Divotees Golf Club records
Scope and Contents
The Divotees were a largely Quaker club. The records of the Divotees, 1921-1995, indicate that meetings generally involved a game of golf in addition to club business, such as nominating new members and taking and spending money. Also included are records of each member's handicap, prizes awarded, and the complete records of each year's games. These records are combined into yearly publications: the "Divotee Mirror," later the "Divotee Record." This publication also records the Divotees' rivalry with the Ozones, another golf club, occasional golfing trips to Bermuda, and the jokes, songs, cartoons, poems, and other lighthearted material related to the club.
Presidents of the Divotees included D.R. Yarnall, I.P. Miller, R.M. Gummere, A.C. Wood, Jr., M.A. Linton, C.C. Morris, S.E. Stokes, J.E. Shipley, C.L. Reagan, J.H. Buzby, F.C. Sharpless, D.L. Burgess, E.L. Webster, E.A. Russell, T.W. Elkington, W.H. Roberts, Jr., H.T. Greenwood, Jr., R.W. Leeds, E.N. Cooper, Sr., H.H. Morris, M.A. Linton, Jr., R.L. Balderston, Joseph E. Rogers, Tim Elkington, Robert J. Rogers, D. Robert Yarnall, William Greenwood, Lewis M. Robbins, E. Newby Cooper, Walter Lamb, James B. Bradbeer, J. Morris Evans, Alden Bennett, T.S. Coxe, James B. Yarnall, R. Larry Zullinger, Jr., W.W. Olmstead, W.C. Evans, and W.H. Lord.
Many prominent Quakers were members of the Divotees, including James P. Magill and members of the Cadbury, Gummere, Leeds, Morris, Rhoads, Sharpless, Shipley, Stokes, and Yarnall families.
The club awarded prizes for the lowest total scores, as well as the highest number of match points and the most improved player. The prize for most-improved player was a dozen golf balls paid for by the player whose scores had declined the most. The other prizes were cups.
These papers were originally stored in two binders. The first is stored in full (Vol. 1, 1930-1944). The second (1920-1995) is split among folders following the dividers in the original binder.
Dates
- Creation: 1920-1995
Creator
- Yarnall, Charles (Author, Person)
- Balderston, Robert L. (Author, Person)
Access Restrictions
The collection is open for research use.
Use Restrictions
Standard Federal Copyright Laws Apply (U.S. Title 17).
Historical Note
The Divotees were A quaker club founded by Robert Yarnall in 1921. It was originally only open to Quakers, although later in its existence the definition of "Quaker" was loosened considerably.
Many prominent Quakers were members of the Divotees, including James P. Magill and members of the Cadbury, Gummere, Leeds, Morris, Rhoads, Sharpless, Shipley, Stokes, and Yarnall families.
The club awarded prizes for the lowest total golf scores, as well as the highest number of match points and the most improved player. The prize for most-improved player was a dozen golf balls paid for by the player whose scores had declined the most. The other prizes were cups.
Extent
0.44 linear ft.
Language of Materials
English
Abstract
The Divotees were a largely Quaker club. The records of the Divotees, 1921-1995, indicate that meetings generally involved a game of golf in addition to club business, such as nominating new members and taking and spending money. Also included are records of each member's handicap, prizes awarded, and the complete records of each year's games. These records are combined into yearly publications: the "Divotee Mirror," later the "Divotee Record." This publication also records the Divotees' rivalry with the Ozones, another golf club, occasional golfing trips to Bermuda, and the jokes, songs, cartoons, poems, and other lighthearted material related to the club.
Acquisition
The Divotees Golf Club records were donated to Special Collections, Haverford College in 1999 by Robert L. Balderston, Haverford College class of 1939. Accession No. 6361.
Processing Information
Processed by Mary A. Crauderueff; completed February, 2016.
- Title
- Divotees Golf Club records, 1920-1995
- Author
- Mary A. Crauderueff
- Date
- February, 2016
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
Find It at the Library
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