Club History
On a wet and windy October day, eight years before the beginning of the 20th century, the first Headingley members put club to ball on a nine-hole course in Spen Lane, on the Beckett estate – now Beckett’s Park.
That makes Headingley the oldest club in the city of Leeds. It was one of only 14 Yorkshire clubs to feature in the official Golf Club Directory of 1892. On that first day October 29, 1892, the correspondent for the Leeds and Yorkshire Mercury reported that despite the foul weather, high wind and rain…
So numerous did the devotees of the game appear to be in Leeds and District that in view of Saturday’s success one can only explain the absence of a Leeds club in the past by the difficulty commonly experienced of obtaining the required amount of space in the neighbourhood of a large town to play the game in anything like its true and primitive character
The need to expand from nine to eighteen holes proved difficult on the Beckett estate so in 1905 the first steps towards a move to the present site were taken at club’s annual general meeting. The name was changed to Headingley Golf Club Ltd., and the founding fathers, three woollen manufacturers, a clothier, a tramways manager, a solicitor and a merchant began the process that brought the club to Adel.
To raise the money for the new clubhouse and course facilities subscriptions for new gentlemen members were raised from just over 3 guineas to 5 guineas. Existing members took up debentures to help raise the £3,000 needed for the new clubhouse and on course facilities