Prince's Golf Club, Sandwich

Prince's Golf Club, Sandwich is a links golf course located in Sandwich in Kent in South East England. Prince's is immediately adjacent to the more famous Royal St George's golf club, and both clubs lie on the same stretch of coastline as nearby Royal Cinque Ports Golf Club. It is notable for hosting the 1932 Open Championship.[1]

Prince's Golf Club
The clubhouse
Club information
LocationSandwich, Kent, England
Established1906
Typeprivate
Total holes27 three loops of nine holes (“Shore”, “Dunes” and “Himalayas”)
Events hostedThe Open Championship
Websiteprincesgolfclub.co.uk
Designed byCharles Hutchings; Guy Campbell and John Morrison
Par107 (36 (Shore) 36 (Dunes) 36 (Himalayas))

History

Prince's was financed by Sir Harry Mallaby-Deeley, Bt and designed by Charles Hutchings, the 1902 Amateur Champion on land donated by the Earl of Guilford. It was completed late in 1906 as an 18-hole course, and was the first course designed to counter the significantly longer Haskell ball. Club captain A.J. Balfour, a former British Prime Minister, drove the first ball in the Founder's Vase in June 1907.

The present-day 27-hole layout is the result of a 1950 re-design following war-time damage to the original course. World War II was very hard on Prince's, but Australian entrepreneur Sir Aynsley Bridgland intervened, engaging Sir Guy Campbell and John Morrison to re-design and restore the course. The new layout incorporated 17 of the original greens (but with most played from different directions to the original course), and eliminated any blind tee or approach shots. The re-design always envisaged a centrally located clubhouse, and this was finally opened in 1985 by Peter Alliss, allowing the 27 holes to be played in three loops of nine holes, known as “Shore”, “Dunes” and “Himalayas”, each starting and finishing beside the new clubhouse.

The Lodge (previously the clubhouse)
The fire damaged remains of clubhouse in 2009
The Lodge, opened in 2012

The original clubhouse still stands at the entrance to the course and adjacent to the 14th tee of Royal St. George's. It no longer serves as the clubhouse but instead has been completely renovated, called the Lodge, it opened in May 2012, with two adjoining buildings, which house 38 bedrooms, a brasserie and lodge.

Prince's is notable for hosting the 1932 Open Championship, which was won by the American Gene Sarazen. Sarazen debuted his newly invented sand iron at the Championship, and his original club was on display at Prince's for many years, until insurance costs became prohibitively expensive. The greenside bunker beside the 9th green on the Himalayas course, a bunker he played from on his way to victory, was unveiled as The Sarazen Bunker in his honour by Pádraig Harrington in June 2011.

Prince's is the only club to host The Open just once. The club remains an Open Championship Local Final Qualifying course, and hosted qualifying again in 2011 when The Open returned to Royal St. George's; Prince's professional golfer Francis McGuirk finished tied second to claim one of the three available spaces.

Prince's has also hosted various other senior and minor professional tournaments, and a number of tournaments for amateurs, including the 1956 Curtis Cup, the 2006 Amateur Championship (co-hosted with Royal St George's), the 2006 Ladies' British Open Amateur Stroke Play Championship, the 2008 Senior Open Amateur Championship (co-hosted with Royal Cinque Ports Golf Club) and the 2013 Amateur Championship (co-hosted with Royal Cinque Ports Golf Club).

Shelter on the course

The late WWII ace, Member of Parliament and 1949 Walker Cup captain Percy Belgrave "Laddie" Lucas was born in the old clubhouse at Prince's, his father being the first club secretary. During WWII, Lucas used his knowledge of the course to make an emergency landing after his Spitfire was crippled over northern France. Today, a commemorative plaque by the 4th tee on the Himalayas course marks the spot where he landed. In memory of Lucas, Prince's hosts an annual golf tournament, the Laddie Lucas Spoon, for boys and girls aged 8–13 years.

Phil Mickelson and Gary Player are both honorary life members of Prince's Golf Club. Ladies European Tour player Helen Wadsworth is a former member and played at Prince's as a junior.

In August 2009 Troon Golf announced an agreement to take over course management at Prince's and the club has undertaken a number of renovations to the course.

Scorecards

Princes Golf Club Scorecards[2]

Prince's Shore & Dunes
Tee Rating/Slope 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Out 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 In Total
Par Men's 45343445436 4354454343672
SI Men's 61216418142810 3151115917137
Blue 74.8 / 128 4525621894151584234345684423643 45817056943841650637122048636347277
White 72.6 / 122 4265301734101373834055424133419 44015552740839449535719846234366855
Yellow 70.2 / 116 4174681373871103363785223853140 42015048437536546032518642431896329
Par Women's 45343445436 5354454353874
SI Women's 9717315131115 41861210214168
Red 71.5 / 124 3254311243391032823035123402759 40014039731532441528615136427925551
Prince's Dunes & Himalayas
Tee Rating/Slope 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Out 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 In Total
Par Men's 43544543436 4544353443672
SI Men's 41614261018128 1351131717159
Blue 75.2 / 136 4581705694384165063712204863634 38162040845814360919734744836117245
White 72.8 / 130 4401555274083944953571984623436 37757537243313555619031242633766812
Yellow 70.3 / 123 4201504843753654603251864243189 36354031239111652417028937830836272
Par Women's 53544543538 4544353443674
SI Women's 517379113151 14612418281610
Red 72.6 / 129 4001403973153244152861513642792 34850029433510347014127834928185610
Prince's Himalayas & Shore
Tee Rating/Slope 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Out 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 In Total
Par Men's 45443534436 4534344543672
SI Men's 14612418281610 5111531713179
Blue 75.2 / 133 3816204084581436091973474483611 45256218941515842343456844236437254
White 72.8 / 125 3775753724331355561903124263376 42653017341013738340554241334196795
Yellow 70.1 / 120 3635403123911165241702893783083 41746813738711033637852238531406223
Par Women's 45443534436 4534344543672
SI Women's 1351131717159 10818416141226
Red 72.3 / 126 3485002943351034701412783492818 32543112433910328230351234027595577

The Open Championship

Prince's Golf Club hosted The Open Championship in 1932.

YearWinnerScore
R1R2R3R4Total
1932United StatesGene Sarazen 1st70697074283
  • Note: Superscript number besides the player's name is the number of the Open Championship in their respective careers.

References

  1. Sullivan, Paul (13 July 2022). "Some Classic Golf Courses Have Fallen Off the Open Schedule". The New York Times. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
  2. Source:<https://www.princesgolfclub.co.uk/play/course-overview>

51.2911°N 1.3729°E / 51.2911; 1.3729

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