Historic Pelham Blog Archive
July 19, 2007
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Thursday, July 19, 2007
Members of
The New York Athletic Club Were Duped Into Believing the Club Created a Small Nine-Hole Golf Course in
Pelham Manor in 1897
In 1895, "golf fever" swept across Pelham. In response to the craze,
two members of the Hazen family, Mrs. John Cunningham Hazen and Miss Edith
Cunningham Hazen, organized "The Pelham Manor Golf Club". The founders
laid out a small course on Prospect Hill. The course opened during the
first week of November 1895.
It would seem that "The Pelham Manor Golf Club" never became thoroughly
established. Its records appear to have disappeared. There is little said
of it after the summer and fall of 1895.
At about the same time, however, members of the New York Athletic Club who
frequented Travers Island began clamoring for a golf course of their own
-- perhaps prompted by envy of the small course that had been laid out by
The Pelham Manor Golf Club on nearby Prospect Hill. It seems that in the
Spring of 1897, one or more members of the New York Athletic Club decided
to rub salt in the wound by duping the New York Athletic Club Journal
into announcing that a small nine-hole golf course had been opened by the
Club for its members in an area behind the Priory.
According to the announcement printed in the Journal, two club
members named C. Smyth and C. V. R. Radcliffe were principally responsible
for the "course". Another club member named Cam Smith supposedly laid the
course out on lands owned by E. C. Roosevelt, also a member of the Club.
The brief entry in the New York Athletic Club Journal published
in May 1897 described the developments as follows:
“A GOLF COURSE.
LADDIES who have been clamoring for a golf course in the vicinity of
Travers Island are at last accomodated. The energy of C. Smyth and C. V.
R. Radcliffe has resulted in the laying out of a nine-hole link on the
property kindly loaned for the occasion by the well-known club member and
frequenter of Travers Island, E. C. Roosevelt. The chappies who affect the
latest form of sport will find the new links very difficult, as they have
been discreetly laid over hills and bunkers on the ground back of the
priory. Many interesting contests have already taken place over the links,
and it appears that Cam Smith, who laid out the course did it with due
regard for his own ability, as he at present solemnly affirms that he
holds the record for the course of fifty-three strokes. The low record is
held by the enthusiastic sportsman, Ernest Thorpe, who spent the greater
portion of an afternoon making 427 drives at the ball in order to cover
the nine holes.
The game has become popular with the oarsmen in training for the
Decoration Day regatta, and ‘Count’ Giannini has to drive his crew away
from the fascinating pastime with golf-sticks.”
Source: A Golf Course in New York Athletic Club Journal, Vol. VI, No. 2,
p. 3.
In the very next issue of the Journal, the Club announced that
it had been duped -- much to the disappointment of the Club's many golf
enthusiasts. The subsequent announcement read:
"IT seems almost like sacrilege to jest on the subject of golf. Yet
some one has so far ignored all the national associations of the game as
to speak lightly and frivolously of such a hallowed subject as a golf
course. So the JOURNAL is forced to confess that the golf links mentioned
in last month's issue are not in existence, or if the holes do exist they
are buried so deep beneath a plentiful crop of hay that even the most
recently imported caddy could not discover them.
Since the JOURNAL'S announcement of the golf links, which seem harder
to attain than the promised land, chairman of the Athletic Committee,
Walter S. Baldwin, has worn a look of worry, now quickly changing to that
of despair, as the task of dodging the golf fiends clamoring for the
alleged couse becomes more hopeless.
The JOURNAL regrets that any members should have been put to
inconvenience on account of the statement about the links, although from
our knowledge of golf we opine that there would be just as much sport and
exercise in looking for the links as in playing the game and looking for
the ball. Hereafter all correspondents who are so impolitic as to joke on
the subject of 'golf' will kindly label their communications
appropriately."
Source: [Untitled], New York Athletic Club Journal, Vol. VI, No. 3, p.
3 (June 1897).
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posted by Blake A. Bell @
4:34 AM
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Posting for July 19, 2007.
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