Dorothy Kirby | |
---|---|
Personal information | |
Full name | Dorothy Kirby |
Born | January 15, 1920 West Point, Georgia |
Died | December 12, 2000 Atlanta, Georgia |
(aged 80)
Nationality | United States |
Career | |
Status | Amateur |
Professional wins | 2 |
Number of wins by tour | |
LPGA Tour | 2 |
Best results in LPGA Major Championships (Wins: 2) |
|
Western Open | 2nd: 1943, 1947 |
Titleholders C'ship | Won: 1941, 1942 |
U.S. Women's Open | 7th: 1951 |
Mary Dorothy Kirby (born January 15, 1920 - December 12, 2000) was an American golf champion and sportscaster.
Born in West Point, Georgia, her family moved to Atlanta when she was ten. At the age of thirteen Dorothy Kirby's victory at the 1933 Georgia Women's Amateur Championship made her the youngest female golfer to ever win a state championship. It marked the first of her six Georgia championships, her last coming 20 years later in 1953.[1] As well, she defeated amateurs and professionals in winning back-to-back National Titleholders Championships in 1941-42. In 1943 she won the North and South Women's Amateur Golf Championship at Pinehurst.
Dorothy Kirby played in her first United States Women's Amateur Golf Championship in 1934 at age fourteen. She was the runner-up to Betty Jameson in 1939 and to Louise Suggs in 1947 then won the most prestigious women's event in 1951. Attempting to defend her title, in 1952 she had the lowest round of the tournament but was still knocked out early. Dorothy Kirby was a member of four U.S. Curtis Cup teams 91948, 1950, 1952, 1954), and despite her success as an amateur, she chose not to join the professional LPGA Tour.
Dorothy Kirby retired from competition in the mid 1950s and worked as a radio and television sportscaster and sales representative for thirty-five years. In 1974 she was inducted into the Georgia Sports Hall of Fame and the Georgia Golf Hall of Fame in 1989.
She died in Atlanta in 2000.
Contents |
Year | Championship | Winning Score | Margin | Runner-up |
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1941 | Titleholders Championship | −1 (80-72-72=224) | 16 strokes | Helen Sigel |
1942 | Titleholders Championship | +14 (79-77-83=239) | 5 strokes | Eileen Stulb |
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