The
following article appeared in The Cork Evening Echo, December 27th 1969 and was
written by Vincent Allen.
Now that pitch and putt has reached the stage of being one of the most popular sports in Ireland, if not the most popular as shown by the reports to the recent union convention, a natural question would be to ask how, where and when did pitch and putt all begin, who organised and promoted the game in the early days?
Having done research on reports and information available, some interesting facts were revealed. At Fountainstown, the County Cork seaside resort, in the mid 1930's, there was in existence a club known as the Fountainstown Developments Association. The club consisted of three tennis courts, croquet, children's playground and an 18 hole putting green. Two of the founder members of the club were W.A. Collins and M.J (Toey) Hunt. These two men were to play leading roles in the development of pitch and putt. The putting green suggested the possibilities of pitch and putt to Mr. Collins, a Cork bank official.
Great Organiser
Mr. Collins, a man of rare vision and great organising ability, lost no time in going ahead with his idea, and a completed nine hole course was opened in 1937. The new course and new game of pitch and putt was an immediate success - a tribute to W. A. Collins, the man who introduced pitch and to Ireland at the seaside resort of Fountainstown in County Cork.
Despite the Second World War the game continued to provide great enjoyment for the many people playing on the course and amongst these was a group of enthusiasts from the Altona Tennis Club in Cork.
A founder member of Altona Tennis Club and by now a keen pitch and putt enthusiast, was a man named Pat Bell. Pat, anxious to get the game going in Altona, prevailed on the club to start pitch and putt. So it was with the help of the club and the advice of his friend Toey Hunt, Pat Bell was responsible for the starting of pitch and putt in Cork City when the Altona nine hole course opened in May 1944.. Pitch and putt it can be said got its first lucky break when the game was started in Altona Tennis Club, as the club at the time was one of the leading clubs in the country and between its own big membership and the many visiting tennis players, pitch and putt got plenty of publicity and attracted more and more to the game.
Millfield
Another course was opened in Millfield, Blackpool in 1944, this nine hole course was situated in the grounds of the Sunbeam factory. The first inter club league was played between the three existing clubs in Cork in 1944, Fountainstown, Altona, and Millfield, with Millfield taking the first inter-club league.
The inaugural pitch and putt dinner was held in November 1944, at the Victoria Hotel, Cork, and the three existing clubs were represented. Guest of honour incidentally was the then Lord Mayor of Dublin, Mr. Martin O'Sullivan, T.D., who spoke in glowing terms of pitch and putt. At this dinner there was a long discussion on the best means to promote and foster the game, not alone in Cork City and County, but throughout the whole country and it was proposed that representatives of the three existing clubs should meet and form the nucleus of a union and so it was that the first seeds of organised pitch and putt were sown.
This meeting took place on December 8, 1944, at the Imperial Hotel, Cork, and it was agreed that the union be named the Irish Amateur Pitch And Putt Union with headquaters to be in Cork. It was agreed that a constitution be drawn up, rules be drafted and arrangements be made to run championship and inter club competitions. The suggestions made at this December meeting were sent to the clubs for ratification and the appointment of club representatives. The various items were enthusiastically endorsed by the clubs and so the first historic meeting of the Irish Amateur Pitch And Putt Union was held at the Imperial Hotel, Cork, on January 12, 1945. Dates and arrangements for competitions for 1946 were made at this meeting with competitions open to all affiliated clubs, the affiliation was one guinea per club.
First Irish Title
Winner of the first Irish Matchplay tiitle played at Millfield in July 1945, was Derry Murphy (Millfield), and the runer-up was D.J. Coughlan (Woodvale). Nine teams competed for the League Trophy in the first year of the union. Fountainstown, Altona "A", Altona "B", Millfield, Woodvale, Sundays Well Tennis Club, Douglas Road Golfers, Marina and Bankers. Matches were played on a match-play basis. The Woodvale course was opened in April 1945 and was the venue for the final in which Altona "A" beat Altona "B" in October 1945.
The same season two new city nine hole courses were opened namely, Collins and Rosemount. The Rosemount club, Sundays Well was opened in June 1945, and curious enough was situated only about 200 yards from the present St. Annes course, the Rosemount club unfortunately went out of existence after a few short years.
The Collins course was opened in September 1945, and within two months the membership was closed at 130 members. Even then arrangements were being made to extend the course to 18 holes, this was to be opened in April 1947. In their first season in competitive ranks the Collins club went on to win the League Championship and the Irish Match-play Title in the person of one of the all-time greats - Maurice O'Brien.
