Net Worth: | $50 Million |
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Profession: | Architect, Golfer, Designer |
Nationality: | United States of America |
Club information | |
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Designed by | Jack Neville and Douglas Grant (1919) Arnold Palmer & Thad Layton (2016 renovation) |
Par | 72 (71 - U.S. Open) |
Length | 7,075 yards (6,469 m) |
Course rating | 75.5 (U.S. Open) |
Club information | |
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Owned by | Augusta National Inc. |
Total holes | 27 (18 Hole Championship Course plus 9 Hole Par-3 course) |
In the 1914 PNGA Men’s Amateur at Seattle Golf Club, Jack Neville displayed unparalleled play, demolishing A.V. Macan 11 & 10 in the semifinals. Shooting a course record 69 in the morning round against Egan, Neville entered the afternoon round leading 4-up.
Many of the golfers H.Chandler Egan competed again in 1914 were already known golf architects. A.V. Macan was the leading course architect in Seattle and Canada and would later design Alderwood Country Club and the Columbia Edgewater CC in Portland course in 1926.
Before getting into course design James Braid was first known as part of golf’s first “Great Triumvirate” of players along with Harry Vardon and J.H. Taylor. Braid became a prominent golf course architect and has been noted by some as the innovator of the dogleg, however existing courses had a design feature similar to a dogleg. During his time as a course architect he designed and redesigned numerous courses throughout England and Scotland.
Robert Trent Jones, Sr. (1906 – 2000) Robert Trent Jones, Sr. has been credited with designing or redesigning over 500 golf courses throughout 45 states in the United States and 35 countries worldwide. Jones began his golf course architecture career after college as a partner with Canadian Stanley Thompson.
Old Tom Morris, the “Grandfather of Golf”, was an innovator in greenskeeping and many modern golf course design techniques. Old Tom Morris got his start apprenticing for Allan Robertson and the pair worked together on a ten-hole design Carnoustie Golf Links in Scotland in 1842. Carnoustie would become one of the homes to the Open Championship. After parting ways with Robertson, Morris would go on to develop many more courses across Scotland. Some notable courses that Morris designed include Prestwick Golf Club which was home to the first Open Championship, Muirfield which was where Jack Nicklaus earned his first Open Championship and subsequently named his course in the U.S. after it, and both the New Course and Jubilee Course at the “home of golf” St. Andrews Links.
Old Tom Morris got his start apprenticing for Allan Robertson and the pair worked together on a ten-hole design Carnoustie Golf Links in Scotland in 1842. Carnoustie would become one of the homes to the Open Championship.
MacDonald spent his college years in 1872 at St. Andrews University in Scotland where he took up golf and was tutored by the great Old Tom Morris. After spending time as a stockbroker MacDonald returned to golf as the game was brought to New York by Scottish immigrants.
He then founded the Chicago Golf Club in 1892 with some associates and designed a simplistic nine-hole course, the first built west of the Allegheny Mountains. The following year MacDonald expanded on his design to create an 18-hole course, making Chicago Golf Club the first full-length course in the United States.
His father, Willie Park Sr., claim to golf fame is being the first Open Championship winner. Following in his footsteps Willie Park Jr. won 2 Open Championships of his own in 1887 and 1889. As his playing career was coming to a close Willie Park Jr. got into designing golf courses becoming one of the early golf course architects. It was at a time when golf was expanding from the United Kingdom to the United States. Throughout his career as a golf course architect Park helped design and redesign 170 courses within the UK, Europe, Canada and the United States.
City Park’s North course, which opened in 1968, was also designed by Wiedorn and Bartholomew. Bartholomew designed and constructed additional courses in several cities that included Covington, Hammond, Abita Springs, Algiers, and Baton Rouge, Louisiana, as well as one course in Mississippi.
The Southhampton engineer would go on to build over 100 courses and become the creator of the National Golf Links of America. Bartholomew learned his craft well from Raynor and early in 1922, he returned to New Orleans where he started construction of Metairie’s new golf course.
Joseph M. Bartholomew – First African American Golf Course Architect and Designer. Joseph M. Bartholomew was an African American golfer who specialized in designing golf courses. He was born on August 1, 1885 in New Orleans, Louisiana and became the first African American man to ever build a public golf course. ...
Bartholomew designed and built Pontchartrain Park’s golf course, which opened in 1956. The course was named in his honor in 1979. City Park’s North course, which opened in 1968, was also designed by Wiedorn and Bartholomew. Bartholomew designed and constructed additional courses in several cities that included Covington, Hammond, Abita Springs, ...
On Oct. 12, 1971 Bartholomew suffered a stroke and died. The following year, his significant contributions to the game of golf were recognized when he became the first African American to be inducted into the Greater New Orleans Sports Hall of Fame. Recommended For You.
Tom Doak studied Landscape Architecture at Cornell University where he won a scholarship to travel to the British Isles, he then spent seven months on the road, literally living on the links.
Pete Dye captained the college team in his youth before going on to qualify for the US Open in 1957. He won the Indiana State Amateur, took part in The Amateur in 1963 and played in five US Amateurs.
Harry Colt studied law at Clare College, Cambridge. Twelve months after his 1887 enrolment, he joined the committee of the Cambridge University Golf Club and in 1889 became the club's first captain.
Alister MacKenzie was born in England, but his parents were Scottish and the family holidayed every year close to where his father was raised in the traditional Clan MacKenzie lands of Sutherland.
Coore and Crenshaw Inc. was established in 1986, but five years passed before the partnership made a real architectural impact when the Plantation course at Kapalua burst onto the scene in 1991.
Pete Dye captained the college team in his youth before going on to qualify for the US Open in 1957. He won the Indiana State Amateur, took part in The Amateur in 1963 and played in five US Amateurs. Read More >>. The most iconic Dye hole - the Stadium 17th at TPC Sawgrass.
Tom Fazio. Born in the northwestern suburbs of Philadelphia, Tom Fazio entered the business of golf course architecture as a teenager in 1962, assisting his uncle George in course construction. Read More >>. Gozzer Ranch is Tom Fazio’s foremost design that nobody has heard of.
For readers wanting in-depth architechnical insight as well as some wonderful golf history, George Bahto 's The Evangelist of Golf; The Story of Charles Blair Macdonald (2002) is marvellous and this writer owes George a large debt of gratitude for having done all the extensive research and for inspiring an interest.
While golf's annals are filled with esteem for its early architects who were more than pleased to make livings and reputations recreating Scotland's untidy pastime as a worldwide pandemic, Charles Blair Macdonald stood apart. First, he was an American – of serious Scottish descent, but nonetheless a bloody American – raised in Chicago ...
Jim Noyes is a retired CEO turned freelance writer and golf nomad.