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Guardians of the Game,  Since 1921

Introduction

The story of senior women’s golf is one of quiet leadership and enduring commitment.
Founded in 1921 by Mabel Emily Stringer, the Veteran Ladies’ Golf Association (VLGA) created a home for experienced women golfers — those who had carried the game through its early decades and wished to keep competing, contributing, and connecting beyond their peak playing years. vlga.intelligentgolf.co.uk+1
At a time when many sporting organisations overlooked older women, the VLGA offered recognition, respect, and purpose.

Origins: 1921 and the Founding Vision

The VLGA began as a network for women aged 50 and over who had long supported the Ladies’ Golf Union (LGU) and county associations. Mabel Stringer and her contemporaries understood that experience itself was an asset — not a barrier — to participation. Wikipedia+1

The association’s early aims were simple but revolutionary:

  • To promote friendly competition among senior women.

  • To maintain lifelong involvement in the game.

  • To uphold the spirit, etiquette, and community that women had built into golf since the 1890s.

This founding vision inspired the growth of a movement that would spread across Britain and beyond.

Expansion and Evolution

Through the mid-20th century, senior and veteran golf associations multiplied — at county, national, and international levels.

Each new group shared a similar ethos: inclusion, camaraderie, and respect for the game’s traditions.

By the 1950s and 1960s, Veteran/Senior Women’s Golf Associations existed across:

  • England – Regional and county veteran ladies’ associations, aligned with the VLGA. warwickshiregolf.com+2lrvlga.co.uk+2

  • Scotland, Ireland & Wales – Sister organisations with their own structures. sswgawest.com+1

  • Australia, Canada, South Africa, the USA and Japan – Independent senior women’s groups formed, many inspired by the British model.

International competitions began to emerge, with senior women representing their countries with the same pride and professionalism as the younger amateur teams. womenonthetee.com

Independence from Governing Bodies

Senior and veteran women’s golf associations are independent organisations.
They are not affiliated with The R&A, the USGA, or any national or international governing body of golf. Their committees, fixtures, and championships are organised autonomously and funded through their own memberships and event income.

What this means in practice:

  • Self-governed: Constitutions, eligibility, fixtures, and selection policies are set by the associations themselves.

  • Rules-aligned, not rules-run: They follow the Rules of Golf and standard handicapping, but no governing body directs their operations.

  • Leaders who also compete: Many office-bearers are experienced referees, administrators, and leading amateur players who represent their clubs, counties, and countries in other contexts — yet they serve here in an independent capacity.

  • Community first: Their mission centres on competitive opportunity, friendship, and service to senior women — not on institutional agendas.

Key point: Individuals may hold roles within county, national, or international golf structures, but the senior/veteran associations themselves remain separate and self-determining.

Evolving with the Times

After more than a century of proud tradition, the Veteran Ladies’ and similar associations are modernising their identity to reflect both continuity and change.
Many have adopted the term “Senior Women” in place of “Veteran Ladies” — a shift that recognises the language and values of today’s game while honouring their heritage.

This evolution signals a new openness:
an acknowledgement that experience and modern thinking can stand side by side.
It reflects the associations’ desire to welcome new generations of women into their community — golfers who value fairness, friendship, and lifelong participation, but who also expect contemporary governance, inclusive language, and a visible place within the wider story of golf.

In changing their name, they have not changed their purpose — only strengthened their relevance.

