|
|
|
The following is from an article originally written by Betty Hansen of Sugarbush for the Tri-States 50th Anniversary.
For fifty
years, women from Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine have maintained a rivalry
- a golf rivalry and a friendly one at that. For fifty years they have
fielded teams and waged their friendly competitions at different golf courses
throughout Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont, and always during the third week
of June.
It al started in 1952 when Ruth Raymond Jones, the "great lady" of
Vermont Women's golf, fondly nicknames "Jonesie", realized one of
her many golfing dreams - to have an annual team competition among the three
states. Together with interested women golfers in her own state, Maine
and New Hampshire, the first tournament was planned and staged in Maine.
Mr. Harold Peart, a prominent businessman and owner of Sprague and Carleton,
furniture manufacturers in Keene, NH, donated the original trophy in
1952. It was a large silver loving cup called the Peart
Trophy. Mr. Peart was a great supporter of women's golf in New
Hampshire and his wife, Nemo Peart, played on the original New Hampshire
Tri-State Team.
Although early records of the Tri-State Tournament series are almost
non-existent, we do know that the first tournament was won by the Vermont
women.
In addition to "Jonesie", the founder of the Vermont Women's Golf
Association, early participants were Betsy Weston of Claremont, NH and Polly
Merritt of Rutland, formerly of New Hampshire. Betsy and Polly played
for New Hampshire in the early years, but up until 1991, they had played on
the Vermont team for twenty-four consecutive years. (Betsy has been a
Vermont State Champion and a Seniors Champion in the past). In addition
to Polly and Betsy, other team members in those early years were Marion Benham,
Mae Murray Jones, Olive Miller, Tessie Woods, Marion Shattuck, and Hilly Finn
to name only a few.
Having run out of space to engrave any more state names of thirty years of
Tri-State Tournaments, the original trophy - The Peart Trophy - was retired in
1982 to the Keene Country Club in New Hampshire where it originated. It
is on display there today. New, there is a new "trophy plaque"
to take its place and it goes home for the year with the winning state team.
Tri-State has been a one-day tournament with a practice round played the day
before. One the day of tournament play, threesomes are made up of one
team member from each of the three states. The format is a Match Play
Nassau - hole by hole - with one point given for each nine holes won, one
point for the eighteen holes won and a half point for tying nine or eighteen
holes. Each players is effect, is playing against the two opposing team
members in the threesome. The maximum number of points a competitor can
win is six. In 2002, a second round of competition was added with
modified alternate shot competition on the first day of play.
Originally there was only one division consisting of twelve regular team
members and six alternates. They Played at scratch - no handicaps.
The quality of play has always been very high. In fact in 1975, Mary
McNeill set an unofficial (because it was match play) course record at
Orleans while playing on the Vermont Tri-State team.
Over the years and A, B, and C division system has evolved. Each state
had a A division with seven members with 0.0 - 12.9 handicaps; B division had
ten players with 13.0 - 22.9 handicaps . There were six alternates per
state. On the day of the tournament play, the alternates played a low
gross/net tournament among themselves.
Players for Tri-State competition are chosen for the team based on level of
play, individual handicaps and past participation in previous
tournaments. The Tri-State Tournament has been held consecutively for
forty-nine years (up through 2001). During that time, Vermont women have
won the trophy fifteen times. Maine has won twelve times, and New
Hampshire has won twenty-two events.
New Hampshire has always been Vermont's most formidable opponent. There
are many more women golfers in New Hampshire and, therefore, New Hampshire has
greater depth from which to choose their team. There have been many
attempts over the years to even out the three teams.
At times, A division played at scratch, B division played at a percentage of
individual handicaps and C division played utilizing entire handicaps.
This system comes up for regular review. New Hampshire, being the
strongest team and the one to give the most strokes, would prefer to play at
scratch with handicaps not being relevant. But for the past years,
Vermont and Maine have prevailed and the tournament has been played using the
total handicap system.
In recent years, Vermont's team has included players such as Mickie LaCroix,
Cindy Paquet, Marilyn Hamilton Patton, Marge Muhonen, Joe Ann Richardson, Pat
Job, and Ruth Weigand. All of these women have participated in at least
eight tournaments and as many as sixteen.
