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Dr. David Cookson Named 2015 Joe Dey Award Winner
The USGA has announced that Dr. David U. Cookson, of Madison, Wis., is the recipient of the 2015 Joe Dey Award.
Cookson has been Rules official and dedicated golf ambassador for nearly 50 years. He will be honored February 7th during the USGA's annual meeting at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York City.
"I am overwhelmed," Dr. Cookson said of the recognition. "Working with the USGA has been a great life experience, and I have built so many great relationships with players and leaders. It is an honor."
Cookson, a doctor of internal medicine, has served as a Rules official for nearly 90 USGA championships, including 25 U.S. Opens, and numerous USGA qualifiers. A USGA committee member from 1983 to 2011, he served on the Regional Affairs, Nominating and Senior Amateur Championship committees during his tenure.
"David represents the highest ideals and spirit of our game," said Tom O'Toole Jr., president of the USGA. "During a very special evening at the USGA Annual Meeting in February, we will celebrate his lifelong love of the game of golf and his unwavering dedication to preserve its honorable traditions."
A member of the Wisconsin State Golf Association board of directors since 1970, Cookson served as its president from 1977-78. He also served on the Western Golf Association's board of governors from 1977 to 1998. Cookson received the President's Distinguished Service Award from the WSGA in 1993, thanks in part to his contributions to the renovation of the University of Wisconsin's Evans Scholars House in Madison. He was elected to the WSGA Hall of Fame in 2006.
"Dr. Cookson has been the most prominent and meaningful volunteer figure in the state of Wisconsin," said Jim Reinhart, WSGA president. "He has been instrumental in virtually every significant golf initiative in the state and involved in every aspect of amateur golf as an administrator and mentor. I cannot think of a more deserving person to receive this award."
Cookson was introduced to golf at age 8, playing on public courses with a set of clubs he inherited from a relative. He is a Michigan and Harvard Medical School graduate and became "a nut about the Rules" during his college years. He is a member of Milwaukee Country Club and Maple Bluff Country Club in Madison, where he resides with his wife, Christine, of 60 years. They have four children and 11 grandchildren.
The USGA has presented the award annually since 1996 in recognition of an individual's meritorious service to the game as a volunteer. It is named for Joseph C. Dey Jr., who served as the USGA's executive director from 1934 to 1969, before becoming the first commissioner of the PGA Tour.
The above report is courtesy of the USGA. For more information, visit www.usga.org.
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