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Talamore at Oak Terrace - Club
History
James W. Hilty
VIII. Oak Terrace -
The Wingel Years
On June 2, 1936, Elsie W. Wingel purchased the club and its 208 acres from
PCILGA for the bargain price of $100,000. Elsie's husband, Harry G. Wingel
became club president. They moved into the upper floors of the
McKean
mansion
and retained the bottom portion as a clubhouse. The Wingels owned Oak Terrace
for the next 33 years. They made no major changes either to the club property or
the golf course. As the years passed the Wingels and the club membership
abandoned earlier pretensions of becoming one of Philadelphia's premier country
clubs and over time Oak Terrace gradually became known as a “blue-collar”
country club.
Besides golf, Oak Terrace continued to offer swimming, tennis, and horseback
riding. Horses were corralled in an area near the present-day sixth tees. The
club also fielded a polo team and matches were played on the field below the
manor house fronting on Welsh Road. The Oak Terrace polo team competed in
round-robin matches against teams representing Penllyn, Gwynedd Valley,
Whitemarsh, and Blue Bell.
In the 1930s a number of club members resided in the fourteen cottages and
houses on the property, and several employees, along with the Wingels lived in
the McKean manor house (clubhouse). Members and local residents from years ago
recall when the head golf professional lived in the house directly behind the
carriage house, once the McKean estate's
Butler's and Coachman's House .
Today it houses the Talamore pro shop. They also recall when the large brick
building behind the carriage house (now housing
the
men's and women's locker rooms) served as a multi-unit apartment house
for members. During World War II Oak Terrace contributed to the war effort by
turning over the cottages, apartments,
and part of the manor house to the U.S.
Navy to house officers and their wives.
A cluster of five houses along McKean Road served as residences for the greens
superintendent and other club employees. At some point the Wingels moved out of
the mansion into the former McKean estate's "Manager's House," a large farmhouse
and corral near McKean Road located a few yards ahead of Talamore's sixth tee.
Eventually the Wingels razed all of the old houses along McKean Road and cleared
the ground, leaving only the water tower. In 1946 the Wingels purchased a
ten-acre tract along McKean Road and built a house at 721 McKean Road.
Tough luck repeatedly dogged the Wingels. A series of accidents, fires, and
personal troubles befell them and the Club. In June 1937 the twelve-year old son
of a club resident drowned in the swimming pool. He apparently struck his head
on the diving board, fell into the deep end, and went to the bottom.
His
mates' yells for help brought a golfer, who dove in fully clothed and pulled the
young man from the bottom of the pool. John Schuebel, the head golf professional
at Oak Terrace tried reviving the boy, but failed.
That same year Harry Wingel, then 41, was arrested for operating slot machines
in the clubhouse basement.
Trouble struck again at three AM on October 6, 1947, when four masked thugs
broke into the Oak Terrace clubhouse, terrorizing ten people, including the club
manager, his wife, another employee, and seven resident members. The robbers
tied up their victims, stole their valuables, methodically pilfered liquor, and
forced the manager to open the clubhouse safe, before fleeing with $7,700 in
cash and jewels.
Then, on a warm July evening in 1950 three hundred members and their guests were
present in the clubhouse when County detectives and State police raided the
club, seized four slot machines ,
and arrested the bartender, club manager, and Harry Wingel. A few weeks later
Harry and the club manager, Charles Grieb, pleaded guilty of gambling and paid
$500 fines. Because it was his second offense, Wingel was also placed on
probation, escaping a prison sentence only because of poor health.
In 1950 Oak Terrace claimed 700 members, but the Wingels, who
apparently liked to live in style, had difficulty making a profit. After the
police raid, the Wingels announced an increase in dues, apparently to make up
for the revenue shortfall occasioned by the removal of the slot machines.
“Members Can't Win,” the Philadelphia Inquirer observed in a classic piece of
ironic understatement.
In 1954, as part of an effort to make ends meet, Elsie Wingel sold off
twenty-nine acres of developable property abutting the van Steenwyk property at
the upper part of McKean Road, reducing the size of her holdings and Oak Terrace to 188.7 acres.
A series of destructive fires plagued Oak Terrace. In May 1958 a fire started by
chimney sparks ignited and destroyed the roof of the Manor House (clubhouse)
over the east wing. As firemen from four fire companies battled
the
blaze for nearly two hours, a group of fifty clubwomen continued their luncheon
card party, undeterred by the fact that the $20,000 blaze
originated
in a fireplace ignited for their party. The following October, as TV anchorman
John Facenda was filming a commercial, an even larger fire broke out in a second
floor ceiling over a stairwell, requiring
firemen from six companies several
hours to suppress it and causing an estimated $25,000 damage.
In January 1963 yet another fire
struck the carriage house and former stables. By then the horses were long gone
and the building contained the pro shop, a bar, restaurant, and the members'
locker rooms for men and women. The fire apparently started in the men's locker
room, quickly broke through the roof, and raged for over an hour. Firefighters
chopped holes through the ice in the swimming pool behind the manor house to
draw pool water to fight the fire. Newspapers first estimated that the fire
caused $15,000 damage, but the final costs for replacing and renovating the
clubhouse, plus members' claims for lost property, were over $50,000.
Oak Terrace's financial matters did
not noticeably improve for many years. Neither did the golf course, which
remained much the same all through the Wingel years.
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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