The Standard (St. Catharines)

World’s largest golf library heading to sport’s birthplace

Scottish-born collector gifting 28,000 books to R&A

- DOUG FERGUSON

Alastair Johnston returned home to Scotland after an internship with IMG and brought with him 30 golf books that had been collecting dust in storage.

That was more than 50 years ago.

His next shipment to Scotland is going to be substantia­lly more.

What began as a hobby has become the largest golf library in the world. Johnston has kept his stunning exhibit in rows of shelves on the second floor of his home in the Cleveland suburbs. It now contains more than 28,000 volumes covering five centuries of the royal and ancient game. So enormous is his library that it requires two volumes totalling 944 pages for the bibliograp­hy alone. And he’s giving it all away. Johnston, vice-chair at IMG and former chair of Rangers Football Club, is gifting the entire library to the Royal & Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews to establish the most comprehens­ive collection of golf books. The location has not been determined, though it will be within walking distance from the Old Course. It will be called the Alastair J. Johnston Library.

For the Scottish-born Johnston, it only made sense — for the home of golf and for himself.

“I had a sense of appreciati­on from having seen so many of my friends in the collecting world try to leave it to family, sell it or do something that would dampen their enthusiasm the last 20 years of life,” Johnston said Monday. “I tried to have a plan that would make me more enthusiast­ic the last 20 years of life.”

In other words, he’ll still be searching, spending and acquiring. That’s what keeps him going.

One of his greatest finds was the first edition of “The Goff,” written by Thomas Mathison in 1743, the first book devoted to golf.

It also has “The Chronicles of Golf,” an exhaustive tome that covers 400 years of history starting with the 1457 Scottish Acts of Parliament. Johnston and his father spent eight years researchin­g and writing it.

Johnston grew up in Glasgow and is an R&A member. In his role at IMG, he has been heavily involved in TV negotiatio­ns for The Open Championsh­ip.

But this was more about his native home.

Johnston can recall more than one occasion when he was in Scotland and would find pamphlets from the 19th century or club histories that revealed so much about the early establishm­ent of golf. Stuffing them into a briefcase, he would board a plane in Prestwick to return to IMG headquarte­rs in Cleveland and feel like a thief.

“I was taking pieces of great Scottish history from authors,” Johnston said. “And I was thinking it should not have been leaving the country.”

The idea of returning it to Scotland never left him, even as the collection grew and he began to appreciate the magnitude of the library he was building. The trick was to find a beneficiar­y that could keep it together, grow it and protect it.

Is there a better fit than the oldest golf in the world? A better place than St. Andrews?

The R&A is making plans to move everything to St. Andrews, where it will be managed by the museum and heritage division. It’s part of a redevelopm­ent plan ahead of the R&A celebratin­g the 150th British Open at St. Andrews in 2021.

“We are committed to nurturing the world-class status of the library and ensuring that Alastair’s legacy is maintained for the enjoyment of those who love this great sport,” said Martin Slumbers, CEO of the R&A.

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