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| Winterfield
Golf Club : by Mark
Beattie |
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When one approaches Winterfield Golf Course, on a summers
day, from a westerly direction what a marvelous vista enfolds.
St. Margarets, the present clubhouse, stands out like a
monolithic sentinel mistress of all she surveys. Twin-blue
backdrops, an azure sky and cerulean sea, shimmering sands and
verdant fairways create a picturesque setting by which even
confirmed cynics and stoics have been heard to be
impressed.
Dunbar town council aquired the 70+ acres of Winterfield in
1935 and a municipal golf course run by the burgh was founded.
The first greenkeeper-cum-"professional" was Henry Anderson
from Gullane, but he soon went to pastures new and the
incumbent of the position was Andrew Dishington - later to make
his name at Dunbar Golf Course.
The physical boundaries of the golf course were much the
same as the present. The public park on its Eastern periphery,
North and Back Roads to the South, Belhaven bay to the West and
the esplanade wall, affording bield and providing the Northern
boundary. Oddly enough the sea to the North of the Promenade
was called the German Ocean (not the North Sea) during the
mid-eighteenth century maybe as a strange foretaste of possible
future events.
Originally the layout of the "parkland" holes - today's
opening
half - were quite different
focusing on the old clubrooms, now part of the town's rugby
clubhouse, with the 1st hole running from a point behind the
7th tee to a green near the now 2nd. Subsequent holes on the
front nine run in a direction counter to the present with a
couple of pitch-and-putt par threes thrown in. The
configuration of the, now inward half, the links area of the
course in the thirties was not dissimilar to today's excepting
the 10th, 17th and 18th, which by more recent acquisition of
extra ground were extended.
When the golf course reopened in 1946 the course, or the
upper half of it was radically transformed - gone were some
acreage of the public park to the playing fields association
for rugby and hockey pitches, and the layout as we know today
was created. The hole sequence was different prior to the
acquisition of St. Margaret's (opened as clubhouse in 1973) the
7th was still the 1st and today's 6th the eighteenth. Some
minor hole sequence was affected during the seventies. Today's
16th was temporarily the 1st but with the opening of the
professionals shop in 1978 the "Wilkie" became the 1st
Hole.
Winterfield golf course was requisitioned during the second
world war years and was closed between late 1939 and 46.
Searchlights, troop barracking, look-out posts and many
hundreds of anti tank blocks were emplaced.
Winterfield Golf and Sports Club has had many creditable
members, these include John Huggan Jnr - course record holder
with a 61 - now a journalist and budding co-author with David
Leadbetter, Stephen Easingwood, Raymond Russell and John Grant
all good amateur golfers.
Members play annually for an host of trophies ranging from
the prestigious club championship played first in 1961 - when
Jimmy "Hooky" Cameron defeated Bob "Trunk" Smith in the final -
to more ephemeral monthly medals. Major amateur open
competitions are played over Winterfield. Firstly the
Craig-en-Gelt instituted in the early 30's, and coincidentally
presented to the club by a Mrs Emily Craig is open to members
and bona fide visitors. Secondly the St. Margaret's Rosebowl
(handicap) and Fiona Smeed Salver (scratch) played for first in
1973 to mark the opening of the new clubhouse and possibly, if
not probably, the best sponsored amateur tournament in the
Lothians. Thirdly the Belhaven Brewery Trophy(ies) generously
donated in 1991 by the local brewery with complimentary "pie
and pint" plus extravagant prizes to the fortunate few who
play.
Another highly prized item of silverware is the Wingate Cup
an handicap matchplay competition. It was presented by general
Sir Francis Reginald Wingate, governor general of the Sudan,
Dunbar's most famous adopted son who took a keen and active
interest in golf. Under his aegis one of his protegees, a
certain Mr Hastie a native of Dunbar, became professional at
Gezira Club in central Cairo.
The weather is particularly clement in East Lothian,
Dunbar's annual rainfall is 24 ins. (60cm) and the towns proud
boast is that of sunshine capital of Scotland. However when the
bar breeze blows and the prevalent south westerlies often do
this, quite often Winterfield becomes a true test of Golf. In
mitigation the trees at Belhaven School and the Promenade wall
do offer some protection. The golf course has seldom, if ever,
been closed because of frost/snow. Therefore one is guaranteed
a feast of golf all year round.
All in all if one enjoys a test of golf on a course steeped
in history with both parkland and links style holes - more a
walk than an hike - with excellent services in the bar, dining
room and professional's shop - Winterfield Golf Club merits
more than a cursory glance.
Mark
Beattie
This Article by Mark Beattie was written in 1992
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