Category Archives: Sport

Galpin’s Park Golf Club

Short-lived golf club that was at the Mitcham Common end of Galpins Road.

This 1910 OS map shows the likely location of the course, based on the newspaper article below. The outline field is 50.743 acres, and the article reported it was ‘about 45 acres’.

OS map reproduced by permission of the National Library of Scotland, reuse CC-BY (NLS)

Croydon Chronicle and East Surrey Advertiser – Saturday 13 January 1912

GALPIN’S PARK GOLF CLUB. The above club opened their new links for play on Christmas Day, and in spite of the inclement weather a large number of members were present. The links are situated at the end of Galpin’s-road adjoining Mitcham Common, in a large field of some 45 acres. An excellent nine-hole course has been laid out with temporary greens for winter use and the proper greens will be ready for play in the spring. A most gratifying feature attending this new departure is that although barely a month since the inception of the club upwards of 100 members have been enrolled. Intending members would do well to send in their names without delay to the Hon. Secretary, Mr. T. C. Quiney, Bickleigh, Guildersfield-road, Streatham, who will be pleased to give any information on the subject.

The club was taken over by the Pollards Hill Golf Club, as reported in the Streatham News – Saturday 19 April 1913

The Pollards Hill Golf Club, Ltd. Pollards-hill South, Norbury, has taken over the Galpins Park Golf Club, and has, it is said, decided to make the course 18 holes.

Lil Bullock tribute in 1965

From the 1965 Mitcham Cricket Club yearbook:

THROUGHOUT the 300 years or so that cricket has been played on England’s village greens, practically all the pitches have been put down within a six-hit of a church. The fact that the local inn was usually within spitting distance is pure coincidence! But we
cricketers wouldn’t have it any other way . . .

Mitcham Green has been well served for many years by magnificent establishments like the King’s Head, The Cricketers, The White Hart and The Queen’s Head. But it is the King’s Head with which we are more concerned here for it houses the only female vice-president in the long history of the club – Mrs. Lilian Bullock, or, as she is known to the famous, the infamous and the nobodies — ‘Lil’.

Achievements

Since she came from enemy territory of Enfield, Middlesex, Lil’s acceptance into the world of Surrey cricket was in itself an achievement, but her association with Mitcham goes back 40-odd years to the days when her father was a baker and confectioner almost opposite the King’s Head, and Burn, her husband, was on the Surrey staff at the Oval.

Until his death in 1954, Burn was an active member of our club, being a vice-president, a life member and match secretary. It was undoubtedly his influence which propelled Lil into club activities.

Shortly after they met she attended her first club function, a meeting of the tea committee — and wound up chairman. Those were the days when a band of elegant ladies provided the food and then presented the club with a splendid marquee from the profits.

Burn & Lil took over the King’s Head in 1941 after his retirement from county cricket and coaching duties and Lil has become as big a part of Mitcham as the lavender itself! Her generosity is unbounded.

Great names have appeared on the Green – and in the King’s Head – because of the Wilson Hospital charity matches. Arranged by Burn and fed by Lil would be a fitting description for these fixtures!

Baseball – cricket

Once, in Burn’s absence, Lil arranged a game for a visiting crowd of American reporters against Monty Garland — Wells’ XI. They turned out in ordinary walking shoes, threw the bat away and ran after hitting the ball, broke a lamp on the Green and generally shattered the piece and reverence of an afternoon on the ‘sacred’ turf.

Those days are gone, but Lil’s affection for the club is reflected in the fact that she made her grandson, Nicholas Dawson, a member in 1961 when he was only 6 1/2 HOURS old!

Just the same

All good publicans put out the red carpet for their customers. When you walked into the King’s Head, Burn always made you feel that you were the very person he was hoping to see.

We still get the same welcome – except that now the greeting is a very cheery and very feminine “Hello darlings”. As I said before — we cricketers wouldn’t have it any other way.
R.H.