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Henry Cotton (golfer)

Henry Cotton
— Golfer —
Henry-Cotton 1931.jpg
Personal information
Full name Sir Thomas Henry Cotton
Born (1907-01-28)28 January 1907
Holmes Chapel, Cheshire, England
Died 22 December 1987(1987-12-22) (aged 80)
London, England
Nationality  England
Career
Turned professional 1924
Professional wins 37
Best results in major championships
(wins: 3)
Masters Tournament T13: 1957
U.S. Open T17: 1956
The Open Championship Won: 1934, 1937, 1948
PGA Championship DNP
Achievements and awards
World Golf Hall of Fame 1980 (member page)
Harry Vardon Trophy 1938
Member of the Order
of the British Empire
1946
Knight Bachelor 1988

Sir Thomas Henry Cotton, MBE (28 January 1907 – 22 December 1987), was an English professional golfer. He won the Open Championship in 1934, 1937 and 1948, becoming the leading British player of his generation.

Cotton was born in Holmes Chapel, then known as Church Hulme, near Congleton, Cheshire on 28 January 1907. He had an older brother, Leslie (born 1905), who also became a professional golfer. Cotton was brought in Peckham, London. He later went to Reigate Grammar School.and then won a scholarship to Alleyn's School in Dulwich, South London. He was a useful cricketer, good enough to bat at number 3 for the school against Surrey Club and Ground, a team containing 5 professionals, at the age of 15. Cotton and his brother had already taken up a second sport, golf, at the Aquarius Golf Club in Honor Oak from 1920. In September 1921 the Cotton brothers played in the first Boys Amateur Championship, then limited to boys under 16. Henry played the eventual winner, Donald Mathieson, on the first day, losing by 2 holes, Cotton was all square after 16 holes but lost the 17th after being incorrectly penalised for placing his bag in a bunker. Cotton also played in the 1922 Boys Championship, again losing in the first round. In June 1923 Cotton won the Hutchings Trophy, the Championship of the Aquarius Club.

Cotton left school in the summer of 1923 and soon started his career as a professional golfer, joining his younger brother Leslie as assistant teaching professional at Fulwell Golf Club under Fulwell's professional, George Oke, who had been at Honor Oak until 1921. Within a year Cotton had left and become an assistant at Rye Golf Club near Rye, East Sussex. During his time at Rye, Cotton travelled to Scotland to try to qualify for the 1925 Open Championship. However scores of 85 and 82 left him well outside the qualifying mark of 158. In March 1926, aged 19, he became the professional at Langley Park Golf Club near Beckenham in Kent, replacing Frank Ball who emigrated to America later the same year.


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