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Talamore at Oak Terrace - Club
History
James W. Hilty
XII. Oak Terrace - The “Bud”
Hansen Years.
In 1979 Elmer F. Hansen stepped forward with a proposal
to help the Archdiocese solve their cemetery problem and
a plan to rescue Oak Terrace. Hansen struck
an agreement with the Archdiocese to exchange land he
owned in Bucks County, land properly suited for a
cemetery, for the right to manage and eventually buy the
Oak Terrace and adjoining parcels owned by
the Archdiocese. In return, the Archdiocese received a
large tract of land at County Line and Upper State Roads
in Bucks County, now the site of St. John Neumann
Cemetery.
Elmer “Bud” Hansen had established himself as a
successful builder and developer, having constructed
Blue Bell's Sentry Park and several other high-profile
office complexes and private homes. In March 1981 Hansen
purchased the former McKean manor house and began
restoring the long-neglected building to its former
stateliness, intending it for use as his corporate
headquarters. With Oak Terrace as his base, Hansen
expanded operations in the 1980s, acquiring several
large tracts of land in Florida, the Philadelphia
suburbs, and elsewhere for golf course, commercial, and
residential development.
With
assets exceeding $1 billion, Hansen, at one point,
employed over 1,200 people. Hansen Group's four major
divisions included
Hansen Properties, Hansen Lifestyles, Executive Suites,
and Hansen Leisure Time.
Oak Terrace fell under Hansen's Leisure Time division,
which commenced an extensive advertising and marketing
campaign aimed at bringing new members to the club and
at restoring the club's reputation as a private
facility. Few substantive changes were made to the
course itself between the time Hansen acquired it and
the course was demolished, but Hansen improved its
general conditioning and grooming, added a few sand
traps, and re-contoured a few greens. Hansen entered
ventures with Arnold Palmer's firm for the design of
Commonwealth National Golf Club and Blue Bell Country
Club. For a brief time, the Palmer group also managed
golf operations at Oak Terrace, with no discernible
impact.
Hansen thoroughly renovated the clubhouse (the former
McKean carriage house) and several of the auxiliary
buildings. Banquet and dining services were expanded and
upgraded. Locker rooms were moved out of the carriage
house to the large brick building immediately to the
rear (once used as members' apartments), where they
remain today. During the 1980s the pro shop was moved
several times within the clubhouse before being
relocated to the building behind and to the left of the
clubhouse (once the McKean's “Butler's and Coachman's
Cottage”), where it remains today. Hansen renovated the
grill area and briefly offered elegant upscale public
dining in Eileen's
Restaurant (managed by Hansen's wife, Eileen)
in the space currently designated the Governor's Room.
In 1988 the outdoor pool behind the manor house (unused
since the mid-1960s) was filled in, paved over and
converted to a parking lot. For a time, the open area
below the manor house extending towards Welsh Road (once
a polo field) was used as a golf practice range.
Struck by the historical connections at Oak Terrace and
the tax advantages then available for preserving
historic properties, Hansen commissioned George Thomas,
a respected architectural historian and professor at the
University of Pennsylvania to prepare and submit a
request to the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum
Commission and its Bureau for Historic Preservation to
certify the manor house as warranting placement on the
National Register of Historic Places. According to
Thomas, the manor house merited consideration as "an
important and rare surviving example of a suburban
Philadelphia turn of the century country seat that falls
within a significant pattern of architectural patronage
by the McKean family, and as the design of a major
Philadelphia architect [Horace Trumbauer]." The
Commission designated the structure as “eligible” but
never formally certified it.
Hansen planned to continue operating the Oak Terrace
golf course while he assembled the properties and
capital to build a spectacular new course on the site
and concurrently develop an up-scale residential
community alongside the new golf course. Thus, between
March 1981 and March 1988, Hansen properties made six
parcel purchases, which, when all were totaled, amounted
to all of the land that the Archdiocese had purchased
from Elsie Wingel and Marion van Steenwyk in 1969,
amounting to 359.74 acres, for which Hansen paid the
Archdiocese $6,724,000 (not counting the trade of the
cemetery property), or $4,877,000 more than the property
sold for in 1969, netting the Archdiocese a tidy return
on their investment.
To
fulfill his plan of building an entirely new
championship caliber golf course, Hansen required a
routing scheme for the new course, one that would take
advantage of both the Wingel and van Steenwyk
properties. To produce the routing plan Hansen
commissioned Cornish and Silva golf course architects.
Geoffrey Cornish and Brian Silva designed several New
England courses, but they are best known for their
redesign and renovations of Seminole (Florida), Olympia
Fields (Chicago), and Broadmoor (Colorado) to ready them
for major USGA competitions. The routing plan for the
new course was developed in 1992 and credited to Dave
Kavanaugh of Cornish and Silva. His plan proposed a
links style course maximizing use of the available
terrain, weaving golf holes through, over, and around
the wetlands, bringing Park Creek into play, and cutting
some holes through the heavily wooded lands on the
former van Steenwyk properties.
Bud Hansen was privately esteemed among his peers for
his ingenuity and vision. He eventually succeeded in
other ventures, but Hansen never realized his plans for
Oak Terrace. A casualty of the savings and loan crisis
of the 1980s, Hansen's ambitious plans for Oak Terrace
collapsed when his credit evaporated at the same time
the real estate market entered a steep downturn. Changes
in federal regulations of the banking industry put
Hansen in a double bind, as he not only owed a
significant amount to a single bank (Mellon) which
called his loans, but he also owned a troubled S&L in
Hammonton, New Jersey. The FDIC took over the Hammonton
S&L and one of his country clubs that Hansen pledged as
collateral. Suddenly forced to liquidate, Hansen
persuaded his creditors that he could yield more money
through the selective sale of his assets than through
bankruptcy. To meet the FDIC demands he sold off most of
his holdings, including Oak Terrace and all
the adjoining land he had acquired throughout the 1980s.
Chapters
I. Earliest History
II. Pine Run Farms - The McKean Estate
III. McKean Manor House - Pine Ridge IV. Horace Trumbauer and Talamore at Oak Terrace
V. Scandal and the Declension of the McKeans
VI. Pine Run Country Club and Alexander Findlay
-- Brushing Against Golf Immortality
VII. Bankers' and the Great Depression.
VIII.
Oak Terrace - The Wingel Years
IX. The “Old Oak”.
X. “Slammin' Sammy” Snead Comes to Oak Terrace.
XI. Location, Location, Location
XII.
Oak Terrace - The “Bud” Hansen
Years.
XIII. Talamore
at Oak Terrace: - Realen and Bob Levy,
Jr.
XIV. Talamore
at Oak Terrace: The making of a golf
course
XV. The switchover, 1993-1995:
XVI. THE END OF THE BEGINNING |
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