Before the Boys Home Internationals was founded, an annual match had been played between England and Scotland since 1923. It was also played immediately before, and generally at the same venue, as the
Boys Amateur Championship. The first match was held on Monday 27 August 1923 at Dunbar, before the third Boys Amateur Championship. There were 10 singles matches with Scotland winning 6, England 3 with one match halved. Scotland won again in 1924 before England won in 1925 and 1926. The 1926 was reduced to just 8 singles matches. Foursomes matches were added in 1927; the match consisting of four foursomes and eight singles. Scotland won the match 7–5. England won a close match in 1928 but Scotland won 9 of the 11 matches between 1929 and 1939. England only win in the 1930s was in 1934, with the 1935 match being tied. Of the 17 matches up to 1939, Scotland had won 12 with England winning 4 and one match tied. The contest resumed in 1946 with England winning the first three post-war matches. In 1950, an increase in the number of entries for the Boys Championship meant that the England–Scotland match was held on a Saturday for the first time. It was played on a Monday in 1951 but then became a regular Saturday event. From 1958 to 1966 a match was played between a combined England and Scotland team and a team from the Continent of Europe, the forerunner of the
Jacques Léglise Trophy. In 1958 and 1959 this match was played on a Saturday with the England–Scotland match played the day before, a Friday. However, from 1960 to 1966 the order of the matches was reversed, the England–Scotland match returning to the Saturday. From 1965 the format was changed; the match consisting of five foursomes and ten singles. The
Jacques Léglise Trophy was started in 1977 and was played on a Friday, the England–Scotland match continuing to be played on the Saturday. Source: ==Earlier Ireland–Wales matches==