Records available to the writer show the officials comprising the Irish Amateur Pitch And Putt Union for the season 1945/6 - President, W. A. collins (Fountainstown); Chairman, W. Dwyer, T.D. (Millfield); vice-Chairman Toey Hunt (Fountainstown); Hon Treasureer, W.J. Hickey (Do.); Hon. Sec., R.D. Lord (Millfield); Committee, E. Bourke (Altona); J. Hickey (Millfield); P. Bell (Woodvale); J. McMullen (Fountainstown); Major Leamy (Collins); and Sean Kenny (Rosemount).
The following is a poem written about Fountainstown Pitch and Putt Club and included in the 1947 Pitch and Putt Golf Magazine.
Now that pitch and putt has reached the stage of being one of the most popular sports in Ireland, if not the most popular as shown by the reports to the recent union convention, a natural question would be to ask how, where and when did pitch and putt all begin, who organised and promoted the game in the early days?
Having done research on reports and information available, some interesting facts were revealed. At Fountainstown, the County Cork seaside resort, in the mid 1930's, there was in existence a club known as the Fountainstown Developments Association. The club consisted of three tennis courts, croquet, children's playground and an 18 hole putting green. Two of the founder members of the club were W.A. Collins and M.J (Toey) Hunt. These two men were to play leading roles in the development of pitch and putt. The putting green suggested the possibilities of pitch and putt to Mr. Collins, a Cork bank official.
Great Organiser
Mr. Collins, a man of rare vision and great organising ability, lost no time in going ahead with his idea, and a completed nine hole course was opened in 1937. The new course and new game of pitch and putt was an immediate success - a tribute to W. A. Collins, the man who introduced pitch and to Ireland at the seaside resort of Fountainstown in County Cork.
Despite the Second World War the game continued to provide great enjoyment for the many people playing on the course and amongst these was a group of enthusiasts from the Altona Tennis Club in Cork.
A founder member of Altona Tennis Club and by now a keen pitch and putt enthusiast, was a man named Pat Bell. Pat, anxious to get the game going in Altona, prevailed on the club to start pitch and putt. So it was with the help of the club and the advice of his friend Toey Hunt, Pat Bell was responsible for the starting of pitch and putt in Cork City when the Altona nine hole course opened in May 1944.. Pitch and putt it can be said got its first lucky break when the game was started in Altona Tennis Club, as the club at the time was one of the leading clubs in the country and between its own big membership and the many visiting tennis players, pitch and putt got plenty of publicity and attracted more and more to the game.
Millfield
Another course was opened in Millfield, Blackpool in 1944, this nine hole course was situated in the grounds of the Sunbeam factory. The first inter club league was played between the three existing clubs in Cork in 1944, Fountainstown, Altona, and Millfield, with Millfield taking the first inter-club league.
The inaugural pitch and putt dinner was held in November 1944, at the Victoria Hotel, Cork, and the three existing clubs were represented. Guest of honour incidentally was the then Lord Mayor of Dublin, Mr. Martin O'Sullivan, T.D., who spoke in glowing terms of pitch and putt. At this dinner there was a long discussion on the best means to promote and foster the game, not alone in Cork City and County, but throughout the whole country and it was proposed that representatives of the three existing clubs should meet and form the nucleus of a union and so it was that the first seeds of organised pitch and putt were sown.
This meeting took place on December 8, 1944, at the Imperial Hotel, Cork, and it was agreed that the union be named the Irish Amateur Pitch And Putt Union with headquaters to be in Cork. It was agreed that a constitution be drawn up, rules be drafted and arrangements be made to run championship and inter club competitions. The suggestions made at this December meeting were sent to the clubs for ratification and the appointment of club representatives. The various items were enthusiastically endorsed by the clubs and so the first historic meeting of the Irish Amateur Pitch And Putt Union was held at the Imperial Hotel, Cork, on January 12, 1945. Dates and arrangements for competitions for 1946 were made at this meeting with competitions open to all affiliated clubs, the affiliation was one guinea per club.
First Irish Title
Winner of the first Irish Matchplay tiitle played at Millfield in July 1945, was Derry Murphy (Millfield), and the runer-up was D.J. Coughlan (Woodvale). Nine teams competed for the League Trophy in the first year of the union. Fountainstown, Altona "A", Altona "B", Millfield, Woodvale, Sundays Well Tennis Club, Douglas Road Golfers, Marina and Bankers. Matches were played on a match-play basis. The Woodvale course was opened in April 1945 and was the venue for the final in which Altona "A" beat Altona "B" in October 1945.
