Showing posts with label Dun Laoghaire Golf Club. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dun Laoghaire Golf Club. Show all posts

5/03/2016

Maguire, Mehaffey and Dunne in Curtis Cup

Leona Maguire 
Three Irish players and five from England, including world number one Leona Maguire, have been selected for Great Britain and Ireland’s Curtis Cup team.

Maguire is joined by Olivia Mehaffey and Maria Dunne, with England represented by Bronte Law, Alice Hewson, Meghan MacLaren, Rochelle Morris and Charlotte Thomas.

Maguire, Law, Mehaffey and Hewson were selected automatically as the top players in the world amateur golf ranking, with MacLaren and Morris earning their places as the top players not otherwise exempt from the LGU order of merit.

Thomas and Dunne were chosen by selectors for the 39th staging of the event between the top female amateurs from Great Britain and Ireland and the United States, which will be staged at Dun Laoghaire Golf Club from June 10th-12th.

The team will be captained by Aberdeen solicitor Elaine Farquharson-Black, who played in the contest in 1990 and 1992.

“We have an extremely talented team which has considerable experience of playing amateur golf at the highest level,” Farquharson-Black said. 

“I am looking forward to meeting up with the team at The Castle Golf Club to prepare for the match.

“With some of the best players in the world on both sides, it is going to be a really exciting Curtis Cup.”

The United States has won eight of the last nine contests, although Great Britain and Ireland did taste victory in the last home tie at Nairn in 2012


The stunning Dun Laoghaire Golf Club is in fact situated close to Enniskerry in Co. Wicklow, but resides on the Dublin side of the Dublin Wicklow border, with the majestic Wicklow Mountains as its nearest neighbours. 

The course decamped the seaside town of Dun Laoghaire in 2007, after ninety-seven years, for the picturesque Ballyman Glen, nestled at the foot of the spectacular Sugarloaf Mountain.

The origins of the Club date back as far as 1909, when a number of Kingstown (as Dun Laoghaire was then known) residents assembled at the town’s Royal Marine Hotel on December 9th for the inaugural meeting of Kingstown Golf Club.

The Curtis Cup Match is played every two years. The players are selected by their respective golf associations, with the USGA selecting the United States team and the Ladies Golf Union naming the GB&I players.

The Curtis sisters, Harriot and Margaret, had competed in the 1905 British Ladies Amateur at Royal Cromer Golf Club, where an informal match had occurred between teams of American and British golfers, and they wanted to promote the international friendships in the world of women's golf.

In 1927, the sisters, winners of the US Women's Amateur four times between them, presented a cup to begin the Women's International Cup. The trophy, a silver bowl of Paul Revere design, is inscribed, "To stimulate friendly rivalry among the women golfers of many lands".

Discussions between various golf associations had been underway since 1924, but it was not until 1931 that the USGA and LGU agreed to co-sponsor the event. It was hoped that the French Golf Union would eventually participate, but that never occurred.

The first Curtis Cup match was held in 1932, at the Wentworth Club in England. A United States team defeated a team from Great Britain and Ireland 5 1/2 to 3 1/2 in this inaugural event.

In winning the 2014 match, the USA team took their overall record in the Curtis Cup series to 28 wins, 7 losses, and 3 drawn matches.

The 2016 Match, the 39th in the history of the event, to be held at Dun Laoghaire Golf Club which is situated just outside of Dublin Ireland, will have the GB&I team looking for only their 8th win in the series.

Throughout the event's long history, some of the best women amateur's from the six countries involved have competed on the GB&I and USA teams and this will be no different in the 39th Curtis Cup match.


10/23/2014

Club History - Dun Laoghaire


For 97 years, home for Dun Laoghaire Golf Club was just a stroll from the town and the sea, a picturesque, parkland course central to an ever expanding community.

Today the club sits majestically under Carrickgollen Hill in Ballyman Glen, with spectacular views dominated by the Sugar Loaf Mountains and the Irish Sea, and still within the boundaries of Dun Laoghaire Rathdown County Council District. Despite its new vistas, the driving spirit of the founding fathers is as strong as ever.

In 1909, fifty-one residents of Kingstown and district gathered in the Royal Marine Hotel on December 9th, to attend the inaugural meeting of Kingstown Golf Club. It was chaired by Major Bryan Cooper, at that time a Conservative Member of Parliament at Westminster, but who was later to become a member of Dail Eireann for Co Dublin. The Earl of Longford, K.P. was elected President on the night. He was subsequently killed in action in the Dardanelles campaign in 1915 and was succeeded by Viscount de Vesci who held the position until 1958.

Formation of the club got under way quickly. Approximately 200 men and 70 Lady Associates were elected and leases taken out on 36 acres of land at Eglinton Park and Highthorn, where a nine hole course was laid out. A clubhouse was built at a cost of £1,265 and in April of 1910 a Council meeting was held in it.

In November of that year a decision was taken to extend the course to 18 holes and approximately 40 acres on the far side of Glenageary Road were leased and an extra nine holes laid out. At the conclusion of the Great War the noted golf architect, Harry Colt, was employed to produce a new lay-out which stood the test of time.

In 1922 the club title was changed to Dun Laoghaire (Kingstown) Golf Club and finally, in 1951, after an acrimonious debate, Kingstown was finally removed. There followed a period of change with the 'old guard' dying off and an influx of new members whose accents represented a broader spectrum of Irish life, both metropolitan and provincial.

From the sixties to the nineties all the leased land was acquired by the club and the importance of this gradual and far-sighted activity was to eventually lead to dramatic change. From the seventies on difficulties arose with the club's boundaries and it became obvious that it was not totally practical to maintain an 18 hole course that was reasonably safe on 78 acres.

An opportunity to relocate to 150 acres in Cherrywood in 1992/1993 fell through when Monarch Properties made a verbal offer, but subsequently decided to go ahead with a housing and industrial development. Another offer was tabled in 2001 by The Cosgrave Property Group which expressed an interest in the club's lands and indicated that that they would be prepared to re-locate the club to a 320 acre site which they had acquired at Ballyman Glen.

For historical reasons the club went back to the Royal Marine Hotel in June of 2002 where the offer was put to the 327 members present and after a vigorous debate, 79% voted in favour of the move.

Work commenced and Hawtree Ltd designed and supervised the construction of the course. The architects, Campbell Conroy Hickey, and builders, Cleary Doyle completed the clubhouse and associated facilities. 

The club moved to Ballyman Glen in August 2007.