, though, there are four or five competing versions as to when and where the game originated.

The earliest version of golf came from the Romans during Julius Caesar's reign, when the game was played with a cowhide-type of ball stuffed with feathers and struck with club-shaped branches. There are stories of the Dutch playing on frozen canals around 1425. Variations of golf were also played in France and Belgium. The main flaw with the Dutch and French versions lies in the fact that they lacked at least one essential element of the game -- the hole.

Golf as we know it today actually originated in Scotland around 1450. Its exact origins are unknown, but it is believed that golf originated with men AND women along the Scottish coast hitting a pebble with a stick, although the game may have first been played in the Scottish moors by shepherds.

 

In 1457, King James II temporarily banned golf in Scotland because it interfered with the practice of archery, which was vital to the country's national defense. The residents, though, ignored the ban and began playing on seaside courses called "links," a term still used today to refer to golf courses. King James' son, James III, and his grandson, James IV, also tried to ban golf in Scotland but, like a drunk trying to enforce prohibition, James IV also took up the game.

 

[to top of second column in this article]

King James VI of Scotland, who later became known as King James I of England, brought the sport with him from Scotland around 1603. King James' mother, Mary Queen of Scots, also took up the game of golf.

St. Andrews golf course in Scotland is the world's oldest course. A number of 6-, 8-, 9 and 12-hole courses were opened in the United States around 1890, and the first 18-hole course, the Chicago Golf Club, was founded in 1893.

So where does the word "golf" come from and what does it mean?

It turns out that the word "golf" is not an acronym at all; it is derived from the Scottish word "gowf," meaning "to strike."

While the "Gentlemen Only -- Ladies Forbidden" philosophy still forbids women from becoming members at Augusta, this is not the case with the PGA Tour. PGA stands for Professional Golfers' Association. Nowhere does it state that it is the "men's PGA." The LPGA Tour, on the other hand, states clearly in its title that it's for ladies and, as a result, allows only female players to compete. But I doubt that the women's game will ever be renamed as "lomf," which would stand for "Ladies Only -- Men Forbidden."

Next week: "Accidental inventions"

[Paul Niemann]

Paul Niemann is a contributing author to Inventors' Digest magazine, and he also runs MarketLaunchers.com, helping people in the marketing of their new product ideas. He can be reached at niemann7@aol.com.

Last week's column in LDN: "Take a flight back in history to 1903"

EL RANCHERITO
Authentic Mexican Restaurant

Carryouts
Call ahead!

831 Woodlawn
735-5721
click here for menu and coupon!

Our staff offers more than 25 years of experience in the automotive industry.

Greyhound Lube

At the corner of Woodlawn and
Business 55

No Appointments Necessary

Flowers and Things

515 Woodlawn Road
Lincoln, IL

(217) 732-7507

"Your Professional Florist"

Back to top


 

News | Sports | Business | Rural Review | Teaching & Learning | Home and Family | Tourism | Obituaries

Community | Perspectives | Law & Courts | Leisure Time | Spiritual Life | Health & Fitness | Calendar

Letters to the Editor