#46 Mrs. Lillian Hyde and Marion Hollins at Women’s Metropolitan Golf Championship, Sleepy Hollow Country Club.

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Mrs. Lillian Hyde and Marion Hollins at Women’s Metropolitan Golf Championship, Sleepy Hollow Country Club.

Mrs. Lillian Hyde stands beside Marion Hollins on the open fairway at the Women’s Metropolitan Golf Championship, posed with the calm assurance of seasoned competitors. Wide-brimmed hats, long light dresses, and the simple line of a club held upright evoke an era when women’s golf was carving out space in organized sport. The soft, distant treeline keeps the focus on the athletes themselves, turning the course into a quiet stage for poise and precision.

At Sleepy Hollow Country Club, the championship atmosphere is suggested not through crowds or banners, but through body language—composed faces, squared shoulders, and the easy familiarity of two players who belong at the center of the frame. Their attire hints at the period’s expectations of “proper” sporting dress, yet the setting makes it clear that serious competition is underway. Details like buttoned skirts and sturdy shoes underline the practical side of early golf fashion, designed to move through grass and weather while maintaining formality.

Golf history often survives in scorecards and newspaper columns, but photographs like this preserve something harder to measure: the culture of women’s sport as it was lived. The pairing of Hyde and Hollins offers a window into early 20th-century women’s golf—its elegance, discipline, and growing visibility within prestigious clubs and metropolitan tournaments. For readers drawn to vintage sports photography, women’s athletics, and the story of golf’s evolution, this image remains a striking, searchable touchstone.