The man who called himself John Montague seemed to appear out of nowhere, simply popping up at the first tee of the public golf courses around Hollywood, California, in the early 1930s. He was a squat and powerful character, somewhere in his late 20s, and he came armed with a pleasant disposition, good looks and a curious set of oversize clubs that featured a driver that weighed nearly twice as much as normal, a monster of a club with a huge head that sent golf balls well over 300 yards down the fairways.
Or at least it did for him. He knew how to make that driver work.
"My brother Bob first met Montague when he was playing out at Sunset Fields," Bud McCray, a local golfer of note, once said, describing his first sighting of the new arrival. "There is a dogleg where the city of Beverly Hills turns into the city of Los Angeles on Wilshire Boulevard, and at two in the morning, Montague used to stand there and hit golf balls down Wilshire Boulevard."
There was a touch of unreality, a mystery about him from the start. He wasn't one of those casualties from the first stages of what would become the Great Depression, wandering into town battered and bankrupt, following a last-chance dream of palm trees and prosperity. He wasn't part of the perpetual stream of tap-dancers and cowboys and lounge singers hoping to find celluloid stardom on the back lots of the movie studios. He was a golfer. He wanted to play golf.
Where did he come from?
He never said.
What did he do for a living?
He never said.
He just wanted to play golf.
Far from indigent, he dressed well, drove fast cars and within a few months was breaking course records. No one ever had seen a man attack this game, this sport, quite the way he did. His long drives set up easy approach shots, which set up birdie putts, which he made more often than he missed. He could sculpt shots around trees or over buildings, step on a ball in the sand, bury it, then blast it out to the desired location. He was a golfing wonder.
Rumors soon circulated about how he had pointed at a string of birds on a telephone wire 175 yards away from a tee at Fox Hills Country Club, picked out a bird in the line, unleashed his three wood and smacked a shot that not only hit the bird, but struck it dead, broke its neck. Broke its neck! He supposedly would open a window in the clubhouse, any clubhouse, prop it open with a water glass, then knock a succession of chips through the small space, never breaking the window nor whacking the wall. He supposedly hit a box of matches off a cocker spaniel's head. The dog never blinked.
The stories and the record scores accumulated in a fast pile. Not only did this John Montague play great and goofy golf, he seemed able to outdrink, out-eat, out-arm wrestle the world. His appetites and abilities seemed almost superhuman. He routinely showed off his strength. Need to change a tire? No jack was necessary. Montague could simply hold the proper end of the car aloft while someone else attached the spare.
In a town of interesting characters, he moved rapidly toward the top of the list. He became someone to know.
"I think I met him the first time in Palm Springs," actor Richard Arlen said. "We played at the only course there was at the time [O'Donnell Golf Club]. Par was either 68 or 70. The latter, I think. O'Donnell was a nine-hole course that put a premium on accuracy. This was one of Monty's strong points. His rounds were 61-61-61-59!"
Arlen, a leading man, star of Wings, which won the first Academy Award for best picture in 1928, became an early friend. The actor was an avid golfer with a low handicap, fascinated by Montague. He played often with him, took him to different courses around the area, eventually suggested that Montague join him as a member of his home course in Burbank. Montague agreed.



Comments
I am not a golfer - but this was one of the most interesting and entertaining articles I have read in a long time... Thank you it was great~!
Posted by Bonny Giovanni on May 30,2008 | 06:08AM
I am more then a little skeptical that any 200-220 pound man could one arm lift another 300 pound man, Oliver Hardy. If he could do that he would be stronger then any heavy weight Olympic class lifter. Was this article written as an example of how myths get started?
Posted by John Elliott on May 31,2008 | 07:12AM
Golf is a game of the heart, With a love that’s meant to last, This brings to mind Payne Stewart, A class act for sure has passed. Flying high in the wild blue yonder, Above the masses below, Payne and those who were with him, Why did they have to go? He was more than just the clothes, This loving husband and father of two, That’s the number of U.S. Opens won, Why? What did he do? A champion of the greens, A master when buried in the sand, On his way to the TPC, The Lord had other plans. Payne birdies 18 to finish at 60, The site is so clear in my mind, But with an 80-foot eagle for the win, God shoots a 59. Payne extends his hand with a smile, Congratulating God for a record back 9, All the while thinking to himself, Lord I’ll get You next time. A lifetime of fond memories, Doing what he loved to do, In our hearts he’ll be here forever, Even though he’s gone at 42! Poems By Luke Easter
Posted by Luke Easter on June 1,2008 | 08:10PM
It's unfortunate that article like these are written. Anyone, and I mean anyone, that golfs knows that these stories are, if not out and out fabrication, exagerated beyond belief.
Posted by Roger Mochel on June 3,2008 | 11:38AM
My father Jack Gaines (1898-1957) was one of California's top amateur golfers in the 1930's. State Champion at Pebble Beach '35, SoCal '32 & 37, etc. A high school teacher and coach, he played most of his golf during summer vacations. He got to know several of the celebrities mentioned in the article. He played many rounds with Bing Crosby at Lakeside (Crosby was a 2 handicap and club champion)--in one match they played "The Great Montague". I have a telegram sent from Lakeside congratulating him on winning the State Championship from several notables including Crosby, Guy Kibbee, and Randolph Scott. Dad also played in the Desert Championship--which drew the best amateurs in the country--to the O'Donnell Course in Palm Springs. Winning it three times and once playing in a featured foursome which included Babe Didrikson--with War-Bonds as the price of admission. I was about 10 years old and got to walk the course with them. What fun!
