Lot # 3: c. 1825 Wrought Iron Cleek / Approach Putter

Starting Bid: $1,000.00

Bids: 5 (Bid History)

Time Left: Auction closed
Lot / Auction Closed




This lot is closed. Bidding is not allowed.

Item was in Auction "Spring 2024",
which ran from 3/28/2024 3:00 PM to
4/13/2024 8:00 PM



Rarely seen, cleeks made prior to 1850 are usually brutish things, with fat hosels and exceptionally thick blades. An account of a cleek published in 1842 notes that cleeks back then were made with a thick strip of smooth iron set at about 45 degrees (which matches this iron) and were useful for "tilting a ball out of a rough place near the hole." (See TCA2 v1 p120). Some have called these clubs "approach putters," as that is what the golfer was using it for when playing from a tough lie near the hole.

Which brings us to the point that the earliest cleeks made during the first half of the eighteenth century were rare specialty clubs. They were not the progenitors of the cleeks made in the second half of the 19th century.  Those slim and sleek, elegant irons were a descendant of the light iron. They were simply given the "cleek" name when the iron approach putters tried before 1850 dissappeared.  The early cleeks/approach putters—like this one—were thick all over.  These clubs were made heavy so a small stroke when near the hole would produce a solid shot.

The auctioneer believes the thick shaft in this club is a modern replacement. But it does not appear to be hickory. You would expect a modern replacement to be hickory. Because the nicking atop the hosel neither looks quite right nor accomplished by a skilled blacksmith who knew clubmaking, the auctioneer believes that the hosel was nicked when the shaft was removed/installed in modern times. Because nicked hosels were the standard throughout history, it is easy to understand why a prior owner of this club would want it to have nicking.  But nicking was not necessary.  On rare occasions, an old iron was produced without nicking.

Another important feature is the hosel pin.  In pinning the shaft into the head, the repairman ground/filed down both ends of the pin and the areas around them to make the pin flush with the hosel.  A cold metal coloring agent was then applied to the pin and the area around the pin on the top of the hosel to darken the freshly ground metal and help the club assume a more natural appearance.  This coloring agent, however, is found nowhere else on the head. The very first picture shows the fine grinding on the pin and the area around it.  

The fact that the hosel pin was treated this way—ground down, leaving scratch marks, and then colored—tells us that the pin is much newer than the head, that the patina was on the head long before it received the current pin. if the club was made in modern times, the pin would be neatly and smoothly fit to the hosel, with no grinding marks, and the finish on the head would be completely uniform, even on the pin itself. That is how clubs were made during the wood shaft era, and that is how both replica and modern playable wood shaft clubs are made today.

Leaving the shaft and nicking behind, this club is old. It's the real deal—a 200-year-old approach putter of considerable historical importance and rarity.  There is a major hosel weld down the back side of the hosel.  Hosel welds were formed when the blacksmith pounded the bar of iron around a mandrel to create a solid, round hosel. The resulting asymmetry of the hammer-formed hosel is clearly on display. 

Sometimes, during the featherball era, the hosel would be neatly finished "to a point."  Irons made then were not held to the same standards that arose thereafter.  Consequently, feather ball irons sometimes show their hosel welds. No big deal back in the day, but a big deal today! A hosel weld shows the hand-made nature of the iron head.  

Going hand in hand with the hosel weld is the wrought iron that was clearly used to form this head. Both feather ball and early gutty ball period irons were made from wrought iron which, unlike carbon steel, has a fibrous grain created by slag/impurities in the iron.  This fine grain will often be visible where it runs horizontally across the front and back of the blade.  Because the quality of wrought iron improved as time moved towards to the end of the 19th century the slag/impurities in the iron became less and less, so the grain became less and less prominent. Of course, there were variances from one smelting operation to the next as well, and that could affect the amount of slag in the iron.

The 6th image with this lot shows the fibrous grain if you zoom in. This closeup image also shows the blade of an 1875 Willie Wilson (not included) and the grain in its face. The grain is more apparent on the approach putter because the wrought iron is much older with more slag.  The patina on older wrought iron is typically a dark brown or even black.

The  iron used to make this head looks different from the iron used to make heads during the 1890s and is even more different from the mild carbon steel used in reproduction irons made with drilled hosels today.

There is a crack (not a hosel weld) down the leading side of the hosel. When the club received its current shaft, the auctioneer believes a small amount of epoxy was used to repair the crack from the inside. No matter, the crack won't be going anywhere now that the club is fully assembled and no longer in use.

The hosel is pinned front to back as was sometimes done during the featherball era but almost never thereafter. The face is uniquely dished. Instead of being slightly concave top to bottom, like the blade on many early heavy irons, the face on this iron is concave only across the middle section of the blade from heel to toe. This is a great feature that the auctioneer has only seen in this club.

This club measures 34" in length, which works for an approach putter.  The suede leather grip is a replacement but matches the period well.

All things considered, this remains a great club. Not only is it extremely rare, but it’s also roughly 200 years old and formed by a blacksmith. Evidence of its handmade nature is visible everywhere. Notice the assymetry between the top of the hosel on the leading and following side, and how the top of the hosel bells out a touch from the body of the hosel below it.   Bottom line, this early cleek was beautifully restored, presents wonderfully well, and possesses much that is wonderfully right.

This very same club in the same condition that it is now in was first offered at auction by Bonhams & Doyle in December of 1998 in New York City.  The iron was cataloged by Robert Gowland, the Bonhams auctioneer, as being a “Rare Late 18th/Early 19th Century Thick Blade Lofting or Approaching Iron” and given an $18,000 -$20,000 estimate.     

The gutty ball, other irons, and 1890 Bussey putter shown are not part of this lot.

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