*** Welcome to piglix ***

Harry Cooper (golfer)

Harry Cooper
— Golfer —
Personal information
Full name Henry Edward Cooper
Nickname Lighthorse Harry
Born (1904-08-04)August 4, 1904
Leatherhead, England
Died October 17, 2000(2000-10-17) (aged 96)
White Plains, New York
Height 5 ft 8.5 in (1.74 m)
Weight 152 lb (69 kg; 10.9 st)
Nationality  England
 United States
Spouse Emma Buchanan Cooper
(1910–2002)
Career
Turned professional 1923
Former tour(s) PGA Tour
Professional wins 37
Number of wins by tour
PGA Tour 31
Other 6
Best results in major championships
Masters Tournament 2nd/T2: 1936, 1938
U.S. Open 2nd: 1927, 1936
The Open Championship DNP
PGA Championship T3: 1925
Achievements and awards
World Golf Hall of Fame 1992 (member page)
Vardon Trophy 1937
PGA Tour
leading money winner
1937

Henry Edward "Harry" Cooper (August 4, 1904 – October 17, 2000) was an English-American PGA Tour golfer of the 1920s and 1930s. After he retired from competitive golf, he became a well-regarded instructor, into his 90s. In his long golf career he had 31 PGA Tour victories and was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 1992.

Cooper was born in the town of Leatherhead, England. His father Syd was a professional golfer who had served as an apprentice to Old Tom Morris at St. Andrews. His mother, Alice Cooper, was also a golf professional, a very rare career for women in that era. His family moved to Texas when Cooper was young, and his father took a job as a club professional in Dallas.

Cooper honed his skills at Cedar Crest and turned professional in 1923. His first pro win, the Galveston Open in 1923, came before he turned twenty years of age. A perennial U.S. Open contender (with seven top-10 finishes and second place in 1927 and 1936), Cooper was nicknamed "Lighthorse Harry" by sportswriter Damon Runyon for his quick pace of play in winning the inaugural Los Angeles Open in 1926, completing the final 18 holes in 2.5 hours. (During the American Revolution, Lighthorse Harry Lee was a cavalry officer in the Continental Army, later the father of Confederate general Robert E. Lee.)

Cooper played in the inaugural Masters Tournament and placed second there in 1936 and 1938. He reached the semi-finals of the PGA Championship in 1925. In all, he finished in the top-10 19 times in major championships.


...
Wikipedia

...