Posted by John Gaines on June 3,2008 | 07:16PM
This was the most enjoyable article I have read in years. I can see why some people would think it contains fabrications, but with so may quotes from notable people, you have to give some credibility to the content. I heard similar comments about Tiger Woods when he walked away with the Masters' championship a few years ago.
Posted by Raymond Smith on June 5,2008 | 06:59PM
I believed every word of it! Seriously, I was skeptical, too, but when I read what sports journalist Grantland Rice witnessed and wrote, I figured that maybe half of what was written about this Montague guy was probably true. Speaking of the unbelievable, there's an interview with Tiger's Left Knee at the ARMCHAIR GOLF BLOG.
Posted by Neil Sagebiel on June 6,2008 | 09:58AM
A great read. My father, Norm Blackburn joined Lakeside in 1936 and I grew up around the place. Johnny Weissmuller gave me a few diving lessons at the pool. In 1974, Dad wrote the Lakeside 50th Anniversary Book for which he was made an honorary member with Bob Hope. Bing Crosby tells of his match with Montague on page 108. Several of the John Montague stories were told on page 127 by Weissmuller. Montague was club champion in 1933-34. I always thought Lakeside was a men only club until the 60's so when I saw the reference to Floncy Rice being a member in the early '30s, I immediately hauled out my copy of dad's book. In deed, Flouncy was made a member in 1935, a year before Grantland joined. Thanks for bring back a lot of memories. Norman Blackburn
Posted by Norman A. Blackburn on June 13,2008 | 12:51PM
read the article read the book --wonderful wonderful!I have know idea about the Payne Stewart post or the Tin Cup post--Both are silly! However,the judge was correct--The jury should have been hung!
Posted by robert douglas on June 19,2008 | 01:07PM
Who would win the golf match John Daily or John Montague? Imagine the damage those guys could have done together boozing it up.
Posted by Jeff Bergo on June 25,2008 | 09:51PM
How the good life & good times were acknowledged by those who live them. Friends and conversation that's golf.
Posted by wayne bradley on July 3,2008 | 03:28PM
Believe it or not, La Verne Moore was my Great Great Uncle. My Grandma and her two sisters (La Verne's nieces) are still living in the Rochester and Syracuse areas. He made his money by smuggling from the Canada border, in the Adirondack area and all the way down to NYC. Also theres a picture of him and Babe Ruth along with Bing Crosby. There was never really any huge stories told because he supposedly kept things secret. Its pretty cool knowing that someone in my ancestry actually made a name for themselves.
Posted by Drew Rogers on July 10,2008 | 10:30PM
Great article, allways enjoy reading about someone like him.
Posted by ROBERT STERLING on July 14,2008 | 09:25AM
My father was a long time member at Lakeside from the early thirties till his death in 1963. As a young person I played many rounds at Lakeside and had a nodding acquaintance with the celebrity characters you mentioned in your story. I also knew Montague, but never managed to play golf with him. However,on a course that eventually became a part of 20th Century Fox studios I ran into Montague on the sixth tee which was fronting Pico Blvd. and directly across the street from Hillcrest Country Club. Montague was on the tee and betting any takers that he could hit a ball with a six iron over an eighty foot water tower on the Hillcrest property. I waited to see if anyone would take the bet and finally someone did and Montague performed. The word got around quickly so Montague ran out of pigeons. Finally, in the mid fifties I was waiting on the first tee on the Rancho Golf Course when this haggard street person approached me. It was Montague. He asked me for a few dollars he needed to get his car out of impound, but promised to pay me within a few days. I never saw him again, but I'm glad you have revived his legend with your article and most of the stories regarding his golfing and strength activities were substantially true.
Posted by Howard Sheehan, Jr. on July 18,2008 | 11:14PM
I am a distant niece of Uncle John Montaque. I remember him as a loving, fun, strong and compassionate man. I also remember some of his amazing shots. These stories are true. When I was young my grandfather and Uncle John would sit around at night (yes with the whiskey) and talk of their day with people like Bob Hope, etc golfing. He and my grandfather were wonderful men. What an honor to see his legend live.
Posted by Linda Wishart on September 27,2008 | 12:49PM
I happen to see the documentary on Fox Sports Net on Tuesday, November 25. This was a very interesting show. I have never heard of this golfer but now I can say that I saw the show and he was definetly a great golfer.I can say that based on the stories I just read from this article. Thank you for sharing these wonderful stories with the public and avid golfers.
Posted by Earnest J. Fields on November 26,2008 | 02:53PM
I recently saw a tv show about Montague, it shows him using a bat, shovel and rake. Some of the claims maybe fiction, but the fact is this man could play some good golf.
Posted by Steven Lucero on February 22,2009 | 10:17AM
I'm reading the book on Montague now, and it is enjoyable to hear how many close friends he made in Hollywood, and about his great golf exploits. Anybody that could reach the 18th at Pebble in two shots, playing with a golf ball and clubs from the 1930's is a great golfer. Think what he could have done with today's ball and golf equipment. If a movie has not been made about this man, then it should be.
Posted by Mark Giuseffi on February 24,2009 | 03:23PM