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Live and Let Fly
Dominic Pedler
Without Ian Fleming there would have been no James Bond. In the spirit of the many retrospectives and events honoring the authors centenary, Dominic Pedler pays his respects to the man and his golf.
Ian Fleming's golfing
exploits go well
beyond a few rounds at
Royal St George's to
research the enthralling
golf chapters in Goldfinger.

The creator of James Bond was an active
member of the famous club at Sandwich from
1948 and was captain-elect in 1964, the year
he died. By then St George's had become a
retreat for him with his returns to London
usually limited to Tuesdays – "the only day
when lunch was not served at the club".
Fleming's love affair with golf had begun
almost half a century earlier, at Durnford
preparatory school near Swanage in Dorset,
which he attended prior to Eton. According to
his biographer, Andrew Lycett, it was 1916
when the eight-year-old Fleming was encouraged
to take his first tentative swings on a
small plot seeded by the headmaster, Tom
Pellatt. But his interest in the game took off in
his mid-teens, when, following the death of his
father, he spent long periods with his Granny
Katie, who lived at Nettlebed, near Oxford –
more importantly, near Huntercombe Golf
Club.
No mean golfer herself, Katie would often
drive her grandson in her Rolls-Royce to play
18 holes with him, with Lycett recording her
eccentric habit of tipping the caddies with
toothbrushes. The club history describes her
as a "formidable lady member of 40 years".
Fleming kept up his interest in golf through
his formative years and, while at university in
Geneva, divided his time between skiing and
golf, occasionally treating himself to a round
at the plush Divonne club.
By his mid-20s, he had settled into a routine
of playing golf with a close circle of
friends at both St Georges and Huntercombe,
helping his handicap (like James Bond's) to
dip to a respectable nine.
Ian Fleming –
Dreaming up a scene.... Ursula Andress emerging
from the surf in Dr No, perhaps?
But a former Royal St George's club pro and
a playing partner of Fleming's points out
that this is misleading by modern standards.
"In those days, handicaps at St George's
were calculated with reference to bogey. And,
in Ian Fleming's time, this was around the 78
mark," says Cyril Whiting, now retired and living
in his Sandwich home, who christened
'The Maiden' after the famous 6th hole. "Even
when he came down to around seven at his
lowest, that would have been equivalent to
around 12 or 13 today."
Whiting and his father, Albert, the St
George's club pro at the time of Goldfinger,
both have the distinction of being immortalised
in the book under the thinly-veiled pseudonyms
of Alfred and Cecil Blacking.
Whiting confirms that much of the golfing
trivia in the book have their basis in fact.
Most notable is the pro shop small-talk in
which Bond is told by Alfred that Cecil was
"runner up in the Kent Championship last
year", and that he "should win it this year if
he can only get out of the shop and on to the
course a bit more".
What a premonition. "I had been runner-up
before, as the book says, but then I did go on
to win it in 1959, a few months after
Goldfinger was published," remembers
Whiting, who was a guest of honour at the
recent Goldfinger Tournament arranged at the
club by the Fleming family.
Fleming played regularly with these loyal
pros, booking them as partners for his regular
weekend foursomes with a small nucleus of
golfing cronies. "My father or I would join up
with him, depending on who was available,"
says Cecil. "Even though the bets were never
much more than a fiver, as I remember, there
was always great pride at stake. He would
play his heart out. He was very competitive
and always like to get the edge".
Not that Fleming was a purist. "He didn't
really have a swing," says Whiting. "He had a
flat, scything action, and he didn't really bother
with lessons – but then not many golfers
did in those days. And I remember his incredibly
strong grip, which would cause him to deloft
the face at impact. It was impossible to
club him." The caddie with the task of clubbing
Fleming was the real-life Hawker, who caddies
for Bond in Goldfinger. "Alf Hawkes was his
name," recounts Whiting. "He was the best
caddie at the club, and was sought out by the
best members and their sons when playing in
top amateur competitions."
Given his winter writing schedule at his
Jamaican home, Goldeneye, Fleming was often
absent from St George's between Christmas
and Easter, but would invariably return rejuvenated
from his Caribbean jaunt. "One year I
remember he arrived back at the club with
this flash, left-hand drive American
Thunderbird," remembers Whiting. "And on
the golf course, he'd tell us these great
schemes, like smuggling banknotes in steel
shafts or diamonds in the centre of golf balls.
