|
W Rea & Sons hickory
shaft transitional brassie with bone sole insert and full leather
face was sold for EUR150 estimated by the seller as an 1885 club.
The following advertisement appeared in the Irish Golfer 18 April
1900.
|
W
Rea & Sons
Butt Wood Drivers
|
| Butt
wood is the first three feet above the root which is the toughest
(part) of the tree, and much closer to the grain than any other
part. Other club makers have to make wooden heads from whatever
part of the trunk or branches the wholesale business choose
to supply. Our wooden heads are made from the butts only of
personally selected beeches grown in Shanes Castle Park. |
| Bap
Drivers |
5s
6d
|
Miss
(May)Hezlet, dual champion (British and Irish) in 1899, writes
: - I have used your wooden clubs for the last three
years, they last longer than any others, and the finish and
balance is excellent. I used them all through the recent championship
at Newcastle
|
Irons,
Mashies, Cleeks & C. to our own special patterns, designed
and tested by Mr. Hubert Webb Irish Champion 1895-1898
|
| Brassies |
6s6d
|
Miss
Pascoe, (British) Lady Champion 1896 writes :- She has
never had a club exposed to such bad weather and constant
usage as the one sent her last year, and which she used all
through the championship. Miss Pascoe must compliment Messrs
Rea & Sons on their excellent shafts
|
A Fred Smyth [Royal Dublin),
Sid(ney) Fairweather (Malone Golf Club] spliced drivers sold for
EUR80 and EUR50 respectively. A T. Stewart flanged putter which
had been stamped with T. Shannon from the Hermitage Golf Club sold
for EUR115. A Thomas Walker (Greystones] spliced neck driver sold
for EUR95 and was estimated to date from 1905. The emphasis on quality
is reflected in the fact that when a damaged John Aitken shortspoon
went for sale which pre-dates all the previous clubs mentioned and
it only achieved EUR20 at auction.
Irons from Willie McNamara
(Lahinch) and Fred Smyth sold for EUR30 each while a Brown Melville
1914 Niblick sold for EUR20. An 1894 Bradell leather face patent
driver by Charles Playfair sold for EUR385 while another 610 patent
driver was up for sale with an open price of EUR850 and no bidders.
Many Irish related clubs were sold during the year but few sold
on their individual merits but sold as job lots averaging at between
Stg10-Stg20 per club included in these were a jigger from H. Fitzhugh:
Knock Belfast, Tom Hood's concentric zenith back mashie with a faint
Gibson Kinghorn stamp mark, spoon stamped Tom McKinstry: Balmoral,
a brassie stamped T. Benson: Greenisland Co. Antrim, L. Forshaw
Lisburn GC showing the unusual Blacksmiths Forge cleek mark, John
Knox Belfast an offset model niblick, irons stamped H. Hamill, Ormeau
GC Belfast and the other stamped J. McCartney Ormeau GC., Approaching
cleek stamped Alex Robertson Newcastle Co. Down and a Braddell:
Belfast showing the Clover cleek mark, thick head blade putter.
|