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Talamore at Oak Terrace - Club
History
James W. Hilty
VI. Pine Run Country Club and Alexander
Findlay -- Brushing Against Golf Immortality
While Henry P. McKean had busied himself assembling land
for Pine Run Farms, the game of golf crossed the
Atlantic and taken firm hold, its popularity virtually
exploding among America's wealthier leisure class. In
1894 the first American interclub matches were held
between The Country Club (Brookline, Massachusetts), Shinnecock Hills (New York), the Chicago Golf Club, St.
Andrews in Yonkers, and the Newport Country Club (Rhode Island). The same year those clubs formed the
Amateur Golf Association of America. The next year they
changed their name to the United States Golf Association
(USGA), which has remained the game's governing body in
America ever since. In 1895 the USGA conducted its first
U.S. Open Championship. Two years later, members of
Aronimink, Merion, Philadelphia Country Club, and
Philadelphia Cricket Club founded the Golf Association
of Philadelphia.
The popularity of golf and its rapid development in
America owed nearly everything to a group of pioneering
Scottish teachers, architects, skilled professionals and
promoters of the game, who immigrated to the US in the
1880s and early 1890s. The Scottish pros sought to
bridge the gap between the two countries and their
contrasting approaches to the game. But differences
abounded.
In Scotland the game evoked a democratic atmosphere.
Golf courses were established in the linkslands, or
public lands on and around the coastal shores, where,
with little labor, golf holes could be molded from
natural terrain and then opened to anyone. The "golf
club" was an organization of individuals who gathered at
the public linkslands (or links) for golf matches and
social events.
In America the initial expense of the game fostered
class division. Most of America's earliest golf courses
were expensive man-made creations on private lands,
requiring substantial labor and extensive schemes for
moving and molding earth. Designing, building,
operating, and maintaining American golf courses
required considerable sums of money, and so American
golf clubs began as private enclaves for their wealthy
founders and members who shared the costs. Yet, by 1895
the US boasted 112 golf courses, which exceeded the
number in Scotland, golf's homeland.
Americans hired Scottish professionals to design and
build the courses, to make and supply the golfing
equipment, and to teach the game to wealthy members of
the new clubs and, eventually, to a large and interested
middle class. From the late 1880's into the early
1900's, thousands upon thousands of American golfers
learned the game from a few hundred Scottish teaching
professionals. It was a Scottish professional who taught
the great Francis Ouimet the skills he needed to reorder
the world's golfing hierarchy when in 1913 he defeated
the redoubtable Scottish professional Harry Vardon, thus
becoming the first American Amateur to win the US Open.
The popularity of golf declined during World War I
(1914-1918) and its growth was slowed by a postwar
recession (1919-1922), but surged during the “Roaring
Twenties” and the “golden age of sport.” Each year
between 1923 and 1929 more than 600 new golf facilities
were built and the number would grow annually until the
Depression took hold in 1931.
Golf had a promising early beginning in the
Gwynedd-Horsham area, but it was slow to take hold. The
first local attempt at organizing a golf club and
building a course occurred in September 1897, when J.
Waln Vaux, Henry McKean Ingersoll, and a few select
friends organized the Penllyn Club. They authorized an
expenditure of seven dollars -- yes, $7.00 -- to hire a
landscape architect, and he laid out a five-hole course
that operated until the fall of 1902. The course,
located somewhere near Penllyn Pike and Gypsy Hill Road,
was crudely rendered. Reflecting back, R. Sturgis
Ingersoll admitted, “I suppose there had never been a
worse golf course.” (You get what you pay for.) Whatever
the reasons, by the fall of 1902, according to
Ingersoll, the course was “returned to the cows and
died.” Thereafter members of the Penllyn Club devoted
their energies to polo and cross-country riding.
