Twenty years after Francis Ouimet’s stunning playoff victory over Harry Vardon and Ted Ray in the 1913 U.S. Open, venerable golf writer Bernard Darwin, who witnessed the incongruous upset, said, “There was never a wetter day and never in all of golf a more historic one.”
Surprisingly, the man who provided the game with its seminal moment in America did not consider it his crowning achievement. Ouimet was proudest of the first of his two victories in the U.S. Amateur Championship, which came one year later, on Sept. 5, 1914, at Ekwanok Country Club in Manchester, Vt. He once described it as his “greatest thrill.”
“Winning the Open was one thing – the winning of the Amateur was the fulfillment of an ambition,” Ouimet told Joe Looney of the Boston Herald in 1963. “The Open was a windfall. The Amateur was within reach, or so I thought.”
In other words, Ouimet simply couldn’t fathom beating Vardon and Ray. As he put it in his 1932 book, “A Game of Golf,” “I honestly think I never got the ‘kick’ out of winning the Open title that I might have if I had thought I could win it.”
The following year at age 21, he tied for fifth in the defense of his U.S. Open title, eight strokes behind Walter Hagen at Midlothian Country Club in Blue Island, Ill. Three weeks later, in the mountains of Vermont, he pulled off a victory in the 20th U.S. Amateur that surely cemented his stature in the game.
Ekwanok Country Club was founded in 1899, and its course in the shadow of Mount Equinox opened for play in 1900. The layout was designed by John Duncan Dunn and Walter Travis, himself a three-time U.S. Amateur champion (1900, 1901 and 1903). The Ekwanok golf professional at the time was none other than Horace Rawlins, who captured the inaugural U.S. Open in 1895 at Newport (R.I.) Golf Club and had a seven-year tenure at Ekwanok.
In the only USGA championship contested in the tiny New England state, Ouimet qualified one stroke behind co-medalists William C. Fownes Jr. and R.R. Gorton among a field of 104 players with a 36-hole score of 145.
Ouimet proceeded to reel off five match-play victories, capping his triumph on Sept. 5 with a 6-and-5 win over Jerome D. “Jerry” Travers, the four-time and two-time-defending Amateur champion. Along the way, Ouimet defeated three other players who had either already captured or would go on to win the U.S. Amateur – in order, Max Marston (1923), Robert A. Gardner (1909, 1915) and Fownes (1910). Ouimet had prevailed against staunch opposition in the U.S. Amateur, which was then and would long be considered the most important golf championship in the country.
Ouimet’s victory in that final match came over a foe in Travers who was universally acknowledged as the game’s premier match-play competitor. Ouimet continued to be a perennial U.S. Amateur contender, but he would not prevail again until 1931, a 17-year gap that remains the record for years between U.S. Amateur titles.