Old Tom Morris's golf shop, where you can still buy souvenirs of your trip to St. Andrews.  Old Tom (1821-1908) won the British Open four times and is an icon of the game.  He worked with Allan Robertson until the two had a falling out over him playing the new gutta percha ball.  He left to be the Keeper of the Green at Prestwick in 1851, and returned to his hometown of St. Andrews in 1864 to look after the Old Course, and was given fifty pounds sterling a year, one man to assist him 2 days a week, and a wheel barrow and a shovel to do the job!  How times have changed.  He is the man responsible for remodeling the 18th green in the early 1870's and creating the infamous "Valley of Sin" that runs in front of it, which has gathered the ball of many a player.  A newspaper article in 1905 described how visitors often found him sitting at the door of his shop with his favorite collie, Silver.  Those who gained his favor might be asked into his shop where the windows overlooked the eighteenth green.  As Tom said of his life:  "I must say that I have never had the slightest cause to regret having returned to my dear, native town, where everyone is my friend, and in which I don’t think I have a single enemy."  This photo was taken in 1990.