Enid Wilson
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Enid Wilson (March 12, 1910 – not found) was a English amateur golf champion. She was a semi-finalist at her first British Ladies Amateur Golf Championship in 1927 and won the Championship three years in a row between 1931 and 1933.
Competing in the 1931 United States Women's Amateur Golf Championship Enid Wilson was eliminated in the semi-finals by ultimate champion Helen Hicks. She got some measure of satisfaction the next year when she beat Ms Hicks 2 & 1 in their match during the first ever Curtis Cup held at the Wentworth Golf Club, in Surrey, England. She returned to the U.S. for the 1932 Championship but went out in the quarter-final. In the 1933 U.S. championship she lost in the semi-finals to the ultimate tournament champion Virginia Van Wie but won the medal for lowest round with a record-setting score.
In 1933 Ms Wilson partnered with Walter Hagen to play a match at the Bruntsfield Links in Edinburgh, Scotland. She co-wrote So That's What I Do! with Robert Allen Lewis that was published in 1935. She also wrote the section on women's golf in the 1952 book A History of Golf in Britain (1990 Reprint Ailsa Inc.) edited by golf writer Bernard Darwin and contributed to by several notables from the world of British's men golf. As well, she wrote ''A Gallery of Women Golfers with the Foreword by Bernard Darwin that was published in 1961 in London by Country Life Ltd..