Alexa Stirling
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Alexa Stirling (September 5, 1897 – April 15, 1977) was a North American amateur golf champion.
Born in Atlanta, Georgia, Alexa Stirling won three consecutive United States Women's Amateur Golf Championships, taking her first in 1916. When no tournament was held during 1917 and 1918 while the United States participated in World War I, Alexa Stirling became one of the famous "Dixie Kids," a group of golfers that included her long-time friend Bobby Jones, Elaine Rosenthal and Parry Adair who toured the United States to raise money for the Red Cross. After the war, she came back to win the 1919 and 1920 titles. She was also the U.S. Championship's runner-up in 1921 to Marion Hollins, in 1923 to Edith Cummings and again in 1925 to Glenna Collett, a year when she broke Dorothy Campbell's single-round scoring record. Although she did not make it to the finals in the 1927 championship, in the third round she defeated Simone de la Chaume, the British Ladies Amateur Golf Champion.
In 1920 she won the Canadian Women's Amateur Golf Championship and after finishing second in 1921 and 1925 she won the Canadian title again in 1934. She married Canadian doctor W.G. Fraser and made her home in Ottawa, Ontario where she became an honorary member of the Royal Ottawa Golf Club and was its ladies' champion nine times.
Throughout her life Alexa Stirling Fraser maintained her interest in golf and during the 1976 United States Bicentennial celebrations she returned to Atlanta for the U.S. Open. She died the following year at home in Ottawa.
Posthumously, Alexa Stirling Fraser was inducted into the Georgia Sports Hall of Fame in 1978, the Canadian Golf Hall of Fame in 1986, and the Georgia Golf Hall of Fame in 1989.