Jack Harris (golfer)
Jack Harris | |
---|---|
Personal information | |
Full name | John Bruce Harris |
Born | West Footscray, Victoria, Australia | 8 December 1922
Died | 22 August 2014 Melbourne, Australia | (aged 91)
Height | 1.70 m (5 ft 7 in) |
Sporting nationality | Australia |
Spouse | Grace McGregor |
Career | |
Turned professional | 1940 |
Professional wins | 90 |
Number of wins by tour | |
PGA Tour of Australasia | 8 |
Other | 83 |
John Bruce Harris (8 December 1922 – 22 August 2014)[1] was a leading Australian professional golfer in the 1946–69 period. As a club professional he taught thousands of golfers and as a player he won 90 professional tournaments on the Australian golf circuit. Harris also served 6 years in the Australian Army during the Second World War.
Harris won a record six Victorian PGA Championship titles from 1950 to 1963 and the Victorian PGA Championship trophy is named the "Jack Harris Cup" in his honour. He became a life member of PGA Australia (2001) in recognition of his distinguished services as a PGA member and his achievements in the golfing community. He also became an inaugural inductee into the Victorian Golf Hall of Fame[2] (in 2011), alongside Peter Thomson, Burtta Cheney, Doug Bachli, Ivo Whitton and Bob Shearer.
Harris became a junior PGA member before age 18, under professional Colin Campbell at Long Island Golf Club in 1940. His professional golfing career was then put on hold for the next six years when he was enlisted in the Australian Army during the Second World War. He spent this time serving as a sapper (a soldier of the engineer corps) in Darwin and later on Labuan Island in Borneo. Harris was discharged from the army in 1946, aged 24, to resume a golfing career after missing a critical development period.
Harris was reacquainted with Colin Campbell and Bob Spencer (Campbell's nephew) who were running a teaching school on top of the Manchester Unity Building in Melbourne CDB. Later they worked in Hartley's sports store on Flinders St. All of Harris's teaching and practice at this time was done by hitting into nets off rubber mats. Harris won his first Victorian PGA in 1950 at age 28 while he was still teaching golf at Hartley's sports store.
In mid-1950 Harris became club professional at Keysborough Golf Club where he stayed for most of his tournament playing career. Bob Spencer later followed as Harris's assistant. Throughout his time at Keysborough he earned his living as a typical club pro (by teaching, running the pro shop etc.) and just like many of his contemporaries practice time to sharpen up his game for tournament play was very limited.[3] Despite this, Harris, throughout the 1950s and early 1960s was still ranked in the top handful of Australian golfers along with the likes of Peter Thomson,[4] Jim Ferrier, Kel Nagle,[5] Ossie Pickworth,[6] Norman Von Nida,[7] Eric Cremin,[8] Frank Phillips, Bruce Crampton, Bruce Devlin.[9]
Even without overseas experience Harris recorded multiple tournaments wins against many golfers who were Australian Open winners including three of whom were also major winners. He also played in tournaments with many top overseas golfers who visited Australia such as Jack Nicklaus,[10] Sam Snead, Art Wall Jr., Arnold Palmer, Gary Player,[11] Bobby Locke, Ed Furgol, Ed Oliver, Max Faulkner, Dai Rees, Harry Weetman, Harold Henning, Peter Alliss, Jimmy Adams, and Sewsunker Sewgolum.
After his tournament playing days were over Harris also spent 13 years as the club and teaching professional at Sorrento Golf Club on the Mornington Peninsula. Harris also continued as a teaching professional at his own school in St Kilda. He will also be remembered for his golf segment on the Channel 7 TV World of Sport programme in the 1960s alongside AFL legend Lou Richards, following on in this role from his first golf teacher, Colin Campbell. Even into his 80s Harris continued to organise a series of pro-am events for senior professionals. Harris was always willing to teach anyone who was interested in the game and was still assisting with lessons at the Wattle Park GC into his 90s.
Harris died aged 91 in August 2014.[12]
Honours
- An inaugural inductee into the Victorian Golf Hall of Fame in 2011.
- Life Member of PGA Australia (October 2001).
- The trophy for Victorian PGA winners was named the "Jack Harris Cup" to recognize his dominance in the event.
- Varley Trophy winner for best annual scoring average on several occasions.
