Lot # 177: Smith & Martin's Foulis Mashie NIblick.

Starting Bid: $75.00

Bids: 4 (Bid History)

Time Left: Auction closed
Lot / Auction Closed




This lot is closed. Bidding is not allowed.

Item was in Auction "Summer 2020",
which ran from 7/8/2020 12:00 PM to
7/25/2020 8:00 PM



In December of 1905, James and David Foulis received a US patent that covered this 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 is a worthy example of a Foulis mashie niblick.  The face is nicely curved top to bottom, the unique-shaped head has a nice even patina, and the back is stamped "Smith & Martin Makers, Oakland" and "Hand Forged"  The head is not marked with the Foulis name, but in every way it matches up to those that were. Of particular interest is the tiny "Hand Forged" stamped on the back of the blade.  This is clearly Spalding's stamp that was used from the late 1890s until approximately 1908, which tells us that Spalding provided the head to Smith & Martin and, as clubmakers, they shafted it.

The shaft still has its original underlisting and just under half of its original sheepskin grip.

 

Views: 431