John
Veitch Aitken
Born: Scotland c. 1873? (1868)
Married
Isobel (Isabella) c. 1893 a native of County Antrim and had two
daughters Lily c. 1894 and May c.1897. Religion - Church of Ireland.
Profession - Golf Club Maker. They lived at Number 10 Main Street
Portrush with three boarders and one servant. [Source: Census
1911].
John's great granddaughter
corrected the details from the census advising us the he was born
on 11th December 1868 and grew up in the Bruntsfield area of Edinburgh.
There's was a golfing family as John's brother Alexander who was
a clubmaker from 1892-1912 and also has an association with Royal
Portrush Golf Club although linked more with Gullane Golf Club
where according to Pete Georgiady book The Compendium of British
Club Makers the press described a set of clubs he made for Mr.
Balfour as "the finest set of golf clubs ever made".
Also another brother, Adam, was also involved but died at a young
age.
A founding
member of the Irish Professional Golfers' Association (June 1911)
and appointed as one of the four professionals (Tom
Hood, Alex Robertson and James
McKenna) to take part in a joint committee for the purpose
of drafting their constitution and a framework for the benevolent
fund.
An extract from "Golf"
1896 was reprinted in J.L. Bamford's centenary book, Royal Portrush
Golf Club - A History which showed an ad for John Aitken's clubs.
In Jeffrey B. Ellis's
seminal work, "The Clubmaker's Art", John Aitken is
attributed with developing a club called "The Bap" when
he quotes from an article in the magazine Golf date 27 December
1895.
Scottish and English
Golfers who were present at Portrush, at the big Autumn tournament
held there, could not help noticing the broad-headed driver
clubs sent out by John Aitken, the club-maker attached to the
Royal County Club at Portrush. ....The club is known as "The
Bap" the name given in the Scots tongue to the round breakfast
roll. The head, which is made of the finest Irish beech, is
three inches broad, with a face of 1 1/4 inches in depth.
The Autumn meeting referred
to above was the first professional golf tournament staged in
Ireland on the 12-14 September 1895.
John Aitken remained
as a club and ball maker at Royal Portrush golf club until 1911
when his role was taken over by Melville Brown. He died on 27th
September 1916 and is buried in Ballywillan Old Graveyard, Portrush.
His wife, Isabella, and two daughters (Lily and Mai) are buried
nearby in Ballywillan New Graveyard.