He was a character."
Quite apart from his club regulars, Fleming
played much golf with his close circle of highflying
friends he dubbed 'Le Cercle gastronomique
et des jeux de hasard'. Bridge and
draughts in the week would give way at weekends
to car races down to the south coast for
golf at favourite haunts such as Cooden Beach,
Rye and over to Le Touquet and Deauville.
Fleming enjoyed a particularly hedonistic
golfing jolly at the recently opened Gleneagles
resort in June 1934. He and 50 friends
(including what he described as "assorted wives and concubines") travelled from London
on a private train, with one carriage for gambling
and another for dancing. A photograph
shows him striding the fairway of the King's
Course with the MP for Bath, Charlie Baillie
Hamilton. The cost of the whole weekend was
ten guineas.
Fleming treated a circle of close friends to a
hedonistic weekend at Gleneagles.This is a shot of the
1st hole on the Jack Nicklaus-designed Centenary
Course, due to host the Ryder Cup in 2014
Even during some of his own tricky overseas
assignments, Fleming would find an excuse to
play golf. While in Tangier in 1957, for undercover
research into diamond smuggling with
former MI5 agent John Collard, Fleming insisted
they have a game at the Diplomatic Country
Club. Despite both playing off nine, Ian failed to
win a hole, being "too often in the rough ablaze
with irises and asphodel, which line the dry
waterhouses around and over which the course
has been constructed", he is quoted in Lycett's
biography.
Fleming kept up with his Old Etonian golfing
friends, playing occasionally in the public
school Halford Hewitt tournament at Deal, and
later gave the OEGS a large chamber pot he
christened 'The James Bond All Purpose Grand
Challenge Trophy Vase', which many members
considered in poor taste.
He continued to play with various Old Etonians in later life when rediscovering the
joys of Huntercombe with Sir Jock
Campbell, who lived near the course at
Nettlebed.
It was during an Old Etonian golfing
weekend at Rye that Fleming was taken ill
with heart palpitations, a condition that
would plague him thereafter. Not long after,
he took his wife, Ann, to Venice for a quiet
holiday. But to her dismay they bumped
into Count Paul Munster, an old White's
Club golfing partner of Fleming's from the
1930s, who duly insisted they spend the
week playing at the Golf du Lido. Fleming
jumped at the chance to sample the same
"browning, undulating fairways" that James
Bond himself would briefly encounter in
Risico, one of the short stories published in
For Your Eyes Only.
Meanwhile, father-and-son Whiting were
not the only real-life golfing characters to
find themselves immortalised in James
Bond stories. Hilary Bray (007's alter ego
from the Royal College of Arms in On Her
Majesty's Secret Service) was another Kent based
friend who often made up a foursome
with Fleming at bridge as well as golf.
Indeed, he proposed Fleming's membership
at Royal St George's in 1948.
Then there was Fleming's regular golf
partner, scratch St George's member, John
Blackwell, whose stories of lie-improving in
the Maiden bunker by unscrupulous opponents
inspired the similar incident in
Goldfinger.
Blackwell himself gets a mention by name
in that book, briefly surfacing as a "pleasant spoken
Import and Export merchant",
although he apparently was none too pleased
that his character was linked with the heroin
trade in Central America. Meanwhile,
Blackwell should get extra credit for inspiring
the name of the eponymous villain himself,
telling Fleming about the famous modern
architect of the day, Erno Goldfinger, who
was married to one of his cousins.
Sometimes the golf connections in the
Bond stories were even more subtle. Who,
for example, would ever have guessed the
origins of the opening line of Thunderball
had it not been for a lengthy plagiarism
lawsuit during which Fleming was challenged
to provide details about the source
of his material for the plot?
"It was one of those days when it seemed
to James Bond that all life, as someone put
it, was nothing but a heap of six to four
against," it reads. That someone was another
of Fleming's golf partners, the fine amateur,
John Beck, who captained the GB&I
Walker Cup team to their historic 1938 victory
at St Andrews.
One way or another, golf played an important
part in the life of Ian Fleming. On August
11, 1964, he had his last lunch in the clubhouse
of his beloved Royal St George's. In the
early hours of the following morning, he
passed away at the Kent & Canterbury hospital.
