
Tea and tees: Discover India's fascinating golf history
Subscribe to enjoy similar stories. The first flush is just starting and while I wait for these teas, I decided to catch up on some tea history, on tea and golf’s shared beginnings here in India. Back in the early 19th century, as British planters set up large tea estates, far removed from towns and cities, they needed a place to unwind and relax.
The clubs, already a British institution, were the inspiration and several planters’ clubs came up. By way of recreation, these clubs offered plenty of sporting opportunities, including, sometimes, a golf course, a game they played at home. Kolkata got the first golf course outside Britain in 1829.
In Assam, the first course came up in Jorhat thanks to tea planter D. Slimmon, who also started the Jorhat Gymkhana Club. As the tea industry expanded, more clubs came up, and golf became a part of some of them, often as 9-hole courses.
In 1964, the Upper Assam Golf Association (UAGA) was formed and today, most of its 150 members are from tea or oil or the Armed Forces stationed in the area. Their Assam Open is a highlight in their annual calendar, taking place in the 18-hole Digboi course. “Each of these golf courses have a history," says Siddharth Chaliha, planter and UAGA secretary.
And what history. In December 1900, the British Viceroy Lord Curzon arrived in Jorhat to announce the partition of Bengal. The avid golfer made time to also inaugurate the Jorhat Club.
A few years later, he went on to design a golf course in Himachal Pradesh. There’s a story from the Rydak tea estate in the Dooars, where in the 1980s, then manager Chirinjiv Bedi chanced upon a letter from the 1950s congratulating the estate manager on a good game. A golfer himself, his curiosity was piqued, and it set
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