The same season two new city nine hole courses were opened namely, Collins and Rosemount. The Rosemount club, Sundays Well was opened in June 1945, and curious enough was situated only about 200 yards from the present St. Annes course, the Rosemount club unfortunately went out of existence after a few short years.
The Collins course was opened in September 1945, and within two months the membership was closed at 130 members. Even then arrangements were being made to extend the course to 18 holes, this was to be opened in April 1947. In their first season in competitive ranks the Collins club went on to win the League Championship and the Irish Match-play Title in the person of one of the all-time greats - Maurice O'Brien.
Records available to the writer show the officials comprising the Irish Amateur Pitch And Putt Union for the season 1945/6 - President, W. A. collins (Fountainstown); Chairman, W. Dwyer, T.D. (Millfield); vice-Chairman Toey Hunt (Fountainstown); Hon Treasureer, W.J. Hickey (Do.); Hon. Sec., R.D. Lord (Millfield); Committee, E. Bourke (Altona); J. Hickey (Millfield); P. Bell (Woodvale); J. McMullen (Fountainstown); Major Leamy (Collins); and Sean Kenny (Rosemount).
The following is a poem written about Fountainstown Pitch and Putt Club and included in the 1947 Pitch and Putt Golf Magazine.
W.a. Collins
When the Irish an Industrial exhibition on the Carigrohane Road closed, it was decided to auction off, among other premises, the buildings which housed the bars during the weeks of the exhibition and which had been especially built for the occasion.
William A Collins, who was manager of the National Bank on the South Mall, and who was involved with the exhibition, purchased one of these buildings. He had it taken apart in sections and transported to Fountainstown. There, on a site which he had bought on the hill, the building was rebuilt an fitted out as a summer residence. The bungalow was named "Turestin" and he and his family lived there from May to September, commuting to Cork when necessary for school and for work.
"Collie" was married to a Scots girl and his father in law, Pickman by name, was one of the people involved in planning the course at Portmarnock Golf Club, and Collie himself, both played and took a great interest in the game of golf. The idea of establishing a club with a pitch and putt course as its centre and including various other sporting amenities and play activities, came after several summers spent in Fountainstown. Even if the summer of ones youth in memory are filled with constant sunshine, outlets are needed for all that youthful energy, and nobody was more aware of this than Collie.
After months of meetings and discussions with other friends and residents, a site was found and leased, and the memorandum and articles of association drawn up and Fountainstown Developments Limited was planned and came into being. "The Club" was intended, from the beginning, to be aplace where no generation gap existed. It catered for and was to be used by all members of a family.
Battles have been won and lost on the swings and seesaws,as well as on the pitch and putt and tennis courts. Generations of teens and twenties must have met or parted, danced and romanced on so many days and evenings down all those years. The many good people, young and old, who gave their time and energy in helping to maintain and manage the club in Fountainstown, and keeping the reality alive, have given a marvellous memorial to Collie and this founder members.
M.C
William A Collins, who was manager of the National Bank on the South Mall, and who was involved with the exhibition, purchased one of these buildings. He had it taken apart in sections and transported to Fountainstown. There, on a site which he had bought on the hill, the building was rebuilt an fitted out as a summer residence. The bungalow was named "Turestin" and he and his family lived there from May to September, commuting to Cork when necessary for school and for work.
"Collie" was married to a Scots girl and his father in law, Pickman by name, was one of the people involved in planning the course at Portmarnock Golf Club, and Collie himself, both played and took a great interest in the game of golf. The idea of establishing a club with a pitch and putt course as its centre and including various other sporting amenities and play activities, came after several summers spent in Fountainstown. Even if the summer of ones youth in memory are filled with constant sunshine, outlets are needed for all that youthful energy, and nobody was more aware of this than Collie.
After months of meetings and discussions with other friends and residents, a site was found and leased, and the memorandum and articles of association drawn up and Fountainstown Developments Limited was planned and came into being. "The Club" was intended, from the beginning, to be aplace where no generation gap existed. It catered for and was to be used by all members of a family.
Battles have been won and lost on the swings and seesaws,as well as on the pitch and putt and tennis courts. Generations of teens and twenties must have met or parted, danced and romanced on so many days and evenings down all those years. The many good people, young and old, who gave their time and energy in helping to maintain and manage the club in Fountainstown, and keeping the reality alive, have given a marvellous memorial to Collie and this founder members.
M.C