Golf came to Horsham Township in 1923. Immediately after
Henry Pratt McKean's death, his wife and sons divided
the estate, selling off Pine Ridge and 128 acres of Pine
Run Farms to a group of investors headed by Ambler
businessman Joseph H. Fretz, the owner of the Hotel
Ambler and several commercial properties along Butler
Pike and Main Street. Fretz and his colleagues
established Pine Run Country Club, with intentions,
according to Fretz, of offering facilities “for almost
every form of outdoor sport, including golfing, polo,
tennis, trap shooting, baseball, steeple chasing, horse
racing, and swimming.” The 52-room McKean mansion was
quickly converted into a clubhouse with sleeping rooms
for members, several dining rooms, locker rooms,
billiard rooms and gymnasium.
Pine Run members laid out a crude nine-hole links course
within the bounds of McKean's former pasturelands and
riding trails. The roughly hewn layout obviously failed
members' needs and Fretz's high expectations, for Fretz
soon proposed a complete redesign of the existing nine
holes and announced plans for construction of an
additional nine. For this task he commissioned the
famous Scottish golfer and architect, Alexander Findlay
(1865-1942).
Gentle readers are forgiven for not recognizing
Alexander Findlay, a name alien to contemporary ears.
Findlay has not received near the attention he deserves.
One hears more about his compatriot Donald Ross, whose
revered status among golfers and course designers grows
each year. Yet, Alexander Findlay's impact on the game
and his place in its history are also worthy of
attention, not only because of his early connection to
Talamore at Oak Terrace, but also because of his many
contributions to the game of golf itself, which in his
day earned him acclaim as "The Father of American Golf."
To begin, Alexander Findlay ranks among the game's
greatest players. Among his many golfing feats, Findlay
was the first golfer in history to record a 72, or an
average of four strokes a hole over 18 holes; this he
accomplished in a championship match in Montrose,
Scotland held August 6, 1886, when he was only twenty
years old. Findlay is thus credited by golf historians
with establishing the standard score for par (72) on a
regulation course. Prior to Findlay's brilliant
breakthrough the standard or target score (par) for 18
holes was an average of four and one-half strokes a
hole, or 81.
Findlay left Scotland in 1887, immigrating to America,
taking his golf clubs and gutta-percha balls with him,
finally landing a job managing a ranch in Nebraska.
There, on the Merchiston Ranch, about 130 miles west of
Omaha, Findlay constructed and played golf on a six-hole
layout. The date was April 4, 1887, or ten months before
John Reid played a round of golf in Yonkers, New York on
his three-hole layout (later dubbed St. Andrews), then
claimed by easterners to be the first course and the
first round ever played in the United States. St.
Andrews moved on four occasions before being settled in
1897 at Mount Hope, New York. Even though Reid is
credited with establishing the first permanent golf
club, golf historians ought to rightly attribute Alex
Findlay with building the first golf course and striking
the first golf shot in the USA.
Findlay's
primitive Nebraska course attracted such golf acolytes
as William F. (Buffalo Bill) Cody and the Sioux Chief
Sitting Bull. All the same, the Cornhuskers, cowboys,
and Indians somehow resisted the game's allure, and the
first golf course in America survived for only a year or
so. Findlay remained in Nebraska another ten years,
moved to Omaha, organized and built the Omaha Golf Club,
offered free lessons, and promoted the game of golf at
every opportunity.
In 1897 Findlay gave up ranching, decided to make golf
his profession, and moved east, where the game was
flourishing. After a ten-year hiatus from competition,
Findlay's playing skills never quite returned to their
prior eminence, but he competed at the highest levels,
scoring well in national competitions, eventually
amassing records at several hundred different courses.
He also performed exhibitions, offered the earliest
pictorial teaching aids, built and sold his own line of
golf clubs, and became a tireless propagandist and
promoter of the game. Findlay made and marketed his own
line of golf clubs, “The A. H. Findlay Clubs” through
Wright & Ditson sporting goods. Findlay worked in their
Boston store, when he was not out demonstrating clubs,
playing exhibitions, or designing courses.