Lived, and let die.
FLEMING & THE CHAMBER POT TROPHY
Having enjoyed the company of many Old Etonians out on the links, Fleming christened this
rather ornate chamber pot 'The James Bond All Purpose Grand Challenge Trophy Vase',
which he donated to the Old Etonians Golf Society in 1962.
The OEGS have competed
annually for the trophy, usually at Royal St George's, apart from a few years when it was
stolen from an open-top sports car before mysteriously turning up on a TV quiz programme
on unusual objects.
(Photo courtesy Imperial War Museum)
HUNTERCOMBE...A PERFECT ENGLISH CLUB

From behind the wheel of an Aston Martin – DB5,
in silver, naturally – the golf club at Huntercombe
lies approximately 40 minutes southwest of
London, in the leafy Oxfordshire countryside, not
far from Henley-on-Thames.
This private members' club is remarkable for
the fact that it is not remarkable at all. It is a quintessentially
English institution – one which James
Bond volunteered to Auric Goldfinger as his home
club when quizzed on the matter of his handicap
before their epic encounter at Royal St Mark's
(the pseudonym given to Royal St George's in the
book.)
"I was playing with the professional. I will play
with you instead." Goldfinger was stating a fact.
There was no doubt that Goldfinger was
hooked. Now Bond must play hard to get.
"Why not some other time? I've come to order
a club. Anyway, I'm not in practice. There probably
isn't a caddie." Bond was being as rude as he
could. Obviously the last thing he wanted to do
was play with Goldfinger.
"I also haven't played for some time." (Bloody
liar, thought Bond.) "Ordering a club will not take
a moment." Goldfinger turned back into the shop.
"Blacking, have you got a caddie for Mr Bond?"
"Yes, sir?"
"Then it is arranged."
Bond wearily thrust his driver back into his bag.
"Well, all right then." He thought of a final way of
putting Goldfinger off. He said roughly,"But I warn
you I like playing for money. I can't be bothered to
knock a ball round just for the fun of it." Bond felt
pleased with the character he was building for
himself.
Was there a glint of triumph, quickly concealed,
in Goldfinger's pale eyes? He said indifferently,
"That suits me. Anything you like. Off handicap, of
course. I think you said you're nine."
"Yes."
Goldfinger said carefully,"Where, may I ask?"
"Huntercombe." Bond was also nine at
Sunningdale. Huntercombe was an easier course.
Nine at Huntercombe wouldn't frighten
Goldfinger.
"And I also am nine. Here. Up on the board. So
it's a level game. Right?"
With $10,000 dollars at stake (the sum being
the amount Bond had charged a Mr Du Pont to
prove Goldfinger's cheating at cards some weeks
earlier in Miami), Huntercombe was the perfect,
comparatively anonymous, English club for Bond's
purposes.
And so it remains to this day, for anyone. It gets
a mention in the novel because Bond's creator, Ian
Fleming, was a member there from 1932 until his
untimely death in 1964. He was also a pretty useful
nine, according to members who knew and
remember him.
As for the course itself, Huntercombe was originally
founded at the turn of the century by Willie
Park, one of the great professionals of his day,
whose father (Willie Park Senior) won the first
ever Open in 1860 – and won it again in 1863,
1866 and 1875.YoungWillie himself won the
championship in 1887 and 1889, and was widely
known for a long-standing challenge to play anyone
in the world for £100. In 1889, he was
engaged to design and supervise construction of
the Old Course at Sunningdale, Bond's other club.
Like most courses which are noticebly short on
the card, the difficulties at Huntercombe are
chiefly concentrated on and around the greens.
Many feature huge contours and two-tier plateaus,
so there is plenty of opportunity to rack up a
score with the putter.Over the years, many of the
original bunkers have been allowed to grow over
for ease of maintenance, and the course is littered
with grass 'pots' and hollows, in many cases more
dangerous than sand. Early posters advertised the
course as an example of a 'links golf inland', and
striking the ball off the trim turf remains one of
Huntercombe's distinct pleasures.
It may have been one of Bond's clubs, but it
need not remain a secret. Although a private club
with a keen membership, visitors and societies can
play the course on some days during the week.
The club's telephone number is (01491) 641207.
Richard Simmons
Reproduced with kind permission of Golf International.

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