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At TZ GOLF we specialize in vintage clubs and golf related items that have a cult like following, may be underrated in some circles, are beautiful to look at, have great performance, give a better value than overpriced new clubs and will help golfers have more fun & style on the golf course.
SUNDAY SET Spalding BLADES 3,5,7,9, Irons 52*,58*, Putter
History of Spalding Golf
No matter what brand of club you pull from your bag, you owe some thanks to one company — Spalding. At the turn of the 20th Century, golf had stirred mild interest in the United States, and A.G. Spalding & Brothers sporting goods saw an opportunity.
The company was already selling golf balls when, in 1905, it became the first in America to offer its own brand of golf clubs.
Starting in 1900, Spalding opened club-making factories in London and in Fife, Scotland, producing forged iron heads for Spalding clubs sold both in the UK and U.S. Irons made during that time are distinguished by an anvil cleek mark.
The company's unique "baseball mark" — A.G. Spalding had helped put baseball on the map--was stamped on the clubs and below it "Made in Great Britain" appeared. Throughout America, the affordable Spalding clubs flew off the shelves and reaped huge catalog sales.
Spalding introduced many variations of hickory-shafted clubs to bring distance and control to the professional and duffer alike. By 1910, the company was selling aluminum fairway clubs and its Gold Medal series (1910 to 1919) featured aluminum bronze.
The company’s lead-faced putters also provided better touch for players. One of the most famous Spalding clubs was the Cran Cleek (club with a narrow face and little loft) for poor fairway lies and even putts. Today, collectors prize the narrow-faced Cran Cleek.
Golfers have always known that deep-grooved irons produce better control and spin. Spalding led the way with such deep-grooved designs as the "waterfall" and waffle-face irons. Until the USGA banned deep-grooved irons, Spalding's Stop 'Em and Dedstop clubs brought a smile to countless players' faces.
By the Roaring '20s, A.G. Spalding & Brothers was using the process of "drop forging" to manufacture metal club-heads. Club-makers’ traditional method had been to shape metal heads with an anvil and forge.
Now, like Henry Ford's assembly-line Model T's, Spalding craftsmen used a mechanical hammer to craft club-heads, drill sockets in them to attach the shaft and then polish the heads, all of which allowed Spalding to mass produce matching club sets.
Spalding club-makers paid as much scrutiny to shafts as heads. The company experimented throughout the 1920s and 1930s with lathe-turned hickory shafts that featured circular ridges spaced at standard intervals down the entire shaft.
The design gave the clubs an exotic bamboo look; the underlying message being that these clubs offered players bamboo's legendary flexibility and whip-like strength.
With Spalding's mass-market success breeding scores of imitators, players could pick and choose from countless club lines. Golf bags bulged with 20 to 25 clubs, and the USGA, fearing too many specialty clubs had watered down the skill required in golf, took action. In 1938, the USGA passed an edict limiting players to 14 clubs.
Some of the most popular Spalding Club models were:
At one time, Greg Norman used the Spalding Tour Edition irons, now a collectors item, on Tour. Buyers can still find Spalding clubs on some secondary sites.
The success of Spalding golf clubs had compelled the USGA to act, but this success was not destined to last forever. Mismanagement and a growing golf market led Spalding to cease manufacturing golf products, selling off popular brands like Top Flite to Callaway in the early 2000s.
Review: "I have a full set of these. 2 thru PW irons and four woods - driver, 3, 4 and 5. My dad and mom bought them for me in 1979 when I made the high school varsity golf team my first year. I stopped playing them over 20 years ago. I always had face savers on the irons and covers on the woods. I had them re-gripped in the mid 80's. They were a very special gift."
This vintage set is in exceptional condition, there are age appropriate scratches and slight dings (see pictures), grips (some original) are playable, great looking shafts, as well as minimal groove wear.
These irons will be a great set for play or as collectables for many years.
The original 7 and 9 irons were replaced with an Arnold Palmer 7 and the Spalding Bob Goalby 9 iron.
Steel shafts in excellent condition