It is very easy to spot team players from a distance as each state has it's
own colors. Vermont wears burgundy and beige, New Hampshire is attired
in green and white, and Maine in navy blue and white.
In addition to the serious aspect of the Tri-State Tournament - the goal of
winning - there also exists something intangible and very important for the
participants. It is the camaraderie, friendship, and good times that
have been established over the years among the players. Betsy Weston
chaired the tournament in the late 60's. "For me the best part of
Tri-States are the friendships I've made and playing with and against people
I've known for a long time. But I preferred that the tournament be
played with no strokes."
Mary Emans, frequent Women's Club Champion at Woodstock Country Club, is
another "great lady" of Vermont Women's Golf. She was Vermont
Chairman of Tri-State for more than 12 years. Mary said recently,
"For me, those 12 years most surely added another facet to the pleasure
of the game. It was great fun to share a common ground with women of
such varying backgrounds and ages. Most of them had a genuine devotion
to the game, were very interested in each other's equipment and home courses,
and most surely were competitive! And the later trait elicited some very
fine golf, record breaking from time to time. Quite a few players have
turned professional, like Jane Blalock and Donna Caponi." (Pat
Bradley, Tina Tombs, Holly Reynolds and others have also gone one to
play professionally.)
Mary Emans has spent a great deal of time perpetuating the spirit and
enthusiasm of the tournament. "Each state has been so very proud to
win the trophy - it is a great feeling to be captain, watching the points add
to the victory. And a great feeling too is to play the final hole with
your teammates surrounding the green pulling for you to make the
putt." In 1987, in recognition of her outstanding efforts and
dedication to the success of the Tournament, New Hampshire made Mary Emans and
honorary member of the New Hampshire Women's Golf Association.
Mary has many stories to relate about the early years of the Tri-State
Tournaments. For example, she tells of the time Tessie Woods of
Springfield was heading for a New Hampshire course, and missed the turn
winding up in Maine. In 1979 when the Tournament was held at
Wentworth-By-The-Sea in New Hampshire, the mosquitoes were so fierce that cans
of bug spray were chained to ball washers on each tee, resulting in some very
mosquito bitten team members (New Hampshire won that year!). In 1976,
when the tournament was played in Kearsage, New Hampshire (now the Country
Club of New Hampshire), all the competitors were lodged in one motel - five
women to a room. There were no screens, no air conditioning, the banquet
was held in a roadhouse, and the entire area was a mosquito-ridden
swamp. (new Hampshire was that year too!)
Mary Emans sums up her feelings of Tri-State by saying, "I loved the
opportunities to meet so many of my fellow Vermont women golfers, to play so
many other courses in New Hampshire and Maine, to compete against those who
had become old friends over the years, and to share wild victories and
heartbreaking defeats. What else could it have been but wonderful?"
In addition to
the day of play, there is always a pleasant evening spent with all the team
members. The host state organizes a cocktail part and banquet.
Seating is arranged according to the threesomes who will be competing the next
day, thereby "breaking the ice" before confronting each other on the
first tee in the morning.
Even "getting there is half the fun". Carpooling, especially
in vans, is always a treat. A trip out-of-state can provide the time for
a game of bridge or just pleasant conversation.
Participating in the 50th anniversary of Tri-States at Rutland Country Club in
Vermont this year (2002) will be a special honor. All players will recognize
and appreciate the rich tradition of such an outstanding regional tournament.
