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NORTH BERWICK
LINKS IN THE 1890s
by DOROTHY CAMPBELL

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Famous North Berwick Golfers
Willie Anderson    Arnaud Massy    Wilfred Thomson    Ben Sayers    Dorothy Campbell    Fred McLeod

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John Ernest Laidlay J.P
Amateur Golf Champion
Born: 5th November 1860, North Berwick
Died: 15th July 1940, Sunningdale, Berkshire

[Laidlay]
Johnny Laidlay © James.C.H.Balmain

[18th Gullane No.1]
Gullane Main Street and No.1 Course
© Digitalsport UK

 

North Berwick Amateur Golfers
Leslie Balfour-Melville
Dorothy Campbell
Robert Maxwell

Laidlay Amateur Record
Amateur Championship 1889, 1891
Royal & Ancient Golf Club,
Silver Cross 1895
Royal Medal 1885, 1887, 1895
George Glennie 1887. 1888, 1895
30 Medals at the Honorable Company of Edinburgh Golfers
15 Medals at Tantallon Golf Club,

  Laidlay invented the grip used by the vast majority of golfers.
By Douglas Seaton
North Berwick Factfile

John Ernest Laidlay born 5th November 1860 at Seacliff House, two miles east of North Berwick, son of John Watson Laidlay, a landed proprietor and his wife Eillen Hope. His father was an Indigo manufacturer in Calcutta before he acquired the estates of Seacliff, Auldhame and Scoughall which then passed to John's brother Andrew Laidlay who perished in a fire which destroyed Seacliff House in 1907.

Johnny Laidlay dominated the Amateur Championship for seven years from 1888, winning twice in 1889 and 1891 and runner-up 1888, 1890 and 1893. Laidlay was a member of a number of golf clubs and throughout his career won over 131 medals. In 1887 alone he won eleven first medals and two seconds, three of these being won with record scores - 83 at St Andrews, 72 at North Berwick and 79 at Musselburgh. In 1885 at Carnoustie he set a new course record 77 which stood for several years. Many of his medals are now on display in the British Golf Museum.

Laidlay learned to play the game over the links at Musselburgh while attending Loretto School. He was tutored by local pro Bob Ferguson, three times Open Champion. While at Loretto, Laidlay was presented with a cleek and a brassy. He used the cleek head as his putter ever since.

The children’s course at North Berwick was the chief haunt of Johnny Laidlay where he learned to perfect his pitch shots required on every hole. He was an advocate of physical fitness for all sports and at school he was the only boy who could draw himself up on a horizontal bar by the use of one hand alone. At the age of sixteen, Laidlay went round the nine-hole course at Musselburgh in 36 strokes, scoring four at each hole. He used a cleek head putter got from old Willie Park at Musselburgh which he reshafted over the years. The children’s course at North Berwick was the chief haunt of John Laidlay twice winner of the Amateur Championship, where he learned to perfect his pitch shots.

The first open amateur competition he entered was in Yorkshire in 1878, and that year he played his only game for the Scottish Cricket Team. His brother W. J. Laidlay also played cricket for Scotland. In 1885, Johnny Laidlay played in the first Amateur Championship at Hoylake and was defeated in the early rounds by John Ball. This was the first of many titanic encounters Laidlay was to have with the talented Englishman. They were of a similar age and died within a few months of one another in 1940. Laidlay was eighty at the time of his death and Ball seventy-nine when he followed his rival to the grave. At the first championship Laidlay was using a mashie which was a new club at the time. He used it very effectively on his approach shots, slightly cutting the ball with a laid back face which landed softly, ideal for the elevated greens on the early course at North Berwick.

In 1882 Messers J.E. Laidlay and J. Wharton Tod challenged any two professionals of North Berwick. The challenge was taken up by John Menzies who brought forward Ben Sayers and Willie Dunn to answer it. The amatuers were five down, Ben Sayers and Willie Dunn doing the round in 74.

Laidlay had an amazing record which included wining ten gold medals at Musselburgh, ten at Muirfield and a further nine silver medals. In 1878, at the age of eighteen he joined Luffness Golf Club playing over the old course near Aberlady. In 1883 he became a member of the Honorable Company of Edinburgh Golfers at Leith, and two years later he joined the Royal & Ancient Golf Club at St Andrews.

Laidlay's caddie was Jack White who apprenticed as a club maker with Tom Dunn at North Berwick before joining the professional ranks at Sunningdale.

In 1884, he was playing so badly he made a number of fundamental changes to his set up including playing the ball off his left leg and using an overlapping grip. In an interview published in the American Golfer, Laidlay said, "At the time I believed it was a good thing to do, and I think it helped me in my putting especially. The reason which started the view in my mind was that my hands being more opposite each other, were more likely to work together and swing the club like a pendulum, and not likely to operate against one another."

These alterations changed Laidlay's game immeasurably and in a two-week period in 1885 he won a tournament at North Berwick, another at Carnoustie, and the King William IV Medal at St Andrews. The overlapping grip used by Laidlay was erroneously credited to Harry Vardon but historians now agree that Laidlay was the first to use the overlapper.

In Willie Park Jnr's book 'The Game of Golf' published in 1896 he remarked that there were only two players he knew who adopted the overlapping grip and they were J. E. Laidlay and J. H. Taylor. It was in the year the book was published when Harry Vardon leapt from obscurity into fame by becoming Open Champion, eight years after Laidlay was using the overlapping grip. Vardon has never claimed to be the first to discover the grip, all that he knows is that he worked it out for himself in the period when he was at Bury and Ripon. It was Vardon's use of it, however that brought it into general acceptance, and with minor variations it is the grip used by the vast majority of golfers today.

