Portmarnock Golf Club

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1894
Links
William Pickeman - Mungo Park
7,463
18
72

 

Portmarnock Golf Club is known as one of the world’s truly great links courses. It is on a small peninsula extending into the Irish Sea and is surrounded by water on 3 sides.

Unlike many courses in this respect, Portmarnock demands a continual discernment of wind direction. As one can expect, Portmarnock Golf Club has an interesting history. Like The Island, in the early days, Portmarnock could only be reached by boat, and the bell, which signaled the last boat of the day, still hangs at the caddie master’s pavilion near the first tee. It was on one such boat trip that W.C. Pickeman, a Scottish insurance broker, and his friend George Ross scouted the land as a possible golf links. The seeds of Portmarnock Golf Club had been sown. Within two years, the initial 9 hole layout had been turned into 18 holes, and what people may find surprising about the design is that it was done through collaboration between the club’s golfers and local professional advisors. British architect Fred Hawtree added nine extra holes in 1971, but the original 18 holes remain as the championship stretch.

The quality and location of Portmarnock have made it a superb venue for some great events over the years. The British Amateur in 1949, the Canada Cup in 1960, the 1991 Walker Cup, and some 12 Irish Open Championships have been held on its hallowed turf. The Canada Cup by the way, was notable in that it gave future legend, Arnold Palmer, his first real taste of links golf. The championship course offers a fair but tough challenge and was acknowledged by Tom Watson in 1981: “There are no tricks or nasty surprises, only an honest, albeit searching test of shot making skills.”