- Australian International Squad member.[13]
Professional wins (90)
PGA Tour of Australia wins (8)
- 1950 Victorian PGA Championship
- 1952 Adelaide Advertiser Tournament[14]
- 1957 Victorian PGA Championship
- 1959 Victorian PGA Championship
- 1960 Victorian PGA Championship, Victorian Open
- 1961 Victorian PGA Championship
- 1963 Victorian PGA Championship
Other wins
this list may still be incomplete
- 1946 Victorian PGA Foursomes (with Colin Campbell)
- 1948 Yarra Yarra Open, Hartleys Easter Scratch
- 1949 Victoria Purse, Victorian PGA Foursomes (with Colin Campbell)
- 1950 Victorian PGA Foursomes (with Colin Campbell), Spalding Bowl, Woodend Purse, Amstel Purse
- 1951 Penfold-Bromford Purse, Amstel Purse, Royal Canberra Fourball Purse
- 1952 Victorian Close Championship,[15] Slazenger Purse, Penfold-Bromford Purse,[16] Don Walker Cup, Chesterfield, Amstel Purse
- 1953 West Victorian Open, Woodlands Coronation, Victorian Open Provincial, Keysborough GC Purse
- 1954 Albert Park Purse, Peter Scott Purse, Woodlands Open, Yarra Yarra Open, Williamstown Purse, Amstel Purse, Kew Purse
- 1955 Arthur Findlay Cup, Latrobe GC Purse, Liquor industry Purse, Keysborough Purse
- 1956 Peter Scott Purse, Woodlands Open, South West Victorian Open, Liquor Industry Purse, Williamstown Purse, Latrobe Purse
- 1957 Liquor Industry Purse, Woodend Open, Victorian PGA Foursomes (with Bob Spencer), Yarra Yarra Open, Chesterfield Purse
- 1958 Liquor Industry Purse, Yarra Yarra Open, Woodlands Open, Keysborough Purse, Rossdale Testimonial, Northern Purse
- 1959 Mount Lofty, Amstel, Victorian PGA Foursomes (with Bob Spencer), Woodlands Open, Yarrawonga Open, Green Acres Purse, Cranbourne Purse
- 1960 Yarra Yarra Easter Open, Victorian PGA Foursomes (with Bob Spencer), Yarrawonga Open, Keysborough Purse, Kooringal Purse, Northern Purse, 3AW Purse, Kingswood Purse
- 1961 Henderson Purse,[17] Victorian Close Championship, Woodlands Open, Liquor Industry Purse, Victoria Purse
- 1962 South West Victorian Open, Victorian Close Championship
- 1963 NSW/Vic Border Open, Victoria GC Pro-am
- 1964 Woodlands Open, Van Cooth Celebrities, Liquor Industry Purse, Royal Melbourne Purse
- 1965 Woodlands Open, Keysborough Purse
Team appearances
- Vicars Shield (representing Victoria): 1948, 1951 (winners), 1952 (winners), 1953 (winners), 1954, 1955
References
- ^ "PGA Australia Facebook".
- ^ "Victoria Celebrates Legends". PGA Australia. Archived from the original on 22 February 2014.
- ^ Blake, Martin. "Tee to Green". The Age. Retrieved 14 July 2004.
- ^ "Harris Equals Course Record". Illawarra Daily Mercury. 8 September 1953.
- ^ "Congratulations for Winner". The Mercury. 22 November 1954.
- ^ "Top Pros, at Wattle Park". The Argus. Melbourne. 19 March 1955.
- ^ "Half-way Leader Fight For Open Golf Title". The West Australian. 30 August 1952.
- ^ "Cremin, Harris in Victorian Title". The Advertiser. Adelaide. 19 November 1949.
- ^ "Cellarbrations Victorian PGA Championship". PGA Australia. Archived from the original on 18 February 2014.
- ^ "Swinbourne and Phillips 2 under". The Canberra Times. 26 October 1962.
- ^ "Nagle Breaks Records To Lead Golf Tourney". The Canberra Times. 28 November 1957.
- ^ "Vale: PGA Life Member Jack Harris". 22 August 2014. Archived from the original on 3 September 2014.
- ^ "Golfer to meet Americans". Western Star (Roma). 30 September 1952.
- ^ "Bunker Didn't Stop Jack Harris on Winning Run Home". The Mail. 5 April 1952.
- ^ "Harris Takes Close Golf Crown With Record 68". The Argus. Melbourne. 20 October 1952.
- ^ "Harris Wins Penfolds Purse". The Advertiser Adelaide. 1 August 1952.
- ^ "Vic. Golf to Harris". The Canberra Times. 4 September 1961.