tThe boy who would be King Charles III was a young boy and not yet invested in the position of Prince of Wales when he stumbled upon a short, broad gentleman with a sweet southern tie as thick as sorghum molasses in the 1950s on a golf course in Scotland. The young royal’s young slouch was greeted by a name he likely had never heard of again in the 73 years it took him to ascend the throne of the United Kingdom.
“Mr. Prince is the way the man called ‘Dynamite’ addressed the young Charles Philip Arthur George, and it is the salutation that made him most attractive to legions of golf enthusiasts on both sides of the Atlantic. Surely it is just a coincidence that “Mr. The Prince “would name his eldest son and heir to the throne William, though it is unlikely that young Charles would have been entirely smitten with this memorable character from the small town of Ocilla in southern Georgia: William Godlow Jr.
Bill “Dynamite” Goodloe had this kind of effect on people.
“Everyone is wild about ‘Diney’, the buxom, boli blonde…