This club is famous for… legalising steel shafts
People aren’t always great fans of change.
We often like things to stay just as they are, but progress and technology wait for no one.
Steel shafted golf clubs were actually invented in the late 1890s but, in the following decades, golfers just couldn’t shake their love of hickory.
Then Sandwell Park came along. In the 1920s, the West Bromwich course was the first British club to sanction a local rule that permitted the use of steel.
Depending on whom you listen to, there are two versions of how this epoch-making moment in British golf came about.
Walter Hackett was a prominent club member and the top dog at Accles and Pollock, a metal tube manufacturer based at Oldbury.
Hackett was a globetrotter. He often made trips to the United States where steel had already surpassed hickory.
Picking up a set and bringing them back to use on the course, his new fangled sticks proved popular and soon plenty of members were ditching their old clubs. But it was not a seamless transition.
While the club committee forged on, and allowed their use in competitions, some members called a meeting looking to banish the metal newcomers from their fairways.
A crunch meeting came in 1928 but the traditionalists were voted down and steel ruled at Sandwell.
Another version of the tale says that Sid Saunders, also a club member, adapted cycle frames into golf club shafts during his work at Accles and Pollock.
He is claimed to have perfected the art in 1912 and that Sandwell members had changed over long before Hackett came onto the scene.
Whichever is right, what can’t be questioned is that Sandwell Park were pioneers.
The R&A legalised the shafts on November 26, 1929 and issued rules the following year that allowed them to be used by all players.
This club is famous for… strange beasts on its fairways
This club is famous for… President Eisenhower and the 14th tee
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Steve Carroll
A journalist for 25 years, Steve has been immersed in club golf for almost as long. A former club captain, he has passed the Level 3 Rules of Golf exam with distinction having attended the R&A's prestigious Tournament Administrators and Referees Seminar.
Steve has officiated at a host of high-profile tournaments, including Open Regional Qualifying, PGA Fourball Championship, English Men's Senior Amateur, and the North of England Amateur Championship. In 2023, he made his international debut as part of the team that refereed England vs Switzerland U16 girls.
A part of NCG's Top 100s panel, Steve has a particular love of links golf and is frantically trying to restore his single-figure handicap. He currently floats at around 11.
Steve plays at Close House, in Newcastle, and York GC, where he is a member of the club's matches and competitions committee and referees the annual 36-hole scratch York Rose Bowl.
Having studied history at Newcastle University, he became a journalist having passed his NTCJ exams at Darlington College of Technology.
What's in Steve's bag: TaylorMade Stealth 2 driver, 3-wood, and hybrids; TaylorMade Stealth 2 irons; TaylorMade Hi-Toe, Ping ChipR, Sik Putter.