Footnotes and Anecdotes
by Shirley Dusinberre Durham, Author and Illustrator
Mr. Ryder's Trophy, 2002 Sleeping Bear Press
In the weeks before the 38th Ryder Cup (October 1 - 3) -- while you are
in a state of idle curiosity -- I'd like to share with you my
unorthodox view of golf history, gleaned from seven years of writing Mr. Ryder's Trophy. It's
my purpose to correct some notions about golf and the Ryder Cup, let
off steam, and hand out gratuitous information. At the same time I'd
sincerely like corrections.
The Trophy - a closer look
The Hallmarks
In August 2000, Edward Asprey of Crown Jewellers Asprey and Garrard,
London, sent me the above explanation of the hallmarks on the Ryder
Cup. The PGA's Susan Martin had arranged for the hallmarks to be
photographed for me at PGA headquarters in Palm Beach Gardens, FL,
where the Trophy was locked in a display case, by virtue of our win at
Brookline. Asprey explained that his firm, which had bought Mappin and
Webb in 1989 (and sold it in ten years later), had made a full-sized
replica of the Cup in 1993 for the safety of the original on informal
occasions.
I asked Mr. Asprey by phone how much the Cup would cost today.
He ventured that if Samuel Ryder bought such a cup off the shelf, in
1926 or 1927, for £250, it might now cost in the range of £20,000 to
£30,000.
The Ryder Cup Trophy resembles in style the US Amateur Championship's
Havemeyer Trophy, the one that was destroyed in a fire at the East Lake
clubhouse, where Bobby Jones had stashed it on a book shelf after his
win in 1925. The replacement Havemeyer Trophy is a big silver thing,
several feet tall. USGA historian Rand Jerris offered this for
context: the Walker Cup (the Amateur equivalent of the Ryder Cup) is an
even bigger silver thing, insured for $1,500, in 1921. (Sorting out
the £ and the $ in fluctuating markets is not something I should even
attempt, but I'm leading to something.)
Words on the Cup
Samuel Ryder did not use philanthropy to promote his business, if the
words on the Ryder Cup an indication of his purpose. I called the
Belfry (European PGA Headquarters) to reaffirm that this was right, to
be sure that the engraving on the Cup did not include the words "Ryder & Son Ltd." the name of Ryder's successful seed company.
A pleasant receptionist at the Belfry hesitated when I asked for the exact words on the trophy. "Yes, well...," she said, them paused, and made an amusing sound, "The Trophy is here at my feet, under my desk. It will take only a moment to open the box and have a look. Have you a pencil?"
A pleasant receptionist at the Belfry hesitated when I asked for the exact words on the trophy. "Yes, well...," she said, them paused, and made an amusing sound, "The Trophy is here at my feet, under my desk. It will take only a moment to open the box and have a look. Have you a pencil?"
Presented by Samuel Ryder EsqJP. of St. Albans to the Professional Golfers' Association of Great Britain May 1927
This inscription told me two things about Sam:
1) He lent his good name to help the men who played his game, not to advertise his business.
2) Of the many fine things Ryder did in his life, JP, Justice of the
Peace, suited him and he liked it best. He was good at justice and
justifying, squaring things so that everyone got a fair shake.
3) Sam may have philosophically disagreed with his brother James. The two worked together for professional golf initially and called their tournaments Heath & Heather, after a the subsidiary of Ryder & Son, of which James was in charge. It was a commercialization to which Sam may have objected, and may have been the reason James seemed to play no role in the Ryder Cup Matches.
3) Sam may have philosophically disagreed with his brother James. The two worked together for professional golf initially and called their tournaments Heath & Heather, after a the subsidiary of Ryder & Son, of which James was in charge. It was a commercialization to which Sam may have objected, and may have been the reason James seemed to play no role in the Ryder Cup Matches.
Which makes me wonder: why would some sportswriters belittle this very nice man and his Cup?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In the
hype surrounding the 38th Ryder Cup Match in Wales, October
1-3, you may hear stories about the origins of the Ryder Cup that are
misleading and inadequate. Rarely is it mentioned that the Ryder Cup
derives from a social problem between professional and amateur golfers
in England 100 years ago. Class distinction was so fierce that it harmed
the development of anyone of the working class who aspired to something
better, especially working class golfers, who -- strange as it may seem
today -- aspired to remain amateurs. Bernard Darwin (my favorite keen
observer) describes the life of professional golfers of the late 19th
century, in Vanity Fair (January 15, 1927):
"Such
a life bred a reckless type of man who took little care for the morrow
-- often a very pleasant creature, alas with a taste for whisky. In the
summer they earned a certain amount of money; in the winter, they got
along the best they could. Gradually, more courses sprang up in England
and this meant more permanent jobs for those who cared to cross the
border. The professional who took such a job was often a jack-of-all
trades, for he was greenkeeper, as well as professional and club-maker,
and could not disdain to push a mowing-machine or pull a roller. Still,
he had an improved status, if only because clubs exacted from a
permanent servant a standard of conduct not expected from a casual ally
in a foursome."
"Golf is the only game that God is interested in."
Shirley Dusinberre Durham, 2002
"Please don't forget that God is also interested in Cricket, since he invented it."
John Cleese, 2004 (e-mail)