Philomena
Garvey (1926-2009)

On
the 18th May 1944, nearly a full year before V-E Day, two ladies
from the County Louth Golf Club faced-off in the final of the
Leinster Scratch Cup, one of them, the eventual loser, would represent
the face of ladies golf in Ireland for the next twenty five years
and would achieve accolades at both national and international
level, surpassing anything that had been achieved before. It was
a youthful, if inexperienced golfer who played in the final that
day at the Hermitage Golf Club but the golfing scribes immediately
saw her potential:
"a
promising player who imparts that pleasing crispness to impact
of clubhead and ball which is the hallmark of a true golfer."
Although
losing by a margin of 4 and 3 to Clarrie Reddan, it would be a
rare defeat at national level as she quickly became a near invincible
force in Irish golf. Philomena Garvey would play golf at the highest
level representing herself, club and country with distinction.
Phil's odyssey into the world of golf saw her compete with some
of the greatest lady golfers of her generation, in the greatest
events her sport had to offer, on the most spectacular golf courses.
In 1946
while the war had ended, Ireland and the United Kingdom were still
subjected to food and clothes rationing, the Irish Ladies' Championship
was back on the golfing calendar. Phil won the first post-war
championship, the start of a run of an unprecedented fifteen titles.
In the same year Phil got to within a hair's breath of the Ladies'
British Open Amateur Championship; it was to be her first of five
finals in the event, an achievement equalled by a small elite
group but only surpassed by Cecil Leitch. Two years later Phil
would make her first of six appearances on the Curtis Cup squad,
although selected seven times, a record only surpassed on this
side of the Atlantic by Mary McKenna with nine appearances.

While
Phil didn't court controversy she was embroiled in a number of
incidents beginning in 1948 when the Royal and Ancient, golf's
ruling body, questioned her amateur status on the basis of being
employed by Clery's, a major department store, selling sporting
goods. In February 1949 they ruled in her favour, as she was not
actively selling golf clubs and the department store were not
promoting her to this end. A ruling against her would likely have
questioned the status of many of the leading amateurs.
In 1952
the History of Golf in Britain was published and Enid Wilson,
a past multiple Ladies' Amateur Champion and renowned golf writer
for Golf Illustrated and the Daily Telegraph; identified the next
generation of champion golfers when she said:
"Of
the newcomers, Miss Stephens is the steadiest; Miss Donald, twice
winner of the Scottish, the most courageous; and Miss Garvey the
most stylish"
Phil's
achievements were all the more incredible for the fact that much
of her golf during the year was restricted to weekend play as
she worked full time in Clery's. Unlike many of her fellow competitors
it was only the summer months, which were unpaid and devoted entirely
to golf. Phil was considered to have tender hands and suffered
from continuous blistering from too much practice; while the use
of gloves helped it proved a constant source of irritation and
even pain.
Above
all else Phil was mentally tough with supreme powers of concentration
and her never say die attitude to golf matches, deficits which
would have subdued other players of lesser character were seen
as a challenge there to test her ability and boundaries as a golfer.
Phil hated to lose, of that there is no question, doing everything
in her power to avoid it especially in Ireland where she relished
the fact that she was Ireland's premier golfer.
During
her era, 1946-1970 the main competitive events for high-level
women's golf were the Irish, British and American Championships,
the Home Internationals, Curtis Cup, the Vagliano trophy and the
Worplesdon mixed foursomes, all match-play format. The expense
and time involved in travelling to the US precluded Phil from
challenging for their championship except in conjunction with
the Curtis Cup team events.
The
blue riband event for any lady golfer, on this side of the Atlantic,
is the Ladies' British Open Amateur Golf Championship. Even for
the US golfers, their record was not truly complete unless they
had added the oldest ladies' championship to their trophy cabinet.
