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| Mary Bea Porter with Alexis Thompson  at 2008 Junior PGA Championship  | 
Mary Bea Porter-King of Kapaa, Hawaii, a  celebrated four-sport collegiate athlete, LPGA Tour veteran, a pioneer in junior  golf within her state, and one of the country’s most respected Rules officials,  has been named the recipient of the 2011 PGA First Lady of Golf  Award.
Porter-King, 61, will be honored at The PGA of America Awards, Thursday, Jan. 26, 2012, during the 59th PGA Merchandise Show at the Orange County Convention Center’s Chapin Theater in Orlando, Fla.
Born  in Everett, Wash., and raised in Costa Mesa, Calif., Porter-King began playing  golf at age 7, mentored by LPGA co-founder Betty Hicks. Porter-King paved her  way in junior golf by conducting a golf clinic at age 8 with Hall of Famer Patty  Berg. She went on to become a four-sport star athlete at Arizona State  University before devoting her career to golf. She was a co-founder of the  Hawaii State Junior Golf Association in 1998; and served from 2001-06 as a  member of the USGA Executive Committee and from 2006-09, as an Independent  Director on The PGA America Board of Directors. As a member of the PGA Rules  Committee, Porter-King has officiated for nearly two decades at golf’s premier  events, including all of the game’s men’s and women’s major  championships.
“Mary  Bea Porter-King’s remarkable career of service to our game is on display within  her home state in a junior golf program that has produced countless success  stories, and is a model for how our industry may improve the future of so many  young people,” said PGA of America President Allen Wronowski. “Mary Bea also has  served golf at the highest levels, a record that includes an unwavering  commitment to the integrity of our sport as a premier Rules official. It is with  great honor that we may now refer to her as our next PGA First Lady of  Golf.”
Porter-King served on the USGA Girls’  Junior Committee from 1994-2000, and since 2001, she has been a member of the  U.S. Junior Championship Committee. In 1998, she co-founded the Hawaii State  Junior Golf Association, which annually engages more than 500 juniors from  elementary to high school age. The program has produced hundreds of collegiate  golfers, with several program graduates including current LPGA standouts -  Michelle Wie and Kimberly Kim.
“I am  very humbled by this honor; first to be honored by The PGA of America, an  organization I have revered all my life, and secondly, it is so special to have  my name listed with all of the previous honorees, women of whom I have so much  respect,” said Porter-King. “I love this game and have spoken for many years to  encourage all of us, The PGA, LPGA, and USGA, to combine efforts to develop the  next core golfers.
“All  of us, who love the game, need to do everything we can to make sure all future  generations who are given the gift of golf understand, play by, and protect the  core values of the game while maintaining its integrity. It is so important we  all work together to develop the next core golfer to ensure that the future of  the game is in good hands. Who will fill the next shoes in our sport? It is up  to all of us.”
Porter-King was inducted in 2001 into the  Arizona State University Sports Hall of Fame in four sports. Competing from  1968-73 in the pre-Title IX era, she excelled in volleyball, softball, golf, and  basketball. Before graduating in 1973, Porter-King was a starting second baseman  for the 1971 ASU College Softball World Series Championship team, and earned  1972 All-American honors in golf, and was a member of the school’s 1970, ’71  NAIA Women’s Golf Championship teams.
Porter-King began her professional golf  career in 1973, earning LPGA Tour Qualifying School medalist honors. She  captured the Golf Inns of America Classic in 1975. She left the Tour from  1983-85, and returned in 1986 and competed until her retirement in  1998.
She is  a past president of the Kauai Junior Golf Association, and in 2004 was inducted  into the Hawaii Golf Hall of Fame. Traveling more than 100,000 miles a year,  Porter-King has officiated at 14 U.S. Women's Opens, 10 U.S. Men's Opens, 10  U.S. Senior Opens, five Masters, four PGA Championships, and one Open  Championship.
Porter-King earned universal praise for a  courageous act on March 16, 1988, during a qualifying round for the former LPGA  Standard Register Turquoise Classic in Phoenix, Ariz. Having hooked a second  shot badly on the 13th hole of Moon Valley Country Club, Porter-King approached  the fence to look for her ball and saw a family in peril. Jonathan Smucker, then  a 3-year-old from Ronks, Pa., had fallen into a swimming pool and was lying  lifeless. Porter-King was helped over the fence by her caddie, administered CPR,  awaited arrival of paramedics, resulting in saving the life of the  child.
For  her action, she was later that year the first recipient of the Metropolitan Golf  Writers Association Mary Bea Porter Humanitarian Award, honoring a heroic or  humanitarian act that enhances human life. The same Association presented  Porter-King this year with its MGWA Distinguished Service Award.
Porter-King and her husband, Charlie,  live in Kapaa, Hawaii. The couple has a son, Joseph, 29, of Santa Barbara,  Calif.; and a daughter, Sherry, 39, married to Mike Niethammer, with three sons,  Charlie, 7, Will, 4, and Max, 2, of Oahu, Hawaii.
The PGA First Lady of Golf Award,  inaugurated in 1998, is presented to a woman who has made significant  contributions to the promotion of the game of golf.
PGA First Lady of Golf Recipients
1998 Barbara Nicklaus
1999 Judy Rankin
2000 No recipient
2001 Judy Bell
2002 Nancy Lopez
2003 Renee Powell
2004 Alice Dye
2005 Carol Semple Thompson
2006 Kathy Whitworth
2007 Peggy Kirk Bell
2008 Carol Mann
2009 Donna Caponi-Byrnes
2010 No recipient
2011 Mary Bea Porter-King
photo credit: PGA
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PGA First Lady of Golf Recipients
1998 Barbara Nicklaus
1999 Judy Rankin
2000 No recipient
2001 Judy Bell
2002 Nancy Lopez
2003 Renee Powell
2004 Alice Dye
2005 Carol Semple Thompson
2006 Kathy Whitworth
2007 Peggy Kirk Bell
2008 Carol Mann
2009 Donna Caponi-Byrnes
2010 No recipient
2011 Mary Bea Porter-King
photo credit: PGA
Voice your opinion on Twitter @Golf4Beginners and friend us on Facebook

2 comments:
Nice to know there is such an award; shame that 2001 had no recipient.
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