The Walker Cup Match began in the wake of World
War I with a view toward stimulating golf interest on both sides
of the Atlantic. The match grew in part out of two international
matches between the United States and Canada, in 1919 and 1920.
At the same time, British and American amateurs considered each
nation's national amateur championship a great plum. Meanwhile,
the USGA Executive Committee had been invited to Great Britain
for a series of meetings with the Royal and Ancient Golf Club
of St. Andrews Rules Committee. The meeting was to look at the
advisability of modifying various rules of the game. Among the
participants was George Herbert Walker, USGA President in 1920.
Upon the Executive Committee's return to the United States,
international team matches were discussed. The idea so appealed
to Walker that he soon presented a plan and offered to donate
a trophy. Mr. Walker had been a low handicap player and was a
keen advocate of the game. When the press dubbed the trophy the
Walker Cup, the name stuck.
In 1921, the USGA invited all golfing nations to send teams
to compete for the Cup, but no country was able to accept that
year. The Americans stuck to their mission, however, and William
C. Fownes, the 1910 U.S. Amateur champion, who had twice assembled
the amateur teams that played against Canada, rounded up a third
team in the spring of 1921 and took it to England. At Hoylake,
the American team defeated a British team, 9 and 3, in an informal
match the day before the British Amateur.
Early in 1922, the R & A announced that it would send a
team to compete for the Walker Cup at the National Golf Links
of America, Mr. Walker's home club, in Southampton, N.Y.
Originally, the competition was open to any country that might
care to challenge. The USGA invited all countries to compete.
Except for Great Britain, however, no other country was able
to accept.
Fownes was the American captain for the inaugural match and
his team consisted of Charles Evans Jr., Robert Gardner, U.S.
Amateur Champion Jesse Guilford, Robert T. Jones Jr., Max Marston,
Francis Ouimet, Jess Sweetser, and Rudolph Knepper, who did not
play.
Robert Harris was captain of the British side, and his players
were Cyril Tolley, Roger Wethered, Colin Aylmer, C.V.L. Hooman,
W.B. Torrance, John Caven, and W. Willis Mackenzie. Ernest Holderness,
the British Amateur Champion, was unable to make the trip.
Bernard Darwin, the golf writer of The Times of London, had
accompanied the team and wound up playing in the Match. When
Harris fell ill, Darwin was invited to compete in his place and
serve as playing captain. He defeated Fownes, 3 and 1.The American
team, however, prevailed, winning the first Walker Cup Match,
8 to 4.
Until recent years, the United States clearly dominated the
series, but the number of American victories never clouded the
true purpose of the Walker Cup Match. A much higher value has
been placed upon the series as a medium of international friendship
and understanding between the R & A and the USGA.
Alternating between sites in the United States and Great Britain,
the Match is usually scheduled so that visiting teams can also
participate in the Amateur Championship of the host country.
The Match was played on an annual basis until 1924, when it
was decided that the financial strain of annual encounters was
too severe. It was also believed that interest might drop if
the matches were played too frequently. A decision was made to
meet in alternate years.
The series was interrupted by World War II after the 1938 Match
at St. Andrews, Scotland. When the Match resumed, in 1947, St.
Andrews was again selected as the site. Under norm peacetime
conditions, the Match would have been played in the United States,
but postwar economic conditions would have made the trip difficult
for the British. The United States leads the series, 31-5-1.
With thanks to USGA for the text. ©®USGA
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