Women make history as Augusta members
03:11 - Source: CNN

Story highlights

NEW: Obama says decision was "too long in coming" but "the right thing to do," his spokesman says

Condoleezza Rice and Darla Moore become Augusta National's first female members

Opting to admit women marks a "significant and positive time" for the club, its chairman says

Women's rights activist Martha Burk declares victory, says pressure forced the club's hand

CNN  — 

Augusta National Golf Club opened its exclusive membership to women Monday for the first time in its 80-year history.

Former U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and South Carolina businesswoman Darla Moore will become the first women to join the Augusta, Georgia, club, Chairman Billy Payne said Monday in a statement.

“These accomplished women share our passion for the game of golf and both are well known and respected by our membership,” Payne said.

The issue of its formerly all-male membership has long dogged the private club and has at times threatened to overshadow the Masters Tournament, among golf’s most prestigious events.

Celebration, surprise, humor after Augusta National admits first women

Women’s rights activist Martha Burk put the issue in the spotlight in 2003, when she led a protest against the club and worked to put pressure on corporate leaders to withdraw their support for the organization and the Masters.

On Monday, she declared victory.

“My first reaction was, we won – and we did,” Burk said. “By we, I mean the women’s movement and women in the United States, particularly those in business.”

She said continued pressure from women’s groups and corporate interests forced the club’s hand. Activists over the last decade “facilitated a couple of sex discrimination suits against corporations whose CEOs are (Augusta National) members,” Burk said, but she did not name any corporations or individuals.

Burk also pointed to the April controversy over the club’s failure to admit IBM CEO Virginia Rometty, as it has past IBM leaders. Sponsoring the Masters usually guarantees membership to a company’s officers. But Rometty had been ineligible because she is female.

“We gave them a pretty big black eye in April when they dissed Ginny Rometty and did not allow her in the club as they had all of the males preceding her as CEOs of IBM. And I think they knew they could not sustain it,” she said.

At the time, White House spokesman Jay Carney said President Barack Obama believed women should be admitted to the club.

Payne declined to comment on the issue then, and is not talking about it now outside of the statement issued by the club, according to club spokesman Steven Ethun.

In that statement, Payne said the decision marked a “significant and positive time” for Augusta National.

PGA Tour Commissioner Tim Finchem lauded the decision.

“At a time when women represent one of the fastest growing segments in both playing and following the game of golf, this sends a positive and inclusive message for our sport,” Finchem said in a statement.

He was far from alone in applauding Augusta National’s decision.

Mitt Romney – the Republican party’s presumptive presidential nominee who, in April, had said that he’d admit women if he were in charge of the club – offered congratulations on Twitter to both his friend Rice and Augusta National.

And Nancy Lieberman, a Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame inductee who played parts of two seasons in a men’s professional league, likewise cheered the move. “Congrts breaking thru #equality,” she wrote on Twitter.

“Slowly but surely lots of crumbs ad up to a cake,” wrote another women’s sports pioneer, Billie Jean King.

Obama “welcomes the development” as well, Carney said Monday.

“He thinks it was too long in coming, but obviously believes it was the right thing to do,” the White House spokesman told reporters.

The choice of Rice and Moore will ensure that women admitted to Augusta will be equals to their male counterparts, Burk said.

“They have chosen two groundbreaking women, two very prominent women, who are clearly equal in stature to the other members who are, of course, all male,” Burk said. “I think it would have been a mistake to choose a lower-profile woman and basically make that statement that, yes, we’re letting women in but they’re not really going to be equal with the men.”

Rice served under President George W. Bush as the first female national security adviser and the first African-American woman to hold the post of secretary of state. She also was on President George H.W. Bush’s National Security Council staff and was a special assistant to the director of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in 1986.

Membership is the latest honor for trailblazer Rice

She grew up in humble beginnings in segregated Birmingham, Alabama, and rose to prominence in academia and international diplomacy. She has been on the faculty of Stanford University since 1981, has authored two best-selling books and is a member of various boards and a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and has been awarded 10 honorary doctorates.

Rice, who is also an accomplished pianist, said in a statement released through Augusta that she is “delighted and honored” to join the club.

“I have long admired the important role Augusta National has played in the traditions and history of golf,” she said.

Moore is the vice president of Rainwater Inc., the investment firm founded by her husband, Richard Rainwater. Fortune magazine once named her among the top 50 women in business, and the University of South Carolina’s business school is named in her honor.

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She is also chairwoman of the Palmetto Institute, a nonprofit that says it is dedicated to producing “dramatic and sustained growth in the creation, distribution and retention of wealth for every person in South Carolina.”

Moore said she is “extremely grateful for this privilege.”

“I am fortunate to have many friends who are members at Augusta National, so to be asked to join them as a member represents a very happy and important occasion in my life,” she said.

Burk’s protests against the club’s policies made Augusta the focus of national attention beginning in 2002, when she wrote letters challenging the male-only membership policy at the club.

The club’s chairman at the time, Hootie Johnson, responded that admitting women as members would not be done “at the point of a bayonet.”

The next year, Burk organized protests to coincide with the Masters, which drew widespread attention. The uproar led Augusta National to decide not to have advertising for the CBS broadcast of the Masters in 2003 and 2004.

In 2006, Burk was among a group of Exxon shareholders who accused the company of violating its discrimination policies by supporting the golf tournament.

On Monday, the syndicated newspaper columnist and co-founder of Center for Advancement of Public Policy women’s equity advocacy group said she hopes Augusta National’s decision “cracks open that glass ceiling just a little bit further” for American businesswomen. At the same time, Burk called the development “just one small step.”

“(Corporations) need to be working toward parity in the halls of power; Augusta National is just one,” she said. “It’s an important one symbolically, but we have a long way to go.”

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CNN’s Edgar Treiguts contributed to this report.