Findlay sprinkled magic dust on American golf when he
returned to Scotland in 1899 and persuaded Harry Vardon,
then the game's greatest player, to tour America the
following year, giving exhibitions, playing in
tournaments, and promoting the game. Vardon's tour was a
grand success. Vardon played eighty-eight matches,
setting course records at nearly every venue and losing
only once, by a 2 and 1 score to -- you guessed it --
Alex Findlay. Vardon capped off his American tour
winning the 1900 US Open (despite missing a two-inch
putt on the last hole). Inspired by Vardon and goaded by
Findlay, Americans' interest in golf surged. In 1913,
after many years of poor health and a gargantuan
struggle with the yips, Vardon returned, accompanied by
his long-hitting countryman, Edward “Ted” Ray, intent on
capturing another US Open title. Ray and Vardon
completed 72 holes tied for the lead along with the
young unheralded Massachusetts amateur, Francis Ouimet.
Ouimet defeated the two golfing behemoths in a
rain-soaked, drama-packed 18-hole playoff, and in the
process launched the game to unprecedented heights in
America. Alex Findlay's unmistakable aura reflected in
the glistening raindrops of that soggy, yet glorious
afternoon at The at Oak Terrace in Brookline, when
American golf came of age. Not only had Findlay brought
Vardon and Ray to America; he had also been responsible
for Francis Ouimet owning his first real golf clubs.
Francis's brother Wilfred sought out Findlay at the
Wright & Ditson sporting goods store in Boston and,
after some negotiating, traded seventy-two golf balls
that Wilfred and Francis had found at The at Oak Terrace
across the street from their home in exchange for an A.
H. Findlay mashie and, later, an A. H. Findlay brassie.
Findlay left Boston in 1913, moved to Philadelphia,
purchased a house in Germantown, and accepted a
lucrative management position with John Wanamaker's
Department Store. Findlay moonlighted as a golf course
designer, contributing over one hundred courses to
American golf. Regarded as one of the famed
“Philadelphia School” of golf course architects, Alex
Findlay's name often appears in golf histories alongside
George Crump (Pine Valley), Hugh Wilson (Merion-East and
Cobbs Creek), A. W. Tillinghast (Winged Foot and
Bethpage-Black), William Flynn (Huntingdon Valley,
Shinnecock Hills), in addition to the peripatetic Donald
Ross (Aronimink, Lulu, Pinehurst No. 2) and the relative
new-comers, Norristown's George Fazio (Squires, Butler
National) and his nephew, Tom Fazio (Wild Dunes, Shadow
Creek, PGA National).
Donald Ross and Alexander Findlay courses bore a marked
resemblance. Each designed courses to accommodate the
game of golf as it existed early in the Twentieth
Century, that is, a game played mostly on the ground, on
shorter, tree-lined courses that placed a premium on
accuracy and the player's ability to hit run-up and
pitch-and-run shots into small, heavily bunkered greens
accessible from the front but not the rear or the sides.
Such was the early design of Pine Run and its
successors, Bankers and Oak Terrace.
Those early Ross and Findlay courses were almost
immediately obsolete because of Coburn Haskell, an Akron
bicycle manufacturer who started tinkering with rubber
compounds in 1900 and eventually designed a new golf
ball, consisting of a small, solid rubber core
surrounded by tightly wound rubber threads enclosed by
thin gutta-percha, and, later, a balata cover. Most
players initially refused to play the “Bounding Billy,”
as they called Haskell's new ball, claiming it provided
an undue advantage because it went so far. Such
sportsmanlike concerns were soon put aside, as the
desire, then, as now, to “grip it and rip it” soon
overwhelmed American golfers almost as quickly as it
overwhelmed the tiny Alex Findlay designed courses.
Indeed, most of Findlay's designs have gone the way of
the feathery and gutta-percha.
A search of the Internet, golf course histories, books
on golf course architecture, and sources in the USGA
Library at Golf House, yields a fair idea of Findlay's
substantial influence on the game over the last century.
Several of Findlay's Philadelphia-area designs are still
in operation, among them the municipal courses at Walnut
Lane (1930) and John F. Byrne (1940). Other Findlay
courses in Pennsylvania still open for play (all
subsequently redesigned, many by his son, Norman),
include Aronimink (also credited to Ross), Pittsburgh
Field Club, Coatesville, Reading, Centre Hills (State
College), Llanerch (Havertown), and Green Pond
(Bethlehem), plus several New Jersey designs, among
them, Tavistock, Wildwood, Medford Lakes, and Pitman.
