A Dropbox link to photos can be found below
Alternatively go to Fleurieu Hickory Golfers website
www.fleurieuhickorygolfers.org

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A Dropbox link to photos can be found below
Alternatively go to Fleurieu Hickory Golfers website
www.fleurieuhickorygolfers.org

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Dinner report by John Trevorrow
The third and final Golf Society dinner for 2025 drew a large crowd to hear a presentation from Andrew Kirby about the connections between The Royal Melbourne Golf Club, Flinders Golf Club and Dr Alister MacKenzie. It was fitting that this talk was given at Royal Melbourne, the club that brought Dr MacKenzie to Australia from Britain in 1926 for his sweeping visit to five Australian states and New Zealand that changed the trajectory of golf course design in this part of the globe.
Andrew Kirby is a long-time member of RMGC and Flinders. He is a former Captain at RM and is chair of the disciplinary committee of Flinders GC. He is a very keen golfer and student of the game, and his presentation painted a vivid picture of the web of connections going back more than a century between both of these venerated golf clubs.
He began by revealing that the founding of Flinders GC in 1903 was thanks in large part to David Maxwell, the first club champion at Royal Melbourne. Maxwell was working in the Flinders area and saw the potential for a golf course, pushed to get it built and eventually became a club founder and the first Flinders GC secretary from 1903 to 1936. Flinders in those pre-automobile days was a far-flung outpost, not the easy 100km drive from Melbourne that it is today. Golfers and holiday-makers in 1903 would mostly arrive by train at Frankston or Bittern railway stations, then travel 15 or 20km over a couple of hours by horse and buggy.
The other links described by Andrew included:
Andrew also speculated on the famous suggestion that 1926 was the good doctor’s second visit. A much-disputed theory is that he visited in 1902 while working as a ship’s surgeon, in the era when he was interested in golf architecture but had not formally begun that career. Andrew cited possible evidence that includes:
This mystery, like the allure of Royal Melbourne and Flinders golf courses, endures to this day.
John Trevorrow

Dear Members,
Over the past 12 months the Society has been developing an online database with member access.
It is pleasing to let you know that this is now complete.
Members will be able to log into the website and update their contact details when required.
I have attached two documents which will guide through the process.
The documents should be used in the following order:
Having an up-to-date database will improve our administrative and communication efficiencies, so we kindly encourage you to login and add your details
If it is your first time to our website, please take the time to browse through pages.
Please note this member database is for your personal use and cannot be viewed by another member or publicly
Should you have any difficulty please do not hesitate to make contact.
https://golfsocietyaust.com/wp-content/uploads/Instructions_Log-in_Golf-Society-Website.docx.pdf
https://golfsocietyaust.com/wp-content/uploads/Instructions_Member-details_Golf-Society-Website.pdf
Stella Cugley
Secretary
Golf Society of Australia
E: info@golfsocietyaust.com
M: +61 408 364 864