Green Jacket Auction Of Old Tom's Photo Collection

With pretty lousy weather around the country, you might yourself with a few minutes of extra web browsing time and I highly recommend the latest Green Jacket Auctions auction.

There are many neat objects, but the Old Tom Morris photos up for sale are the real prize. Many are believed to have decorated his walls and were found after Eric Auchterlonie passed and these were discovered in an old horse stable.

From the auction description:

On the property grounds, inside an old horse stable and hidden behind two large hessian coal stacks, was one of the most historically significant golf collections in the world. Word of this so-called “Stable Find” quickly spread throughout collecting circles.

The collection – consisting of more than 40 original photographs from the 1800’s – was personally owned by the legendary Old Tom Morris, and then passed down in the Auchterlonie family for almost 90 years.

Maybe because I sought out the golfing ghosts at Leith Links this year, this one from there with Old and Young Tom Morris really looked special. From the description:

1867 Leith Links Gravure w/ Old & Young Tom Morris

At the 1867 Grand Golf Tournament, a photographer was present to take 3 group photographs of the early professional golfers. This was simply unheard of at the time, though the exact reason for the photographer's presence has been lost over time. That group included both Old Tom Morris and his then-16 year old son Young Tom Morris. This is Old Tom Morris' personal copy of one of those rare images.

This original gravure (Version 1 - Young Tom on Steps) depicts the greatest golfers of 1867. The entire piece measures 15 1/4” x 12”, with the image (including names) measuring 9 7/8 x 7 3/4.

The auction ends January 18th.

And the image:

The King's State Of The Game: Do Not Credit Me For "Salvaging" The Open Championship, It Was Frank Stranahan

Arnold Palmer makes his once-a-year GolfChannel.com appearance to expand on the "State of the Game," and because so many he knew passed away in 2013, The King remembers friends, rivals and even those he had less than perfect relationships with.

While the disharmony with Ken Venturi was well known and Palmer's take here fascinating, I was even more interested in his views about the late Frank Stranahan and The Open Championship.

One last note about Frank. I am often given credit for “salvaging” the British Open in the early 1960s. We can argue whether the game’s most historic championship really was in danger of sinking, but it is safe to say that after World War II, many American competitors simply found it easy and more profitable to compete here in the United States. Frank never quit on the Open. He continued to compete there on a regular basis, and finished second in 1947 and 1953. His devotion to the Open Championship is what inspired me to go over in 1960. I won the following year, and I’ve been credited ever since with “saving” the Open, but it was Frank who paved the way.