Phil was a five-time finalist and semi-finalist on two occasions,
on four other occasions Phil would lose to an eventual finalist;
this in a match-play format in an un-seeded competition is a monumental
achievement. Phil finally achieved her ambition of winning the
Ladies' Amateur title in Gleneagles on 27 June 1957. A civic reception
awaited her on her return home where jubilant well-wishers lined
the streets in recognition of her achievement.
In her
first appearance at the US Amateur Championship at the East Lake
Country Club, the home of the legendary Robert Tyre (Bobby) Jones
junior, she reached the quarterfinals before being beaten by the
eventual winner, the slim, big hitting Beverly Hanson. It was
the fiftieth anniversary of the event during which she was introduced
to the legendary Bobby Jones who at the time was suffering from
a debilitating illness, which at the time was undiagnosed.
You
couldn't always tell from her demeanour in competition, that she
liked playing golf. An expressionless, seemingly unfriendly façade,
deep in concentration didn't endear her to spectators. One reporter
compared her to Helen Wills, the tennis champion, who was nicknamed
"Little Miss Poker Face" for her facial expression when
playing championship tennis. During matches Phil was quiet, not
wasting time on whimsical remarks or idle chatter with her opponent
or spectators. All opponents and spectators saw was a calm, unflappable
person with an air of invincibility and the more titles she amassed
the more daunting the task her opponents faced.
Phil's
championship routine was professional-like and after nine o'clock
during events she was nowhere to be seen, retiring to her room
early. This behaviour may have been considered somewhat unsociable
but in truth it was a bi-product of a nervous disposition while
playing championship golf. This nervousness sometimes had unwanted
side effects; hardly eating during the events would leave her
weak competing in the closing stages of championships.
Phil's
golfing life saw her rub shoulders with some of the great female
golfers of her generation and in many cases of all time. These
included: Mildred Ella Didrikson (Mrs George Zaharias, aka "Babe"),
Patty Berg (the "freckled fireplug"), Glenna Collett
Vare, Louise Suggs, Marlene Stewart, Jessie Valentine, Joanne
Carner (the "Great Gundy" or "Big Momma"),
Barbara McIntire, Barbara Romack and the home grown talent of
Clarrie Reddan, Kitty MacCann and Mary McKenna. Phil's matches
against the US players: Babe, Louise Suggs and the Great Gundy,
three of the greatest lady golfers ever, show the calibre of her
golf. Phil lost to the Babe on the final hole of a thirty-six-hole
match-play event at the Sunningdale Ladies course, secured a half
against Louise Suggs in the 1948 Curtis Cup and beat JoAnne Carner
in the 1960 British Amateur Championship. That she could compete
comfortably with women, who between them had won seven Womens'
U.S. Open Professional Championships and are ranked in the top
ten female golfers ever, is a testament to her ability as a golfer.
Against
Jessie Valentine and Marley Spearman, the triple and double Ladies'
Amateur Champions respectively, she never lost in the eight times
they were paired together. Against Frances Stephens another double
Ladies' Amateur champion she lost only twice in the six matches
played.
The
most controversial incident of her golfing life was to occur in
1958 when Phil reluctantly took a stand on the issue of the Union
Jack emblem that adorned the sweaters of the Curtis Cup players.
An offer to wear the sweater worn at previous cup matches was
rejected by the LGU who decided not to show the tricolour or compromise,
without any seemingly justifiable reason. This must have been
a personal blow given the fact she was the reigning British Amateur
champion and was a representative on the 1952 and 1956 winning
teams.
Phil
didn't play in the Curtis Cup that year but still travelled to
America to compete in the US Amateur Championship. The fact that
the team secured its first draw on US soil together with a bad
showing in the US Amateur magnified the frustration felt by Phil
at the LGU's intransigence on the issue. The L.G.U reversed their
decision the following year for the Vagliano trophy, when the
emblem was changed to incorporate the four countries representing
the "British Isles" team. In 1955, Phil won the famous
Worplesdon Mixed Foursomes at her first and only attempt; her
partner was Philip Scrutton from Sunningdale.
