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Titleist
John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum, Boston, MA; National Archives Records Administration
Titleist
John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum, Boston, MA; National Archives Records Administration

Titleist

Founded 1935
The Titleist brand started with a vision - and an x-ray. The Titleist success story began one Sunday in 1930, when Phil Young, a dedicated amateur golfer and owner of a precision molded rubber company, missed a well-stroked putt in a match with his friend, who was head of the x-ray department at a local hospital.

Convinced that the ball itself was at fault, Young and his opponent went to the hospital, x-rayed the golf ball in question and found that its core was, in fact, off-center. With his discovery, Phil Young persuaded Fred Bommer, a fellow MIT graduate, rubber specialist and avid golfer, to head up the Acushnet Golf Division. They set out to develop the highest quality and best performing golf ball in the world; one that would be uniform and consistent in quality, ball after ball.

It took Young and Bommer three painstaking years to perfect the first Titleist golf ball, but when it was ready in 1935, it could truthfully be introduced to club professionals and golfers as the best ball ever made. Applying a lesson well learned, Young implemented a process check that is still in practice today: every Titleist golf ball is x-rayed.

The Titleist script originated when the first Titleist-branded golf balls were being produced in 1935. Executives were looking for a logo and an executive suggested the handwriting of office secretary Helen Robinson who was considered to have beautiful penmanship.

Helen was given a sheet of paper and asked to write the word ‘Titleist.’ The way she wrote the word on the page that day was used for the original logo and the Titleist script, one of the world’s most recognized marks, is still based on this initial lettering today - gracing every piece of Titleist equipment throughout the world.