The early history of golf at Kingsbarns is illuminated
by one shaft of light. On September 4, 1793 , a year after their
near neighbor Crail Golfing Society had adopted an official uniform
of a scarlet jacket with a plain yellow button, Crail's minutes
“agreed that members of the Kingsbarns Golfing Society be
allowed to appear on the links at Crail in the uniform belonging
to their own society, Blue Jackets.” It would suggest that,
like Crail Golfing society (1786), Kingsbarns formed its Society
at least as early as 1793.
There is one piece of evidence pointing towards the 1790's as the
likely date of the institution for Kingsbarns. The earlier of their
two medals is 1829 and on the obverse side it has a scroll bearing
the motto “Palmam qui meruit (spelled ‘meriut') ferat,”
meaning, “Let him who has won the palm bear it.”
Now, this was the motto of First Lord of the Admiralty during the
Napoleonic Wars, Horatio, Lord Nelson, who was at the height of
his fame in the 1790's. He had entered the navy in 1770, lost his
right eye at Calvi in Corsica in 1794, taken a prominent part in
the battle of Cape St Vincent in 1797, and lost his right arm at
Santa Cruz in the same year.
Dalrymple wrote of the 1829 motto, “but whether it formed
the Society's motto I have not been able to ascertain . ”
But then he didn't know of the Nelson connection. Strangely enough,
the first winner of Kingsbarns' 1841 medal, Mr. Robert Haig of Seggie,
was the grandfather of a famous soldier, Field Marshal Earl Haig,
Captain of the Royal and Ancient Golf Club in 1920.
The article, which carried the information I have used about these
Kingsbarns medals appears in Golf Illustrated in 1909 and tells
us that the club was wound up by August 3, 1849.
Yet the second edition of Farnie's Golfer's Manual (1862) has the
club still flourishing thirteen years later. "KINGSBARNS
- this links is small and of a sandy soil. The grass grows
rather coarse for the finer shots of the game and there are few,
if any, hazards. The Kingsbarns GC was instituted in 1815; and members
meet four times a year, on the first Fridays of February, May, August
and November. In May, the “Bachelor Medal” is played
for, open to regular members only, and in November, the Feilden
Medal, open to members of the St. Andrews , Leven, Hercules (i.e.
Colinsburgh) and Crail Golf Clubs: Post Town , Kingsbarns.”
The Kingsbarns name itself goes back to the 11 th Century, its
royal connections genuine and documented. King Malcolm of Scotland
visited St. Andrews to collect his dues; in the case of grain, he
would store it on land at Cambo-in, of course, the “King's
barns.”
As I have said, there was golf at Kingsbarns before Napoleon's
defeat at Waterloo in 1815. Other later battles took their toll
on the links, for, at the outbreak of World War II in 1939; the
nine-hole course was taken over by the Ministry of Defense. They
saw the beach at Kingsbarns as a natural invasion point and used
the land for maneuvers for the duration of the War. In 1945, the
40 or so members of Kingsbarns were unable to finance the course
reconstruction, so joined nearby Balcomie Links at Crail, where
they still play today.
Kingsbarns lies on one of the many East of Scotland areas where,
it is safe to assume, links golf originated, with its feature, which
distinguishes our club-and-ball game from all others - the
hole. That never figures in the Old Dutch paintings adduced as evidence
that we borrowed our game from Holland . In any case, these 17 th
century works, however beautiful, are utterly irrelevant, since
the famous Statute banning golf and football dates from 1457. The
only valid evidence available at present is in a Book of Hours at
Bruges, published in 1510, and containing a picture which includes
a player hitting a ball with a club towards what is undoubtedly
a round hole, four or five inches in diameter. Now Bruges is a Belgian
seaport, in the Flemish or Flanders area, and from at least the
14 th century it was engaged in trade with many Scottish ports,
right up our East coast. Included are, of course, St Andrews, whose
first Provost, in the 12 th century, was Mainard Fleming, and Crail,
whose north barns came to be called “Kingsbarns.” The
main authority on Scottish surnames, Black, begins his entry on
“Fleming with: “a surname sufficiently indicative of
the nationality of its original bearers.”
He goes on to list bearers of that name in many parts of Scotland
, from 1147 onwards. I am not suggesting for a moment that our game
probably originated in Fife or Angus - although the current
number of “Flemings” in the residential section of the
Tayside and North Fife telephone directory stands at 262! But surely
it is reasonable to argue that our game with a hole was taken back
by a Fleming to Bruges, and Belgium. |