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Royal Winchester Golf Club

England, United Kingdom

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Founded in 1888, Royal Winchester Golf Club is the fourth oldest golf club in Hampshire and there are some attractive holes, especially on J.H. Taylor’s strong and engaging outward nine.

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Royal Winchester Golf Club

The course at Royal Winchester Golf Club doesn’t date back quite as far as the city’s famous 11th century cathedral – which features the longest knave and greatest overall length of any Gothic cathedral in Europe – but it’s been around for well over a hundred years, nonetheless.

The club was founded in 1888, with members playing on a course located at Morn Hill, near Chilcomb, to the east of the city. One of the club’s earliest professionals was Andrew Kirkcaldy, who lasted only six weeks before heading back to Scotland, with J. H. Taylor replacing him.

Royal Winchester moved to its present location on Teg Down in 1901, although J. H. Taylor had already left to join Royal Wimbledon before subsequently moving on to Royal Mid-Surrey, he was brought in to set out a new course that was modified some time later by Harry Colt.

The Royal prefix in the club’s title had been used in good faith since 1893 when the Duke of Connaught became a patron and apparently granted permission for its use, however the Home Office intervened twenty years later to inform the club that no official authority had ever been given by the monarchy.

A hastily composed letter of request, along with details of the club’s financial status, was submitted to the Secretary of State and on 2nd January 1913, a letter was received confirming that King George V had granted the club its royal title, allowing everyone to breathe a huge sigh of relief.

Royal Winchester has overcome a number of challenges down the years; the lady members kept the club solvent by joining the men’s club and contributing their financial reserves in the 1940s, then the old clubhouse was sold and a new one built in the mid-1960s but this was lost to a fire in 1994, resulting in the construction of a new building.

Stretching to 6,387 yards from the back tees, the course plays to a par of 72, with fairways laid out across pleasantly undulating downland. A bunker renovation programme was completed in 2017, with in-house staff installing EcoBunkers to deliver badger-proof banks and a gentler sand profile which is resilient to sand wash down.

Highlight holes include the par three 7th (played to a sand-protected raised green), back-to-back par fives at the 9th and 10th, the long, stroke index 1 par four 15th (though many think the left doglegged 13th is the toughest hole on the card), and the 355-yard 18th, where a “bomb-hole bunker” guards the front of the 3-tiered home green.

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