Company Profile

Texas Golf Association

Company Overview

The Texas Golf Association is a nonprofit organization that serves as the state’s governing body for amateur golf. Founded in 1906, the TGA is dedicated to promoting the game in Texas and serving its membership of more than 550 clubs and 150,000 individual golfers. The TGA administers 170 events across 350 days of competition each year, that include men’s and women’s championships, the Legends Junior Tour, multiple major college tournaments, as well as 60-plus TGA and USGA qualifying events.

Company History

Back in 1906, golf had just been introduced to the Lone Star State ten years earlier and was enjoyed by a relatively small number of people. To change that, a group of forward-thinking members, representing the country clubs of Beaumont, Dallas, Houston, San Antonio and Waco, met in Houston to form an alliance that would encourage others to take up the game.

On February 2, 1906, the Texas Golf Association was formally organized with a simple mission: “To promote the playing and advancement of the royal and ancient game of golf in Texas, by bringing the clubs and players of the state together.” Membership eligibility was open to “all regularly organized Golf Clubs of the State.” There was to be at least one annual meeting of the representatives of each club to take place in the spring, at which time “there shall be held a three day’s tournament to decide the championship of Texas for men.”

The first annual meeting was held in Dallas in April 1906. Forty-six players from the five original member clubs plus two clubs who had joined in the preceding month, showed up to compete for the State Championship on the links of the Dallas Golf and Country Club.

H.L. Edwards, an Englishmen transplanted to Dallas by way of the cotton business and who was also a member and founder of the host club and the first TGA President, shared the medalist award at 87 with F.M. Lewis of San Antonio. Fittingly, Edwards went on to defeat Lewis 3 and 2 in the finals of the match play event, for it was Edwards who is credited with introducing the game to Texas. In honor of the first TGA President and amateur champion, the TGA still presents the H.L. Edwards trophy to the winner of the Amateur Championship.

The amateur championship has produced a notable list of winners. The first four-time winner was the remarkable R.H. Connley of Austin (1908-11), who played every shot cross-handed. Connley, a member of Austin Country Club, was also the state’s trap-shooting champion and after a round would often have his caddie, a young Harvey Penick, throw clay pigeons so he could keep his aiming skills sharp. Five-time champion George V. Rotan, originally from the Waco club, also won four straight (1912-1915), then won again in 1919 representing Houston. Rotan, the first Texas amateur with a significant international reputation, was a member of the second U.S. Walker Cup Team in 1923, which won the Cup on the Old Course at St. Andrews.

Of more modern vintage, Masters champions Charles Coody and Ben Crenshaw, along with PGA Champion Mark Brooks have won the Texas Amateur. So, too, have Earl Stewart, Jr., Don Massengale, Bruce Lietzke, Bob Estes, John Grace and U.S. Amateur champions Scott Verplank and Kelly Kraft, who captured both the Texas Amateur and U.S. Amateur titles in the same year. Ralph Guldhal, who never won but was medalist in 1930, later claimed two U.S. Open titles. From the inaugural Amateur Championship in 1906 and the first Senior Championship in 1937, the Association has expanded its statewide competitions calendar to include a Mid-Amateur (both stroke and match play), the Father-Son, Four-Ball, Super Senior, Stableford Handicap, League Play and the Texas Shootout, the lone invitational event on the schedule.

The Association also added to its lineup nine regional tournaments, which include: the North and South Amateur, North and South Mid-Amateur, North and South Senior Amateur, North and South Four-Ball, and the West Texas Amateur. Additionally, every two years from 1995 to 2016 the TGA sent a team of three to represent the Lone Star State in the USGA’s biennial Men’s State Team Championship. From the inaugural U.S. Men’s State Team Championship in 1995 until the event was halted in 2016, Texas was the only state to have captured the national title four times, in 1999, 2005, 2007 and 2014, with Bob Kearney and Terrence Miskell capturing the individual titles in 1999 and 2005, respectively.

The number of member clubs has grown from the original five in 1906 to over five hundred (and counting), and the membership base is as diverse as Texas and includes every type of facility – from historic private clubs to the newest daily fees, from rural 9-hole family operations to multi-course resorts, and from military courses to local municipals. And while conducting the state’s most prestigious championships may have been the first and most visible role of the Association, it has grown right along with its membership, increasing the number of valuable services it provides over the years to now include Amateur Status reinstatement, Communications, Course and Slope Ratings, Educational Seminars, GHIN Handicapping, Junior Golf, Representation, and charitable work through the TGA Foundation, to list but a few.

For over 100 years, the Texas Golf Association has functioned to promote the best interests and true spirit of the honorable sport throughout the state of Texas. We cooperate with the United States Golf Association and the Northern and Southern Sections of the Texas PGA, and many others to help make the game more enjoyable for all golfers. That the Association has thrived and flourished since 1906 is a testament to the strength and character of not only its dedicated volunteer base, but to the cooperation and support of member clubs, their individual members, and other local, regional, state and national golf associations as well. The Texas Golf Association will begin its second century of service just as it did its last, by adhering to its original purpose: “To promote the playing and advancement of the royal and ancient game of golf in Texas, by bringing the clubs and the players together.”

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