Teeing off
in the Dutch times
In the latter part of the Dutch administration
in the maritime regions of Sri Lanka, Europeans of different ethnicities
came to the island either singly or with their wives and children,
as there were no hard and fast rules governing their arrival or
departure. Among those who arrived were not only the Dutch, but
also German, French, Swedish, Scottish and British nationals. For
the Dutch administrators, they all were vrij burgers or ‘free
citizens’, and permitted to earn their living in such ways
as suited them. Inn keeping and baking were preferred professions.
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The Golf Club where avid golfers tested their
skills |
The employees of the Dutch Company VOC were a separate
class of people, who were forbidden to marry native women. Concubinary
too was prohibited. All Europeans under the Dutch rule were known
as Lansi by the Sinhalese, shortening the Dutch word Hollandsche.
This community who settled in major towns had to get their ephemeral
needs and requirements of recreation and entertainment fulfilled.
Diving into the inventory
The lifestyle of the new settlers was not at all
in harmony with the day-to-day life of the ordinary locals. The
peculiarities of the European way of life are reflected in the printed
works of Dutch and English writers, whereas the archival sources,
especially records series such as last wills (testamenten) and sale
registers (vendu boeken), provide us with a vivid picture of their
requirements. This interesting series of documents that the Dutch
left with us is extremely important in analysing the urban social
life of the European community at the time. The notarial inventories
of household effects and last wills give us particulars of furniture
in rich and pleasing variety, jewellery, household ornaments, cutlery
and crockery, kitchen utensils, toilet requisites, lingerie, woollen
and cotton clothing, silks, satins, velvets, books and even their
gold, silver and brass clasps and many more.
While reading through some writings of Edmund
Reimers, the late Government Archivist, a reference was found to
a notarial inventory sworn to on May 6, 1771 of the ‘loose’
goods and effects of the Public Hostelry of Colombo. This aroused
my curiosity in wanting to read the original deposited in the archives.
Apparently, the keeper of the Hostelry had died a few days before,
and his widow, with typical Dutch caution, had proceeded immediately
to get the ‘loose’ goods inventoried. Mostly, her own
personal effects and those belonging to the dear departed were sealed
where that was possible, viz., in various chests, baskets and rooms
to which presumably the public had no access.
The Hostelry referred to in the document was housed
in a large, cool, well-ventilated, old Dutch colonial mansion. The
vestibule or voorhuis gave access to the front room or voor kamer.
This had the addition of the bedrooms or slaap kamers on either
side, and an inner room or binnen kamer were in the main building.
A wing on either side with the kitchen, or kombuis at the back enclosed
a paved court yard called the plaats. Usually a summer house or
a speel huis was a must in this type of an environment, but no mention
of such construction had been made in this document. The plaats
in the Hostelry appears to have been a lounge with a raised platform
called platje meant for the bar. The main lounge and place for refreshments
was in the galderij, or the wide verandah at the back of the main
building. The wings and the kitchen were surrounded by the plaats
or courtyard. On that account the rooms of the wings were called
the plaatse-kamers. The verandah, which was covered by a ‘half-roof’
or halve dak, the courtyard being open gave access by a wide gateway
to the back ‘garden’ called tuin, and a miniature golf
course called the kolf-baan. It is presumed that in this atmosphere,
the frequenters and the residents of the Hostelry indulged in a
mild form of recreation and exercise. In the garden was a construction
known as schaggerij (shed), where broken old furniture and other
odds and ends were placed.
According to the inventory, in the vestibule of
the Hostelry, there were six leather-covered armchairs, and a hanging
lantern described as blique (what we call belek in Sinhala). The
last four items in the shed off the golf course in the garden were
six glazed flower pots, 11 copper-branched candle sticks, 21 golf
balls, 19 golf clubs with two wooden statues.
A round of golf, anyone?
Mr. Reimers, who himself was a golfer, overwhelmed
by his discovery, composed the following lines, which was published
in a leading newspaper of the day with a caption Golf – a
la Hollandais.
“The weakness we often impute to the Dutch
Is giving too little and asking too much
But the little they give you’ll gladly admit
Is sometimes – not often – a really good bit;
E.g., golf, who’d have thought that jolly old threesome
On the dunes of Bruges so open and freesome
Was the direct ancestor of golf in Ceylon?
Colombo that is. Why share what you’ve won
By true right of inheritance straight from the Heer
Who in seventeen-seven odd kept such excellent cheer
In his place in the Fort, Mom, Roskammer, Deventer
Rhinewine and French ditto and Knyp and ‘Genever’?
And other good things besides both liquid and solid
Who hurried or strolled to bar or the links
For a game of Dutch ‘kolf’ or a couple of drinks.”
The word ‘golf’ is derived from the
Dutch kolf, meaning club. The historians are equal in agreeing that
golf originated in Holland and not in Scotland, where it was played
much in the 15th century. The Dutch colonial officers brought the
game to Sri Lanka. However, it is not known whether they played
it in a miniature course in the Fort or in the Galle Face Green.
Nothing is known about the origins of the game
of golf. Nor is it known when and by whom it was introduced to Scotland.
However, it was certainly established as a Scottish game by 1457.
Whatever its history may have been, golf was a recognised at an
early date as the national game of Scotland.
It was not until towards the 19th century that
golf began to spread over England with courses such as Hoylake in
Cheshire and Sandwich in Kent. With the expansion of the British
Empire, golf too was introduced into colonies as a popular pastime
among the compatriots, who were eager to have exercise and relaxation
for all classes of people. In Sri Lanka, golf began to be played
in major towns from the late 19th century.
The Colombo Golf Club was established in 1880
and the Nuwara Eliya Club in 1890. The Nuwara Eliya golf links at
the time were considered the most beautiful, and the best 18-hole
course in the east. Golf in Colombo later concentrated to the present
links in Borella since December 10, 1896. It was first named after
the British Governor Sir Joseph West Ridgeway, who contributed much
to promote the game in the island.
The Colombo golf links was provided with a beautiful
two-storied pavilion, which was completed in 1905 at a cost of Rs.
32,000.00. Its original beauty is well-depicted in the contemporary
photograph reproduced here. This building has been modernised with
several additions and alterations, changing the façade to
a greater extent. The Kelani Valley railway line cuts through the
golf links, adding an attraction to the putter on the plush green.
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