Even
Enid Wilson, one of the foremost pre-war lady golfers turned journalist
and probably not one of Phil's greatest allies, had to admit that
her record in the Home Internationals was without equal. Out of
the fifty-one singles matches she played for Ireland she would
only lose ten, four of which were in her first two years representing
Ireland. It must be borne in mind that as Irish champion Phil
would, as Irish champion, invariably play the top English, Scottish
or Welsh player in these matches.
In the
early fifties, Fred Corcoran was promoting the Ladies Professional
Golf Association (LPGA) tour and its starlets and decided to bring
an elite group of players on tour to England as part of the Weathervane
International Series, an offshoot of a very successful national
tour being played across America. Corcoran was considered one
of the early pioneers of ladies professional golf in America,
an Irish-American promoter who was inducted to the Golf Hall of
Fame, where his short biography finishes with the line: "the
man was golf". In 1951 Phil had been chosen, as part of a
six-person team to represent the best in Europe to face the best
America had to offer, all the U.S. players were pioneers of professional
golf in America and included a Who's Who of women's golf.
What
transpired was a complete whitewash of the European side and while
defeat was probably not unexpected the margin was. Amateur golfers
were, as it turned out, no match for women who made a living at
it or at least the stellar talent that Corcoran had brought together.
What was unexpected was the fight that Phil put up against the
darling of this group, the "Babe", as she took her to
the last green of a thirty-six hole final only to lose by an incredible
stroke of bad luck on the final green. The "Babe" was
a triple Olympian in the field of athletics and was voted as the
greatest sportswoman of the twentieth century for her accomplishments
in the fields of golf and athletics.
After
the match Corcoran asked Phil to consider becoming a professional
on the US circuit, when it was proving lucrative for players such
as Babe Zaharias and Patty Berg. Phil decided not to pursue the
offer but by late 1963 she could no longer resist the temptation
of turning professional.
Despite
all Phil's golfing achievements she lamented not playing her best
golf during the Curtis Cup matches even though she was on two
winning sides, in 1952 and 1956. Phil will have bittersweet memories
of the half secured against Louise Suggs, the victory over Dorothy
Kirby and a crushing defeat by "Wiffi" Smith.
Although
furthermost from her thoughts, Phil took on the mantle of pioneer,
joining the professional ranks in 1964, becoming the First Lady
of professional golf in Ireland. John Letters, the renowned club
manufacturer signed a contract with her to manufacture and distribute
clubs endorsed by her. Phil began writing articles on golf instruction
for the Evening Herald, another first for ladies golf in Ireland.
There was no ladies tour at the time and if times were hard for
her male counterparts they were presumably even tougher for Phil
who was not attached to a golf club and was operating freelance
while still working for Clerys promoting their sports equipment.
The
life of a female professional golfer presented near insurmountable
obstacles from both a competitive and coaching perspective, eventually
leaving no real alternative but to leave Ireland or request a
re-instatement of her amateur status. At Phil's request her amateur
status was reinstated in 1968 and she started playing competitively
again. The period of self-imposed exile no doubt reduced her tally
of titles and the lack of a competitive outlet diminished her
desire to compete at the same level as an amateur upon her return.
The country was just not ready to embrace the idea of a lady professional
golfer but it forced the establishments to consider how to approach
the prospect of women professionals. In some small way it may
have cleared a path to future aspirants of the professional game.
Phil
announced her retirement in 1970 after winning her fifteenth Irish
Championship in Royal Portrush, during which she would beat her
heir apparent, Mary McKenna. Phil bowed out where it had all started,
at the very top of the pile and undisputed Queen of the Irish
fairways. Amassing a record, with few parallels in women's sport
in Ireland, it acts as testament to the fact that she was truly
Ireland's greatest lady golfer. Philomena Garvey passed away on
5 May 2009.