On March 6, 1457, King James II, who was the King of Scots from 1437 until his death in 1460, in an Act of Parliament banned citizens from playing football and golf. Scotsmen had allegedly been playing these games in the streets and churchyards, instead of practicing archery skills for their mandatory military training.
“No part of the country should football, golf, or other such pointless sports be practiced but, for the common good and for the defense of the country,” stated the ban.
This ban is the first written mention of a game called golf. But what was this game? “There is both text and visual evidence that there was a game that we would call golf,” says Rand Jerris, a prominent golf historian and the former Director of The USGA Golf Museum and Library. “One was played over large pieces of property striking balls out in the open. The other was actually a game that was played through the streets of a village or a town where they were hitting a ball into a churchyard or down a street. So historians have differentiated between what they call short golf and long golf that was played in Scotland in the 1500s.”
What Jerris and other golf historians are sure of is that there is enough evidence to prove that by the mid-1500s there was a game being played with multiple clubs over long distances to a hole in the ground. Historians have discovered a Latin grammar book from the era that used golf to teach Latin. Vocabula, which was published in 1636 by Aberdeen, Scotland schoolmaster David Wedderburn, includes the earliest descriptions of the game, including the first mention of a golf hole.
“All the things that we know to be true about the early game—the character of the game and the type of equipment that was used—is because golf is being invoked in a Latin grammar book for schoolchildren,” Jerris said.
The First Rules of Golf
In 1744, the Honorable Company of Edinburgh Golfers wrote down the first rules of the game, known as the Thirteen Articles, for their tournament at the Leith Links in Edinburgh. Over the next 100 years, those 13 rules were adopted by more than 30 clubs.
There wasn’t an attempt to create a standardized set of rules until the Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews (R &A) delivered the first consolidated rules code in 1899. During this same period, the United States Golf Association was formed in New York City. The USGA’s rules converged significantly with those from the R&A, consolidating those two entities as the two main governing bodies of the game.
According to Jerris, there was a movement beginning in the 1880s to create governing bodies for sports. The golf community resisted one set of rules. Competitive rules changed from course to course. “It’s not until the 1890s that you have in golf the momentum and the impetus behind forming a governing body to bring unification to the game,” Jerris says.