|
Year |
Location |
First |
Second |
Third |
|||
|
1953 |
Maine |
Vermont |
|
New Hampshire |
|
Maine | |
| 1954 | Rutland CC, VT | New Hampshire | |||||
| 1955 | New Hampshire | Maine | |||||
| 1956 | Maine | New Hampshire | |||||
| 1957 | Burlington CC, VT | Vermont | 33.5 | New Hampshire | 25.5 | Maine | 15.1 |
| 1958 | New Hampshire | Vermont | |||||
| 1959 | Portland CC, ME | Maine | 102 | New Hampshire | 87.5 | Vermont | 26.5 |
| 1960 | Woodstock CC, VT | Maine | New Hampshire | Vermont | |||
| 1961 | New Hampshire | New Hampshire | |||||
| 1962 | Kennebunkport, ME | Vermont | |||||
| 1963 | Vermont | Vermont | |||||
| 1964 | Laconia, NH | New Hampshire | |||||
| 1965 | Maine | Maine | |||||
| 1966 | Rutland CC, VT | New Hampshire | |||||
| 1967 | Hanover CC, NH | New Hampshire | |||||
| 1968 | Gorham CC, ME | New Hampshire | |||||
| 1969 | Sugarbush, VT | Vermont | 68 | Maine | 44 | New Hampshire | 50 |
| 1970 | Nashua CC, NH | New Hampshire | |||||
| 1971 | Martindale CC, ME | Maine | 66 | New Hampshire | 47 | Vermont | 33 |
| 1972 | Equinox CC, VT | New Hampshire | Vermont | Maine | |||
| 1973 | Laconia CC, VT | Vermont ? | |||||
| 1974 | Rockland CC, ME | Maine | New Hampshire | Vermont | |||
| 1975 | Orleans CC, VT | New Hampshire | Vermont | Maine | |||
| 1976 | Kearsage CC, NH | New Hampshire | Maine | Vermont | |||
| 1977 | Augusta CC, ME | New Hampshire | Maine | Vermont | |||
| 1978 | Woodstock CC, VT | New Hampshire | 77 | Vermont | 45 | Maine | 40 |
| 1979 | Wentworth, NH | New Hampshire | |||||
| 1980 | Martindale CC, ME | Maine | |||||
| 1981 | CC of Barre, VT | Vermont | |||||
| 1982 | Keene CC, NH | Vermont | |||||
| 1983 | Waterville CC, ME | New Hampshire | |||||
| 1984 | Rutland CC, VT | New Hampshire | Vermont | Maine | |||
| 1985 | N. Conway CC, NH | Maine | |||||
| 1986 | Augusta CC, ME | New Hampshire | |||||
| 1987 | Mt. Anthony CC, VT | Vermont | |||||
| 1988 | Portsmouth, NH | New Hampshire | 89 | Maine | 64.5 | Vermont | 62.5 |
| 1989 | Rockland CC, ME | Maine | |||||
| 1990 | Woodstock CC, VT | Vermont | |||||
| 1991 | Eastman CC, NH | New Hampshire | |||||
| 1992 | Bethel CC, ME | New Hampshire | |||||
| 1993 | Quechee Club, VT | Vermont | |||||
| 1994 | Nashua CC, NH | Vermont | |||||
| 1995 | Samoset CC, ME | Maine | |||||
| 1996 | Basin Harbor, VT | Vermont | |||||
| 1997 | Hanover CC, NH | Maine | |||||
| 1998 | Sugarloaf, ME | Vermont | |||||
| 1999 | G.M. National, VT | New Hampshire | 97.5 | Vermont | 84.5 | Maine | 79.0 |
| 2000 | Eastman CC, NH | New Hampshire | 110 | Vermont | 87.5 | Maine | 72.5 |
| 2001 | Waterville CC, ME | Maine | 98.5 | Vermont | 94.5 | New Hampshire | 77.0 |
| 2002 | Rutland CC, VT | Vermont | 189.0 | New Hampshire | 137.5 | Maine | 78.5 |
| 2003 | N. Conway CC, NH | New Hampshire | 176.0 | Vermont | 143.0 | Maine | 86.0 |
| 2004 | Boothbay CC, ME | Vermont | 161.5 | Maine | 125.0 | New Hampshire | 118.5 |
| 2005 | Haystack GC, VT | New Hampshire | 164.4 | Maine | 128.0 | Vermont | 112.5 |
| 2006 | Hanover, NH | Tournament cancelled due to weather | |||||
| 2007 | Rockland, ME | Vermont | 146.0 | New Hampshire | 137.0 | Maine | 122.0 |
| If anyone has any information to fill in the gaps in these records, please forward that information to the web administrator, capaquet@msn.com. Thanks! |