Findlay-designed
courses can be found from Maine to Florida, Texas to
Minnesota and at several of the country's leading golf
resorts. His 1894-designed Siaconset Golf Club on
Nantucket has been called “a pasture golf gem,” where
“true cow pasture golf” can still be played over one
hundred years later. Siaconset's unwatered fairways and
tiny greens are design features members of the old Oak
Terrace recall only too well.
Findlay's other designs
still available for play in the Northeast include,
Granliden [New Hampshire] (1907); Grindstone Neck Golf
Course, Winter Harbor, Maine (opened in 1891, redesigned
by Findlay circa 1900, and listed by GOLF Magazine among
"The First 100 Clubs in America"); and the Mt.
Washington Hotel GC, Bretton Woods, New Hampshire (laid
out by Findlay around 1900, modified by Donald Ross in
1915) rated No. 46 of the “Top 100 public courses.”
The persuasive Findlay was
a tireless emissary and promoter of the game. He coaxed
John Wanamaker into taking up the game at age 80.
Findlay even tried to persuade the Pope to play. In 1926
he traveled to the Vatican and proposed (unsuccessfully)
to create a six-hole layout. Pope Pius XI apparently was
no fan of the game. Perhaps his robes got in the way. In
1935 Findlay promoted an American tour of the English
champion, Miss Joyce Wethered, which stimulated a spike
of popularity in women's golf. Findlay succumbed in 1942
at 75 and was buried in Philadelphia at Ivy Hill
Cemetery.
Findlay was present on September 6, 1924 for the
official opening of Pine Run Country Club.
Philadelphia's newspapers credit Findlay for redesigning
the original links layout, although biographical
sketches of Findlay retained by the USGA at Golf House
do not list Pine Run among his accomplishments. One
cannot be sure why that is so. Perhaps he contributed
little more than his name to the project. More likely
the absence of any mention of Pine Run in his portfolio
is because Pine Run Country Club was defunct within a
few years. All the same, Findlay gave a dedication
speech that day and afterwards newspapers reported that
“The Daddy of American Golf” who designed the course was
given the honor of driving the first ceremonial ball
from the first tee.
Newspaper reports describe Pine Run Country Club in 1924
as a “sporty” nine-hole track, with several doglegs, one
water hole, and two of the greens “set back in the
woods” compelling “perfect approaching.” The first hole
was described as a long dogleg left and the second a
short but difficult par four requiring a second shot
over water. No design layouts, scorecards or other
memorabilia survive. Beyond the newspaper accounts, not
much otherwise may be discerned about the course.
Newspapers reported that a second nine was completed and
opened for play in the spring of 1925. Findlay's plan
called for pine trees to be planted along the fairways
of the golf course. Some of those pines survive today
and can be seen in several places at Talamore, such as
bordering the left side of the third hole, which may be
the one golf hole route remaining from the original
Findlay design that has been continued in subsequent
courses.
Reports on the size of the Pine Run Club differ
dramatically. The Philadelphia North American reported
350 acres and the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin said it
was 300 acres. The 1924 County tax records indicate the
Pine Run Club paid taxes on 128 acres, but County real
estate records show a transfer of 208 acres from the
McKean estate to the club.
Whatever its size, John H. Fretz, Pine Run's president
and major investor, had grand ambitions for the Club,
telling Philadelphia newspapers that he eventually
intended to build 45 holes of golf, 6 tennis courts, and
a trap shooting range; that he intended to provide
members with ice skating and skiing in the winter, a
three and one-half mile steeplechase course, a polo
field, an oval for horse shows, and stable
accommodations for "over a hundred horses." When the
club opened, twenty-five saddle horses and ponies were
available for members who desired to engage in
cross-country riding on the same trails used by H. P.
McKean. McKean's chicken houses and cows provided fresh
eggs and milk for the dining services at the club. Fretz
told the press that he intended to operate the club
along the lines of the Biltmore Club of New York, but
with lower entrance fees and dues so as to attract
"persons of moderate means."
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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