John Morrison
- Full Name
- John Stanton Fleming Morrison
- Year of Birth
- 1892
- Year of Death
- 1961 (aged 69)
- Place Born
- West Jesmond, Newcastle upon Tyne, England
- Place Died
- Farnham, Surrey, England
John Morrison was a larger than life figure with an iron constitution, remarked Henry Lord and Peter Pugh: “Aside from being a consummate sportsman, he also proved his drinking prowess by winning a beer-drinking contest at Oktoberfest in Munich. To celebrate this, he reputedly drank a pint of sherry, which was his preferred tipple.”

John Morrison was educated at Charterhouse School in Goldaming, Surrey from 1905 to 1911, during which time he captained the school’s cricket and football teams. He also captained the Public Schools Team against the MCC in his final year at Charterhouse before he went up to Trinity College, Cambridge to study history and law.
The Great War curtailed his university studies and he joined the Royal Flying Corps, where he was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross for flying torpedo bombers. It’s also thought he was one of the first pilots to land a plane on an aircraft carrier. After the war, Morrison returned to Trinity College, graduating in 1920.
His sporting achievements as an amateur during the 1920s were many, including a cap for England against Wales at football, and he captained Corinthians when they beat Blackburn Rovers 1-0 in the first round of the F.A. Cup at Crystal Palace in 1924. He also played cricket for both the Somerset and Northumberland county teams.
Morrison joined Harry Colt’s design partnership in 1923 (the same year Alister MacKenzie withdrew) and became a director of the company five years later. He was also a skilled practitioner on the golf course, winning the Worplesdon Foursomes (partnering Joyce Wethered) in 1928 then the Belgian Open Amateur Championship the following year.
During the 1930s, Morrison and Henry Longhurst were long-standing partners for Charterhouse in the Halford Hewitt early season match play competition for public schools, where each team fields five foursomes pairs. Over a six-year spell, the prodigious pairing of Morrison and Longhurst won all but one of 32 matches played.
Morrison was Captain of both Sunningdale (1933)...
John Morrison was educated at Charterhouse School in Goldaming, Surrey from 1905 to 1911, during which time he captained the school’s cricket and football teams. He also captained the Public Schools Team against the MCC in his final year at Charterhouse before he went up to Trinity College, Cambridge to study history and law.
The Great War curtailed his university studies and he joined the Royal Flying Corps, where he was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross for flying torpedo bombers. It’s also thought he was one of the first pilots to land a plane on an aircraft carrier. After the war, Morrison returned to Trinity College, graduating in 1920.
His sporting achievements as an amateur during the 1920s were many, including a cap for England against Wales at football, and he captained Corinthians when they beat Blackburn Rovers 1-0 in the first round of the F.A. Cup at Crystal Palace in 1924. He also played cricket for both the Somerset and Northumberland county teams.
Morrison joined Harry Colt’s design partnership in 1923 (the same year Alister MacKenzie withdrew) and became a director of the company five years later. He was also a skilled practitioner on the golf course, winning the Worplesdon Foursomes (partnering Joyce Wethered) in 1928 then the Belgian Open Amateur Championship the following year.
During the 1930s, Morrison and Henry Longhurst were long-standing partners for Charterhouse in the Halford Hewitt early season match play competition for public schools, where each team fields five foursomes pairs. Over a six-year spell, the prodigious pairing of Morrison and Longhurst won all but one of 32 matches played.
Morrison was Captain of both Sunningdale (1933) and Royal Worlington & Newmarket (1936) and he teamed up with Joyce Wethered to win the Sunningdale Foursomes on a couple of occasions in the mid-1930s. When World War II broke out, Morrison enlisted in the RAF, serving first as a Wing Commander then Group Captain of a training facility.
He was a larger than life figure with an iron constitution, as remarked on by Henry Lord and Peter Pugh in Masters of Design – Great Courses of Colt, MacKenzie, Alison & Morrison when they wrote: “Aside from being a consummate sportsman, he also proved his drinking prowess by winning a beer-drinking contest at Oktoberfest in Munich. To celebrate this, he reputedly drank a pint of sherry, which was his preferred tipple.”
John Morrison assisted Harry Colt on numerous design projects in the United Kingdom and on the continent of Europe. Indeed, a large proportion of the overseas commissions for Colt Alison & Morrison Ltd were overseen by John Morrison but, like C. H. Alison, his contribution is often overlooked in favour of headline partner Harry Colt, whose name and reputation is far more widely known.
Morrison worked extensively in The Netherlands, Germany and Spain before World War II then in France and Italy after the war. On the domestic front, he’s probably best known for remodelling the course at Prince’s along with Sir Guy Campbell in the late 1940s and he remained active after the demise of Harry Colt in 1951 and Hugh Alison a year later, collaborating with J. Hamilton Stutt on projects until he passed away in 1961.
Bibliography:
Around Golf by John Stanton Fleming Morrison (1939)
Featured courses designed, remodelled and added to by John Morrison
Barlassina
25th

Situated a mere 20km to the north of Milan, Barlassina Country Club is an exclusive and private club, which was originally founded in 1956 by a group of wealthy Italians...
Bergisch Land
7th

Bergisch Land means "mountainous country" and that may be a slight exaggeration, but "hilly" certainly fits the bill.
Berlin-Wannsee (Championship)
3rd

Formed as Berlin Golf Club by British and American diplomats back in 1895, Golf- und Land-Club Berlin-Wannsee is one of the oldest and most prestigious in continental Europe.
Calcot Park
7th
Calcot Park Golf Club is one of the lesser known designs on Harry Colt’s CV, laid out in collaboration with John Morrison. It’s set in beautiful, undulating parkland and its four short holes are among the best collection of one shotters in Berkshire.
Frankfurter
9th

Frankfurter Golf Club was a once a regular German Open venue and this historical layout was designed by Harry Colt and John Morrison in the 1920s.
Garlenda
33rd

Bisected by the Lerrone river, the layout at Garlenda Golf Club was planned by John Morrison before he died in 1961 and completed by Commander John Harris in 1964, an architect who fashioned more than a dozen courses in Italy, including the highly regarded Biella, Venezia and Menaggio & Cadenabbia.
John Morrison Leaderboard
Rank | Name | Courses Played |
---|---|---|
1 | Helmut Baeck |
|
= | Jorn Greve |
|
3 | Dr. Michael J. Noack |
|
= | Brian Ward |
|
5 | Tony Walkow |
|
= | Tom |
|
7 | Bob McCoy |
|
= | Georg Kittel |
|
= | Marcel |
|
10 | Ulrich Mayring |
|