In
December of 1905, James and David Foulis received a US patent that
covered a concave face iron which the patent identifies as a "mashie
niblick." The Foulis brothers are often credited with inventing the
mashie-niblick. In addition to making a club that was a "cross between a
mashie and a niblick," their club had a concave face top to bottom.
According to the patent, the Foulis brothers calculated that the curved
face would provide additional backspin. As we all have learned, not
everything works out quite like we might hope, but the curved face makes
their club all that more collectible!
James Foulis was the winner of the 1896 US Open, held at Shinnecock
Hills Golf Club on Long Island. He and his brother are credited with
developing the bramble pattern cover used on the newly invented
rubber-core Haskell golf ball. The two brothers are often called the
founders of Mid-West Golf, as, headquartered in Chicago, they helped the
game expand into middle America. James also laid out a number of
courses.
This particular iron is modeled after the Foulis concave face mashie
niblick. Complete with a concave face and a bit of a pointed toe very
similar to that on the Foulis model, this mashie niblick was made circa
1920 by Burke and the back of the head is marked "Harrison" but is twice stamped with Burke's Rampant Lion trademark.