
Peter Thomson Statue
Victoria Golf Club today honoured its most famous
member by unveiling a bronze statue of five-times British Open champion
Peter Thomson AO, CBE .
Thomson's five British Open wins between 1954 and 1965 rank him second
to Harry Vardon who won the title six times between 1896 and 1914. Such
was his dominance of the title in the 1950s that in the years that he
did not win between 1952 and 1958 he was runner-up.
The unveiling was attended by Thomson, wife Mary, daughter Deirdre,
members celebrating the club's Foundation Day, MPs Andrew Robb and
Murray Thomson, Bayside Mayor James Long, and the CEOs of Golf Australia
and the PGA, respectively Stephen Pitt and Max Garske.
Melbourne sculptor Louis Lauman took six months to produce the
work, drawing his subject in charcoal and using Thomson family
scrapbooks to capture the swing and accurately portray the clothes and
equipment of the era.
The statue is 1.1 times (110%) life size, sculpted in clay and cast in
silicon bronze at the Fundere Fine Art Foundry in West Footscray.
Golfing greatness is measured by major championships won and longevity
in the game. Thomson's first victory of note was his club championship
at Royal Park in Melbourne at the age of 16 in 1946.
His last win came in the 1988 Seniors British PGA Championship and he
won somewhere in the world at least once every year from 1950 until
1973. In 1985 he dominated the US PGA Senior Tour with an unprecedented
nine victories.
His brilliant playing career, with victories spanning five decades, was
capped in 1998 when he led the International Team to its only success
against the might of United States in the Presidents Cup at Royal
Melbourne.
Along the way he found time to design and build more than 100 golf
courses around the world, serve as chairman of the Australian
Professional Golfers Association for 32 years, run for Parliament in
Victoria and pioneer the professional golf circuit in Asia.