Timeline of Senior & Veteran Women’s Golf Associations Worldwide

Year Country / Region Event & Notes
1921 England / UK Veteran Ladies’ Golf Association (VLGA) founded by Mabel Emily Stringer — the world’s first organisation for women aged 50+, providing structured competition and social connection.
c. 1922 Canada Canadian Women’s Senior Golf Association (CWSGA) established at Lambton Golf & Country Club, Toronto. Among the first senior women’s groups outside Britain.
1949–1950 Australia (NSW) Veteran Women Golfers’ Association of NSW (VWGA) formed; first events in 1950. Inspired the creation of other state-level senior women’s golf bodies.
1950 Scotland Scottish Veteran Ladies’ Golf Association (SVLGA) founded by Miss Charlotte Lyon, formalising senior women’s golf north of the border.
1950s–1960s Ireland & Wales Veteran and senior women’s associations established, completing the network across the British Isles.
1963 Australia (Victoria) Senior Women Golfers’ Association of Victoria (SWGAV) created, strengthening senior women’s competition in Australia.
1966 Sweden Swedish Senior Golf (Svensk Seniorgolf) founded — one of Europe’s earliest national senior golf associations; includes women’s division that later helped found the ESLGA.
1968 Finland Finnish Golf Seniors (Senioriliitto) founded as a mixed senior body, with an active women’s section that later joined the ESLGA.
1969 UK (Regional) The VLGA develops four regional divisions — North, South, Midlands, and Scotland — extending senior women’s golf across England and Scotland.
1971 Canada Canadian Women’s Senior Championship officially adopted by Golf Canada, giving senior women a national competitive stage.
1972 Switzerland Swiss Senior Ladies’ Golf Association (SSLGA) founded — among Europe’s oldest independent senior ladies’ associations.
1974 Germany Deutsche Golf-Seniorinnen-Gesellschaft e.V. (DGSG) founded, becoming a major independent women’s senior association with a strong ESLGA presence.
1975 Italy Associazione Golfisti Italiani Seniores (AGIS) founded by Marisa Sgaravatti, who later co-founded the ESLGA; features one of the largest women’s senior sections in Europe.
1976 France Association Sportive de Golf Séniores Dames de France (ASGSDF) established, coordinating national senior ladies’ competitions; long-standing ESLGA member.
1978 Spain Asociación Española de Seniors de Golf (AESGOLF) created; mixed membership but one of Europe’s strongest women’s senior divisions.
1980s (early) Belgium Belgian Senior Ladies Golf Association formed (under Belgian Senior Golf Federation); ESLGA membership follows soon after.
1984 Netherlands Dutch Ladies Senior Golf Association (DLSGA) founded; later hosts multiple European senior events; joins ESLGA same year.
1985 Europe (Continental) European Senior Ladies’ Golf Association (ESLGA) formally established, linking national senior women’s organisations across Europe to promote competition and camaraderie. (eslga.org)
1985 Austria Österreichische Golf-Seniorinnen-Gesellschaft (ÖGSG) founded shortly after ESLGA’s creation; independent senior women’s organisation and active member.
1986 Portugal Associação Portuguesa de Seniores Golfistas – Senhoras (APSGS) established; long-term ESLGA participant.
1989 Norway Norsk Seniorgolf formed as a mixed organisation with strong women’s section; joins ESLGA in the 1990s.
1992–1993 Hungary & Czech Republic Hungarian Senior Golfers’ Society (MSGT) (1992) and Czech Senior Golf Association (ČSGA) (1993) founded; both mixed, with ESLGA-linked women’s divisions.
1995 Luxembourg Association de Golf Senior Dames de Luxembourg formed; independent yet ESLGA-affiliated.
1996 Australia (Victoria) Victorian Women’s Golf League (VWGL) modernises its competitions and governance, introducing senior categories.
1998 Poland Polish Senior Golf Association (PSGA) established; women’s section joins ESLGA soon after.
2006 Europe European Senior Ladies’ Team Championship inaugurated under the European Golf Association (EGA), open to ESLGA members.
2010s Iceland & Slovenia (emerging members) Golf Iceland (Senior Division) joins ESLGA in the 2010s; Slovenian Senior Ladies Golf Association founded 2023, joins in 2025 — newest member of ESLGA.
2018 United States U.S. Senior Women’s Open held for the first time — professional, but elevates recognition of senior women globally.
2020s Global Veteran and senior women’s associations across the UK, Europe, and beyond begin adopting the term Senior Women to replace Veteran Ladies, embracing modern and inclusive language.
2023 England (South & Midlands) VLGA South and VLGA Midlands formally rename as Senior Women’s Golf Association (South) and Senior Women’s Golf Association (Midlands), leading modernisation within England’s regional structure.
2024 Scotland Scottish Veteran Ladies’ Golf Association (SVLGA) becomes the Scottish Senior Women’s Golf Association (SSWGA), completing the rebranding trend among UK senior women’s bodies.
2025 Europe (Current) ESLGA now represents over 20 national associations from across Europe — women-led, volunteer-run, and proudly independent of The R&A, USGA, or any national governing authority.

  • The European Senior Ladies’ Golf Association (ESLGA), founded in 1985, formalised cooperation among Europe’s senior women’s golf bodies, bringing together independent national associations from across continental Europe. Its members — from Austria to Sweden — coordinate international competitions, including the European Senior Ladies’ Team and Individual Championships, and the Sgaravatti Trophy.However, the British senior and veteran women’s golf associations — including the Veteran Ladies’ Golf Association (VLGA) and its regional divisions, as well as the Scottish Senior Women’s Golf Association (SSWGA), Irish Veteran Ladies’ Golf Union, and Welsh Veteran Ladies’ Golf Association — have never been members of the ESLGA.This separation is both historical and structural rather than purely political:
    • The UK and Ireland developed earlier, well-established senior golf systems (dating back to 1921) that pre-dated the ESLGA’s formation by more than 60 years.
    • Their competitions and inter-county events operate through a self-contained British & Irish network that remains strong and independent.
    • The ESLGA was founded primarily to unite continental European associations seeking international representation under a common framework.
    • While Brexit may have reinforced the current distinction, the separation existed long before — rooted in differing administrative traditions rather than exclusion.

    Today, both systems coexist respectfully:

    • The British and Irish senior women’s associations continue to operate independently, maintaining their own championships, home internationals, and administrative structures.
    • The ESLGA and its European members sustain a vibrant international circuit for senior women across continental Europe.

    Together, these parallel traditions reflect the diverse yet interconnected heritage of senior women’s golf — one that values autonomy, shared purpose, and enduring friendship across borders.

    Each of the Senior Womens Golf associations retains its independence from national governing bodies (The R&A, USGA, England Golf, EGA, etc.) while remaining aligned with the Rules of Golf.

    Collectively, they represent a global community of experienced women golfers, united by shared values of competition, friendship, and service to the game.

Legacy and Recognition

For more than a century, senior women have quietly upheld the spirit of amateur golf.
Their influence is not always visible, but it is deeply felt — in every well-run event, every fair ruling, and every welcoming clubhouse.

They are not just part of the past of golf — they are its guardians, ensuring that the game remains open, fair, and kind across generations.

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