James
McKenna
(Lahinch,
Carrickmines, Portmarnock, Rossmore and Armagh)
Born
Clontarf 1876 and truly one of the early pioneers of professional
golf in Ireland. From the 1911 census we can see he was married
in 1900/1901 to Anne and had four children: Patrick, John, Mary
Agnes and Anna. On 1 April 1893 at the tender age of 17/18 when
there was less than twenty clubs in Ireland he joined Lahinch
as their first resident professional. Enda Glynn in his centenary
of the club points out that this predated Old Tom Morris' arrival
by one year and that James supervised Morris' recommendations
for improving the course layout between 1894 and 1899.
McKenna
eventually left Lahinch to join Carrickmines Golf Club, which
was formed in 1900. During his time at these clubs he seems to
have frequently travelled, helping, if not, initiating course
designs. The evidence back then is somewhat sketchy but he is
credited with the design of Ballybunion, Waterville, Killiney,
Hermitage and the reconstruction of Lucan Golf Club.
Ballybunion
in their history
states the following:
In early 1897 an
article in the Irish Times, headed The Golf Links of Kerry,
dismissed Ballybunion Course with some contempt as "a rabbit
warren below the village, where a golfer requires limitless
patience and an inexhaustible supply of golf balls." This
provoked a tart rejoinder in the same paper in March 1897 from
P McCarthy, General Manager, Listowel and Ballybunion Railway.
The course, he claimed, was "quite first class and a sporting
course, laid out by the professional who had laid out the links
at Lahinch and Dollymount." The Irish golfers guide of
1897 names this course designer as James McKenna, who did this
work "at the instance of the Lartigue Railway Company."
It is interesting to note the connection with modern day Ballybunion
as he was the grandfather of past Ballybunion Golf Club Secretary
- Manager, Jim McKenna.
James
McKenna as a nineteen-year-old played in the first Irish Professional
Golf Tournament held at Royal Portrush on 12-14th September 1895
and while he was knocked out in the second round it would have
introduced him to some of the golfing legends or soon to be heroes
of the game including: Harry Vardon, William Fernie, Sandy Herd,
Jack White and the Kirkcaldy brothers. In the first round James
beat Samuel Jones the professional at Fleetwood by 2 & 1 and
in the afternoon was beaten by George Lowe from St. Anne's (Lytham)
by 4 & 2.
A founding
member of the Irish Professional Golfers' Association (June 1911)
and appointed as one of the four professionals (Tom
Hood, Alex Robertson and John
Aitken) to take part in a joint committee for the purpose
of drafting their constitution and a framework for the benevolent
fund.
Probably
around 1920 James McKenna left Portmarnock to take up a position
at Rossmore in County Monaghan before moving to Armagh Golf Club
in 1924 (he may have remained attached to Rossmore for a few
years as his name was still associated with the Club in the 1926/27
Irish Golf Directory), here he would remain for a further
quarter of a century retiring in 1950 at age 76.
James'
son John would also turn professional
having played most of his golf at Armagh and would eventually
take up a position at Douglas Golf Club. Annie the daughter was
described in the Armagh centenary book simply as: "one of
the finest lady golfers the club has ever produced".
While
at the Armagh Golf Club the subservient position of a professional
golfer at the time was very much in evidence as related by John
O'Hare in the aforementioned centenary book. In 1931 his salary
was reduced by four schillings per week, bearing in mind that
in 1941 his salary was two guineas-a-week, this represented a
not insignificant hit on ones take-home pay. In the same year
his contract terminated and was re-negotiated for the lower amount
and additional sums could be obtained for cleaning the clubhouse
and maintaining the players clubs.
James
McKenna: course designer, club and ball maker, teacher, professional
golfer loved the game and left an indelible mark in the history
of Irish golf.