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Los Angeles Country Club pin flag George Thomas open ryder british pga
$ 158.4
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Description
In the fall of 1897, a group of Los Angeles residents organized theLos Angeles Golf Club,
and a 16-acre (6.5 ha) lot was leased at the corner of Pico and Alvarado streets (now part of the
Alvarado Terrace Historic District
) for a nine-hole
golf course
. Called "The Windmill Links," the course was named for a makeshift
clubhouse
crafted from the bottom of an abandoned
windmill
. Through the middle of 1898, this site served as the club's home until the course became too crowded. The club was removed to
Pico Heights
, at Hobart and 16th streets. The new home was named "The Convent Links" for its location behind a
convent
near
Rosedale Cemetery
. Again, nine holes were laid out for play, but by the spring of 1899, this course and clubhouse had also become too restricted for play.
The search committee for a new site, consisting of the club founders
Joe Sartori
and Ed Tufts, found the club's new home just 0.2 miles (300 m) west, on the northeast corner of Pico and Western. The
clubhouse
was transported intact to a new site in Beverly Hills, and it was expanded there. The club also laid out an 18-hole course. The club reopened on May 30, 1911. It now has 36 holes of golf and tennis courts. The original golf course was laid out by Joe Sartori, Ed Tufts,
Norman Macbeth
, and Charles Orr. Later, the courses were redesigned by
Herbert Fowler
and
George C. Thomas, Jr.
, and again by Thomas with William P. Bell in 1927-28. In 1996 and 1997 an extensive renovation of the north and south courses was completed. In February 2010, an
extensive restoration
of the North Course by Gil Hanse and Thomas biographer Geoff Shackelford took place to return the course to
George C. Thomas, Jr.
's design from 1921. The course reopened in October 2010.
The north course hosted the first
Los Angeles Open
92 years ago in 1926, and it returned four times:
[4]
1934, 1935,
[5]
1936, and 1940.
[6]
[
citation needed
]
The most recent in 1940, won by
Lawson Little
, was plagued by heavy rains.
[6]
On July 22, 2015, the
United States Golf Association
announced that Los Angeles Country Club was selected to host the 123rd
U.S. Open
in 2023