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On the 4th November 1912, a group of local gentlemen
met at the White Lion Hotel, Commercial Street to discuss the
feasibility of forming a golf club at Maesteg. Their first task was
to find a suitable site on which to locate the course and, after
considering a number of locations at Tyn Waun, Bryn Rhyg and Gelli
Lenor, they eventually chose a collection of fields at Brynmawr Farm
which would be leased from Margam Estates for £10 per annum.
The original par-36 nine hole layout at Brynmawr was
designed by the then professional at Porthcawl Golf Club, Mr.
Hutchinson and subscriptions were set at one guinea plus an entrance
fee of ½ guinea. The course was officially opened on 30th July
1913. In March 1914, agreement was reached to rent two rooms at
Mount Pleasant Farm to act as locker rooms for the members. However,
the distance from the locker rooms to the original first tee meant a
daunting climb and eventually the holes were renumbered.
Following the outbreak of World War I, the course
and it's facilities were offered free of charge to Belgian refugees
being quartered locally and also to wounded soldiers convalescing at
Maesteg General Hospital. In late 1916, however, Mr. Evan
Williams, the groundsman, was conscripted and, despite an
unsuccessful appeal by the Club, the course remained closed for the
remainder of the War.
The course reopened in 1919 but it was in October
1920 that the decision was taken to rent from Mr. Rees, the tenant
of Cwncerwn Farm, the land on which the modern-day course is
situated. The first Clubhouse - a former army hut - was erected at
Mount Pleasant and officially opened on 20th July 1921. Following the opening of a new main road to Port
Talbot in 1924, the decision was finally taken to build six
additional holes on the newly acquired (and very wet) land at Mount
Pleasant. This was extended to nine holes in September 1929 when the
lease on the original land at Brynmawr was terminated.
Another momentous decision was taken in 1933; the
playing of golf on a Sunday was finally permitted. This was now
possible as the Club, having moved to the new course in 1929, was no
longer subject to the objections of the tenant farmer at Brynmawr which had
previously prevented Sunday golf. In 1934, the Club finally
abandoned it's old horse-drawn mower in favour of a motorised
vehicle. The mare who had given such stirling service to the Club
over the years was retired to Brynmawr Farm. A bar had been
installed in the Clubhouse in 1923 but it wasn't until 1939 that the
first Stewardess was appointed. During the early years of World War
II, a contingent of the local Home Guard shared the clubhouse with
members and Officers stationed at the Bryn, Garth and Maesteg Army
camps were invited to become honorary members of the Club.
In late 1942, the course at Mount Pleasant together
with the old farmhouse were purchased from Margam Estates for £500.
The following year, James Braid, five time winner of the British
Open Championship, was engaged to design a new nine hole layout. He
submitted two schemes and one of these was used as the layout for
the new course. In 1946 a new Clubhouse was purchased from R.A.F.
St. Athan and officially opened on 18th June 1947.
During the 1950s and 1960s, the Maesteg golf
scene was dominated by the Rees brothers and in particular Cliff
Rees who won the club championship on no fewer than thirteen
occasions. As well as Cliff there were his brothers Mel, Gwilym and
Billy and they thought nothing of playing 72 holes every Sunday!
During these two decades and thanks in no small part to the success
of the Rees brothers, the Club was able to consolidate it's standing
and membership increased significantly. Continuing improvements to
the Clubhouse were dealt a blow, however, when, in 1956, part of it
was damaged by fire yet, in spite of the ongoing modernisation, the original Mount Pleasant farmhouse was not
demolished until the late 1960s. In 1962, the Club celebrated it's
Golden Jubilee, the highlight of which (pictured right) was a visit
by Peter Alliss, then a successful PGA golfer, for a fourball
match.
The domination of Maesteg golf enjoyed by Cliff Rees
in the 1950s and 60s can tend to overshadow the number of other fine
players which the Club has produced. Cynwyd Jenkins was Club
Champion in 1947 and went on to serve as Chairman of the Club for
nine years. Eddie Davies was Club Champion on three occasions and
Match Captain for no fewer than 15 seasons. Jeff Ham deservedly won
two Club Championships in the 1980s while Robert Jenkins won the
title three times before the age of twenty.
The 1970s was a decade of change at Maesteg. The
Clubhouse which had been in use since the mid-1940s was demolished
and replaced by the structure which stood until the year 2000. At
the same time as the Clubhouse was being renewed, the course was
being extended from nine holes. 1975 saw fifteen holes in play and
the full eighteen were in use in 1977. It was not until 1985 that
the Club appointed it's first professional, Mr. Bill Evans,
who, as well as being a past Welsh Professional Champion had also
been a junior member at Maesteg many years previously.
With the new Clubhouse now fully operational,
Maesteg Golf Club is again at the dawn of a new era. It is only when
one considers the modest beginnings of the Club at Brynmawr in the
early years of the 20th Century that one can fully appreciate the
progress that has been made in creating a course and facilities that
the members and local community can all be proud
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