Prior to the 1889 Amateur Championship at St Andrews, Laidlay had lost his game and could not hit a ball. In desperation he took out Willie Campbell the licensed professional at North Berwick to try and find out what was wrong. They tried everything and as a last resort Campbell suggested that he should hold his driver at the bottom of the leather - and it worked. Laidlay won the Championship and held his clubs short ever since. In the final he defeated Leslie Balfour Melville at the nineteenth hole. Laidlay's caddie at St Andrews was Jack White who apprenticed as a clubmaker with Tom Dunn at North Berwick before joining the professional ranks at Sunningdale.

As the public began to lose interest in the professional money matches with rumors of match fixing, the top amateur players began to attract thousands of paying spectators in exhibition matches. In 1888, the North Berwick Town Council organised an Open competition for amateur players to attract more visitors to the town. Laidlay persuaded Horace Hutchinson to be his guest at Seacliff for the week and enter the competition. They both reached the final and after extra holes Laidlay was the winner.

Horace Hutchinson wrote later about his great friend Laidlay "He addressed the ball off his left leg which looked ungraceful and cause his driving to be erratic, but his hand and finger work of his iron clubs was beautifully delicate. His clubs were all curiously thin in the grip and one of his great theories was that the club should be held as lightly as possible."

Laidlay won the Amateur Championship again in 1891 after defeating Harold Hilton in the final at Hoylake. Laidlay played in the Open Championship thirteen times from 1885 to 1901. He was leading amateur four times in 1887, 1889, and 1893 when he finished two strokes behind the winner, Willie Auchterlonie and again in 1901. He played for Scotland against England ten times between 1902-1911 and his handicap was plus four at the age of 58. He was Captain of the following clubs, Prestwick (1894); Lundin Links (1895); The Golf House Club, Elie (1896); Honourable Company (1904); North Berwick Golf Club (1906) ; North Berwick New Club (1913-15); Tantallon Golf Club (1906-08). Laidlay was also a member of Dunbar Golf Club and in 1884 he won both the Roxburghe and Club Gold Medals.

[Invereil House]

ABOVE: Invereil House overlooking the eighth fairway on the West Links built for John E. Laidlay in 1899. The architect George Washington Brown was inspired to design Invereil after Seacliff House the Laidlay family residence east of North Berwick.  © Digitalsport UK

Sir Hew Dalrymple of Leuchie presented Laidlay with a set of nine Hugh Philp clubs, either for wining a competition at North Berwick which was the practice or in recognition of his triumph in the Amateur Championship. The clubs were crafted in the early 1850s at St Andrews when Robert Forgan was Philps assistant. They were displayed at the Glasgow International Exhibition of 1901. Unfortunately in 1981 the set was broken-up with each club sold individually at Sotheby's in London.

Laidlay played an unusual round before each championship, when with Jack White as his caddy, he would play a ball from the first tee at North Berwick to the Roundel Hole at Gullane, six miles away by the way of Eel Burn Hole, the sands along the shore, the neighbourhood of the fishermen's cottages and away over Muirfield in the rough country to the top of the hill, playing from whatever lie his ball chanced to find, and once doing this course in a total of 97 strokes.

Johnny Laidlay played the North Berwick course daily and his regular foursome partners were Walter de Zoete, John Penn M.P. and Arthur Balfour. In 1886, Arthur Balfour, as Chief Secretary for Ireland was obliged to have two detectives with him at all times. They would shadow him on the West Links, disguised among the sandunes. Laidlay supported the Ladies Golf Association and refereed many of their important matches along with Robert Maxwell, Leslie Balfour-Melville and Captain Charles Hutchings. He was also a skilled photographer and often visited the Bass Rock, capturing the young gannets on camera. The rocky stack lay a mile offshore and dominated the views from Seacliff House. He also enjoyed catching lobsters from his boat in the harbour below the mansion.

Laidlay was a Justice of the Peace and attended Haddington Sherriff Court. In 1899 he built Invereil House overlooking the eighth fairway on the West Links , North Berwick where he resided with his daughter Faith Laidlay. Following the First World War, he moved to Sunningdale with his wife Eileen where his former caddie Jimmie Sheridan from Ferrygate Farm, Dirleton was the caddie master and they called their house 'Auldhame' after his family estate at North Berwick.

[fairway]
Searching on the 11th hole, West Links, North Berwick  © Digitalsport UK

Amateur players like Johnny Laidlay and Robert Maxwell lived on independent means and were able to play golf everyday. The Amateur Championship was originally played for among the blue-blooded fraternity and a closed shop to artisans. The competition played over a week precluded the local tradesmen from taking part.

Even in local competitions the joiners, teachers and clerks who played to a high standard within their golf club could not compete against Maxwell or Laidlay who were full time golfers. At the age of 61 years Laidlay played for Sunningdale against Oxford University and was a tough opponent over 36 holes. Laidlay and Maxwell played during a period when amateur golf was at its height of popularity and the standard was of a high quality although the professionals continued to dominate the Open Championship. His daughter Eileen 'Faith' Laidlay was a member of North Berwick Ladies Golf Club and her brother Peter Laidlay was a member of Sunningdale Golf Club. Johnny Laidlay died 15th July 1940, aged 80 years and is buried in Holy Trinity Cemetery, Sunningdale, Berkshire.

Copyright © Douglas C. Seaton 2021, All Rights Reserved.