To show its appreciation for his longtime patronage and friendship, Cape Arundel Golf Club’s historic hunter green clubhouse overlooking the Kennebunk River was renamed as 41 House in 2011 to honor the club’s most famous member and 41st President of the United States George H.W. Bush.
If your travels take you to Maine, make Cape Arundel Golf Club a must-visit destination. Even if you are not a golfer, you will appreciate the beautiful setting, nostalgia, and history lesson about the 41st president of the United States.
Rick Stedman is an avid golfer, RVer, and writer who lives in Olympia, Washington. Rick writes a golf column, “The RV Golfer,” which is published every month in rvlife.com. He can be reached at [email protected].
Club President J. Pierce O’Neil and President George W. Bush celebrate the naming of 43 House at Cape Arundel Golf Club’s expanded Members-only Practice and Teaching Facility along the Kennebunk River in Kennebunkport, Maine.
Travis, known as “The Old Man” and the most successful amateur golfer in the United States in the early 1900’s, also designed or influenced the design of many other notable courses including Pine Valley, Pinehurst #2, National Golf Links, Westchester Country Club, and Garden City Country Club.
Gary’s House is named after Gary Pike, a Kennebunk man who died of cancer in 1991. The program through Northern Lights Mercy hospital provides accommodations for families receiving treatment in Southern Maine, not just a Mercy.
Golfers posed for pictures with the president and four Boston Red Sox World Series trophies on display. Hall of Fame LPGA golfer Nancy Lopez and retired professional athletes from the Red Sox and New England Patriots attended.
George H. W. Bush, Summer House Compound Kennebunkport Maine. Walker’s Point Estate (or the Bush compound) is the summer retreat house of the Bush family which served as the Summer White House of George H. W. Bush, the 41st President of the United States. It is located along the Atlantic Ocean in the northeast United States, ...
Walker’s Point juts out into the ocean in southern Maine, in the town of Kennebunkport, approximately midway between the cities of Portland, Maine, and Portsmouth, New Hampshire. The property has been a family retreat for more than a century, starting with Bush’s maternal grandfather and great-grandfather. The estate was purchased in the late 19th ...
In 1921, Dorothy Walker and Prescott Bush were married, and Bert Walker built a “bungalow” on the Point and gave it to them as a wedding present. When Bert died in 1953, his son, George Herbert Walker Jr. (“Herbie”), purchased the property from his father’s estate. It was not willed to him.
The estate has been a backdrop of family weddings, holidays, and receptions. While at the “ Summer White House ,” Bush hosted world leaders including Margaret Thatcher and Mikhail Gorbachev for informal ...
The estate was purchased in the late 19th century jointly by Bush’s great-grandfather David Davis Walker, and his son, St. Louis banker George Herbert “Bert” Walker. Both built mansions on the point in 1902.
A tee shot of 220 yards over the water will set up a birdie opportunity when the pin is on the lower tier. When the pin is up on the upper tier, par is a good score.
Short shots will find the water, and bunkers on the left and right will capture the errant shot. Hole 14. A tee shot that carries the river and draws is ideal, but it must avoid the water all along the left. A mid-iron second shot to a well guarded green awaits.
A tee shot placed down the right side, that avoids trees and fairway bunkers is ideal. The approach shot is played over two cross bunkers, to an extremely narrow, undulating green with run offs on three sides. When the pin is on the top shelf pars are hard to come by.
A 210 yard par 3 which requires length and accuracy. Trees and ledge guard the right and numerous mounds guard the left. Par is always a good score.
Though a dog leg right, a tee shot that favors the left side of the fairway providers the best line to a very narrow green perched above the river. Approach shots that miss that green left, right or long will challenge the golfer's short game skills.
The tee sits at the rivers edge. A strong tee shot played into a prevailing wind is required. The long second shot to a well guarded, uphill green makes for a challenging finish
Club selection and accuracy are critical on this hole. A well played tee shot, using a mid-iron, to the right center of the green is ideal. A variety of hazards await an errant shot.