-40%

Vintage MacGregor Edgemont Hickory Shaft E6 Forged Mashie Golf Club RH

$ 21.12

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Shaft Material: Wood
  • Club Type: Mashie
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Modified Item: No
  • Custom Bundle: No
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Dexterity: Right-Handed
  • Brand: MacGregor
  • Model: Edgemont
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Gender: Men
  • Vintage: Yes
  • Flex: na

    Description

    Vintage MacGregor Edgemont Hickory Shaft E6 Forged Mashie Golf Club RH
    Note:  I have 16 sets of irons, 16 wedges, and 9 hickory shaft clubs purchased from the collection of Curtis Person Sr., Tennessee Hall of Fame golfer who won 127 tournaments from 1930 - 1970.  All the iron sets and wedges in the room were from the early 1970's and before.  Most of the grips look like they were replaced with Golf Pride Victory in the 1990's by his son Judge Curtis Person Jr., former US Senator.  Google Curtis Person Sr.  Below are some excepts from his Biography:
    He was well placed as a member of the museum committee seeing as how he had a large room in his house dedicated just to golf memorabilia. By 1995, Person had 409 putters, 250 bag tags, and half a dozen golf bags chock full of clubs.
    CURTIS PERSON SR.
    Category:
    1970 - 1979 Inductees
    Year Honored:
    1972
    BIOGRAPHY
    For Curtis Person Sr., winning golf tournaments was just like breathing – it came naturally. Starting in 1930, Person began a long and distinguished playing career which would last over forty years. During that time he would go on to win 129 golf tournaments, making him the winningest amateur in the history of golf. His crowning achievements came as a senior when he won twenty major championships, including a USGA National Senior Amateur Championship in 1968 and 1969. No surprise then that “Golf Digest” ranked Person as the Number One Senior Golfer in the United States for five consecutive years from 1966 through 1970. His remarkable achievements did not go unnoticed by his home state either, and after winning the Grand Slam of Senior Golf in 1968, Person was named Tennessee Athlete of the Year. Perhaps the most important and satisfying honor in Person’s career came in 1969 when he was selected by the Golf Writers Association of America as the winner of the Ben Hogan Award. This honor is presented annually to the golfer who has overcome a physical handicap and returned to championship golf. In 1961 Person was told by doctors that he would never play golf again and would have extreme difficulty walking for the rest of his life. Through sheer determination, he proved the doctors wrong and returned to become the greatest senior golfer the game has ever known.
    Credit 1:
    Person, C.
    Credit 2:
    Golf House Tennessee
    Thanks for bidding!