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History
Hayston
Golf Club was founded in 1926 amid raging contoversy that split the
town of Kirkintilloch and it's community. It all came about because of
'the demon drink'.
In 1921,
after a
poll of the 12,000 population, it was decreed that all
the pubs in Kirkintilloch be closed and that the town should become
'dry'. Considering that there were 14 pubs and 15 churches, the
publicans had plainly been living on borrowed time!
Naturally
this news
did not please the members of Kirkintilloch Golf
Club who liked nothing better than visiting a hostelry for a dram or
two after their exertions on the course. Faced with such a fearful loss
of amenities, an extraordinary general meeting was called to vote on
plans for a new clubhouse and an application for a liquor licence. The
motion was narrowly defeated and the disaffected members promptly
agreed to form a breakaway club on leased land only a stone's throw
away, but just over the county line in Stirlingshire.
Thus
Hayston Golf Club was born. To add a piquant note, the licensee Tom
Pate, was also the
club
master, the equivalent to today's secretary
and was a lifelong friend of James Braid. So Braid, ironically a
non-drinker, was asked to design the course returning on many occasions
to fine-tune his original design. What's more, Braid refused to submit
an account on the grounds that it was a personal favour! However, Tom
and the members would have none of that and finally forced Braid to
accept the grand sum of £5.00 (approx US$7.00).
Kirkintilloch
remained a 'dry toon' until a referendum in 1968, long
after Hayston had caused further scandal by voting to break the
national trend and allow play on Sundays. The pulpits may have been
rocking, and the fire and brimstone smouldering, but the new club
survived.
Now it
prospers as
never before and the Braid course, last visited by
the great man in 1946, is better than ever thanks to modern green
keeping techniques and the strategic planting of 25,000 trees. The site
is a mere 72 acres, but Braid showed what imagination could do with a
limited canvas - it appears much more expansive. The ground slopes and
tilts this way and that which lends itself nicely to elevated greens,
deflecting hummocks and gathering bunkers.
The
terrain
contradicts the yardage and makes club selection a critical
part of playing the course. Although the greens are mainly on the small
side, they are very deceptive. Looking generally flat, they can be
slippery in summer when they are fanned by the prevailing westerly wind.
The card
reads 6,080
yards, par 70, although for most it appears somewhat longer.
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Hayston
Golf Club
Campsie Road, Kirkintilloch,
Glasgow G66
1RN
Clubhouse: Tel +44 (0)141 776 1244
Secretary: Tel.
+44 (0)141 775 0723 Professional: Tel. +44 (0)141
775 0882
eMail: secretary@haystongolf.com
Web: www.haystongolf.com

Copyright
© 2007 Hayston Golf Club
Web
Design by Phil Thelwell
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