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Golf Ball History
Historical references of the
first golf ball
makers point to
Holland back in the 15th
century. Dutch golf players
originally played with
wooden golf balls made from
elm or beech.
Gradually the Dutch replaced
the wooden ball with a white
leather ball filled with
cow's hair which was used in
the local game of kaatsen
(hand tennis). The kaatsen
ball later inspired the
Scots to invent the
"feathery" sometime in the
17th or early 18th century
as a replacement for the
wooden ball that had little
aerodynamic or control
benefits.
See History of
the golf ball below
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Historical Timeline Of Golf Ball Evolution
During the latter part of the first decade in the twentieth
century, golf ball manufacturers were experimenting with rubber
core mesh balls. It was at the beginning of this period that the
modern day golf ball came to be.
Early dimple balls offered
players greater spin and feel and competitors began designing
unique mesh type patterns on golf balls.
There was the Rifled
Ball with groves like in the barrel of a gun, raised banana
shapes, donut dimples, Stars, Circles, Hexagons and eventually
the square mesh ball became standard.

In
the earliest days of golf on
the eastern coast of
Scotland, players used
primitive equipment to play
the game.
The first clubs and balls
specifically made for golf were fashioned from wood.
The balls used were made
from hardwoods such as beech
that were likely imported
from Holland. These balls were used from the 14th to 17th
Century .
Record books show that in 1447 King James II
outlawed golf due to concerns that his subjects preferred
playing golf over weapons training.
The Feather Ball:
In
1618 the feather golf ball
or 'Featherie' was
created most likely with
inspiration from the Kaatsen Dutch hand ball. The feather ball
period was the longest
period of stability in the
history of the golf ball.
The feathery ball period
lasted from as early as the
14th Century to as late as
the 16th Century and was
produced until the early
1850's. Originally these balls were
likely to have been filled
with wool or hair. Ultimately
the contents were changed when it
was discovered that the use
of feathers would produce a
livelier and longer lasting
ball golf ball that was
preferred over the previous versions.
Feather Ball Construction:
Several pieces
of stout leather were
tightly stitched, leaving a
small opening. Boiled and
softened feathers were tediously
stuffed into the casing
before the final stitches
were made. The surprisingly
hard feather ball was
hammered into roundness and coated with several
layers of paint.
The
Gutty Ball: This is where the modern era started, with the
feathery being replaced by the gutty. Gutty-percha is a
similar material to rubber that is made from the dried sap of a
tree. The first "Gutta" ball is believed to have been made in
1848 by the Rev. Dr. Paterson from gutta-percha packing
material. Gutta-percha is the evaporated milky juice or latex
produced from a tree most commonly found in Malaysia. Gutta
balls, were handmade by rolling the softened material on a
board. The new durability of the Gutta, together with its much
lower cost, resistance to water, and improved run, provided
rejuvenation to the game of golf, thus the Gutta gradually
replaced the Feathery.
Gutta-percha
enormously enhanced the game of golf, and it was soon discovered
by golfers who failed to smooth their balls by boiling and
rolling them on a "smoothing board" after play, that a many
"nicked" balls had truer flight than the smooth gutta. Thus the
hand hammered gutta was created by hammering the softened ball
with a hammer to give the ball an even pattern that greatly
improved its play. Later iron molds or ball presses were used to
form the balls and create patterns.
Bramble Surface
textures and patterns impressed into the gutta-percha balls
evolved to greatly improve the ball’s flight. The best known
balls were the hand-marked private brands of the Scottish club
makers. Many brands with a variety of patent names used the
bramble pattern (with a surface similar to the berry). This
became the most popular pattern of the gutta era and was also
used on some of the early rubber balls.
The
rubber ball was invented in 1898 by a Cleveland, Ohio,
golfer, Coburn Haskell, in association with the B. F. Goodrich
Company. The ball featured rubber thread wound around a solid
rubber core. The Balata cover was developed in the early 1900’s.
Bramble, mesh, reverse mesh, and a great many other patterns
gradually gave way to the aerodynamically superior dimple
pattern first used in 1908.
Modern On
January 1, 1932, standardization of golf ball weight and size
was established by the United States Golf Assn. following 1930
standards set by the British Golf Assn. for a slightly smaller
ball. The weight was set at a maximum of 1.620 oz., and diameter
not to be less than 1.680 in. Later. after testing apparatus was
developed to measure velocity, a maximum velocity of 250 feet
per second was added by the USGA. The durability and precision
of today’s balls reflect technological advancement of their
manufacture and the development of space age plastics, silicone,
and improved rubber.
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