http://www.bramshaw.co.uk/index.lasso?pg=e22f527e4264112f&cl=1&catid=4cc9422eabb5b397&mp=6cc4072f61aef2e4&-session=ldcms:8424A5C3A72E743726384812EF2A7F0E&-session=ldcms:ED385C736182058AFC29634B787AF4DCWas driving through the beautiful New Forrest yesterday and thinking “golf country”.
I then saw two holes (9&10) of what turns out to be Bramshaw Golf course. It’s an excellent website and it would appear a bunkerless course. (further checking reveals they spoilt this on the 12th hole
). I think the course would be worth investigating but in summer as the poor soil showed thin grass and surface water.
From the site
“The original course, now known as the Forest, was originally built by a local resident/landowner called Philip de Crespigny, for the entertainment of his weekend guests in about 1865. It was built partly in his large garden at Roundhill and partly on Brook Common. There were no other golf courses in Hampshire at that time and no records can be found to show that he had permission to build his!
The many natural features of the New Forest, particularly the rise and fall of the land and the stream that runs through the far side of the course ("Kings Garn Gutter"), made it easy to create golf holes of great interest and ones that required the skills of a seasoned links golfer to master. Without any form of mechanical assistance, the major part of the work was either done by hand or with the assistance of horses from local farms.
Together with another local landowner, John Jeffries, they formed Bramshaw Golf Club and Bramshaw Cricket Club (which is alongside the 18th fairway) in 1880, a fact documented in the R&A Handbook. There were fourteen entrants in its first ever Monthly Medal, which was won by Philip de Crespigny (playing off scratch) with a total of 174 for 36 holes. By the third competition they reduced it to just 18 holes! After a period in the 1890's when the club had just 9 holes, it formed a partnership with a new local club at Lyndhurst (who also had 9 holes). The combined club, calling themselves New Forest Golf Club, had the unique feature of the front and back nine holes being over 5 miles apart!
The course at Brook Common was extended to 18 holes in the first decade of the 20th Century and the partnership was dissolved in 1913. It was not until 1945 that the club obtained a formal Forestry Commission permit to play golf there.”
Anyone know more?