Golf Tee Collecting
Uncover the Joy of Collecting
Why Collect Golf Tees?
The earliest tees were the work of caddies who took a pinch of sand from the preceding hole, moistened it and formed a small mound. This became much cleaner and more uniform with the invention of the “sand tee mold”, its cup packed with damp sand and inverted onto the teeing ground. (That by H.G. Alexander in balsa wood was the earliest in 1890). Others followed in brass, steel, aluminum and eventually Bakelite with spring assisted plungers becoming the norm.
More above ground examples followed with flat bottomed plastic or rubber tees, and cone shaped foldable paper tees.
Finally, ground piercing tees were invented, including one by Thompson and Co in the 1890’s with a solid India rubber top anchored by a steel peg into the ground called the “Perfectim” (though apparently of questionable durability and negative effect on the strike). Tyler & Smith devised a simple angled wire with a circular loop to suspend the ball above the ground. Others followed with hinged tees and spinner tees to avoid breakage or interference. Also, to avoid loss of the small metal or celluloid pegs in the ground, numerous examples were created with tethers to lead weights or to tassels or to other tees of varying height.
The modern era began with American dentist William Lowell who hand carved small wooden tees that he soon manufactured as THE REDDY TEE popularized by Walter Hagen (attempts at green colored or degradable versions were abandoned when golfers simply picked them and reused them). There were many ensuing shapes (trumpets, funnels, goblets, classics, etc.). With the advent of tees professed to add distance or accuracy, there are now distinct rules on designs.
Not to be ignored are desirable associations including Tee Boxes (containers) and Tee Holders.
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Articles on Golf Ball Collecting from Our Publications
Here are a few relevant articles on ball collecting from our archives (in The Golf and The GHS Bulletin).
A Short History of Golf Ball Dimples and Patterns
Why/How to Collect Golf Balls
GHS Zoom Presentations
The GHS Ambassador Program
Doug Marshall, Canadian historical golf leader, 1937-2022
Member exclusive – video interview with Dr. Bob Jones IV
Leonard Fischer, March 2021
Lance Enholm, April 2019
Joe Meehan, August 2019
Dr. George “Willie” Gayle, October 2019
Dick McDonough, author of ‘Great Golf Collections’ 1942-2021
Gene Boldon – 1927-2020
Extra Holes for Autumn 2019
Membership news and notes
Extra Holes – The Golf, Summer 2019
GHS Board Meeting Minutes and President Statements
The Golf, Spring 2019 – Extra Holes
Eras of Golf Tee Collecting
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Sand Molds
Other above ground tees
Ground Penetrating Tees
Reddy Tees and beyond
Tee Boxes
Tee Holders
Fakes
& More
Golf Ball collecting Resources
Video Resources
Collecting Playlist
FEATURED GOLF BALL COLLECTIBLE
Johnny Bulla
Autographed Ball
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Golf Ball tees
From Our Blog
Our blog has a constant stream of valuable articles on golf’s rich heritage.
Tee mold with wings
Plastic tees banned from British course
Golf Ball collecting Resources
Recommended Reading Resources
- 500 Years of Golf Balls, by John F. Hotchkiss, 1997, Antique Trader Books
- The Essential Guide to Collecting Golf Balls, by Colin Palmer, 2010, Riley Dunn & Wilson Ltd.
- Antique Golf Collectibles, 3rd Edition, by Chuck Furjanic, 2004, Krause Publications
- Golf in the Making, by Ian Henderson and David Stirk, 1979, Henderson & Stirk Ltd.
- The Encyclopedia of Golf Collectibles, by John Ohlman and Morton Ohlman, 1985, Books Americanna
- Antique Golf Collectibles, Identification and Value Guide, by Pete Georgiady, 2006, Collector Books
- The Story of the Golf Ball, by Kevin W McGimpsey, 2003, Philip Wilson, London (winner of the 2004 Murdock Medal presented by the British Golf Collectors Society)
- The Collectible Golf Ball Directory, Folio I, ‘Gutta-Percha’ golf balls 1845-1903, by Kevin W McGimpsey, 2021
- The Collectible Golf Ball Directory, Folio II, ‘Rubber-Cored’ golf balls 1901-1919, by Kevin W McGimpsey, 2022
- The Collectible Golf Ball Directory, Folio III, ‘Rubber-Cored’ golf balls, A-K 1920-1945, by Kevin W McGimpsey, 2023 [November]