Frederick Guthrie Tait
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Frederick Guthrie Tait (January 11, 1870 - February 7, 1900) was a Scottish soldier and amateur golfer.
Born in Edinburgh, the third son of eminent physicist and fanatical amateur golfer Peter Guthrie Tait, Frederick was educated at the Edinburgh Academy and Sedbergh School. He entered the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst at the second attempt and is credited with introducing golf there. Tait joined the 2nd battalion, the Leinster regiment (109th foot) and then the 2nd battalion, the Black Watch.
Tait was an extremely powerful and long hitter of the ball. At The Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews on January 11, 1893, he hit the ball 250 yards, the ball then rolling on frozen ground and coming to rest 341 yards from the tee, thereby refuting his father's calculation that 190 yards was the maximum possible flight. Tait won the The Amateur Championship twice (1896 and 1898), finished third in The Open Championship twice (1896 and 1897) and was leading amateur in the same competition on six occasions.
Tait was killed in action at Koodoosberg during the Second Boer War.
[edit] Honours
- The Freddie Tait Cup is awarded annually to the leading amateur in the South African Open.
[edit] Bibliography
- Darwin, B. (1933). "Memories of Freddie Tait". The American Golfer. selections reprinted in Price, C. (ed.) (1964). The American golfer.
- Durran, R.A. (2004). Tait, Frederick Guthrie (1870–1900). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. Retrieved on 2006-06-26. (subscription or UK/ Ireland public library membership required)
- Low, J.L. (1900). F. G. Tait: A Record.
- Low, J.L (ed.) (1909). Nisbet's Golf Yearbook.
- Ryde, P. (ed.) (1981). Royal & Ancient Championship Records, 1860–1980.