The Golf Course - Huntington Woods
Transcription
The Golf Course - Huntington Woods
FINAL REPORT Rackham Golf Course Historic District Proposal “Rackham Historic District” Presented November 21, 2006 Table of Contents Charge of the Committee ................................................................................... 1 Members of the Committee ............................................................................... 1 Description and Boundaries ............................................................................... 2 Significance ........................................................................................................ 3 Criterion A ................................................................................................ 4 Criterion B ................................................................................................ 4 Criterion C .................................................................................................4 Cultural Landscapes....................................................................................5 Integrity................................................................................................................5 Historic and Non-Historic Resources .................................................................7 History ................................................................................................................ 8 The Clubhouse ..................................................................................................33 The Greenskeepers’Building ............................................................................48 The Golf Course ................................................................................................53 Cell Tower, Cart Storage and Repair Facilities ................................................97 Conclusion and Recommendations ...................................................................99 Endnotes ..........................................................................................................102 Appendix: ........................................................................................................105 A. Aerial Photographs/Maps B. Baker Land Company and Rackham Deeds C. Letters of Support D. Donald Ross Course List E. Public Hearing Comment, Letters, Minutes F. Resolutions of Support G. Bibliography H. Ruskin Forms I. Ordinance The City of Huntington Woods The Proposed Rackham Golf Course Historic District FINAL REPORT CHARGE OF THE STUDY COMMITTEE By resolution dated February 21, 2006, the City Commission of the City of Huntington Woods charged the Historic District Study Committee to study the Detroit Zoological Park property and the Rackham Golf Course property for consideration as a historic district in accordance with the State of Michigan Public Act 169 of 1970, Local Historic Districts Act, as amended. Early in the study it became apparent that the golf course and zoo were very different and that each required extensive research. As a result, the study committee decided to separate them into two individual studies and evaluate each as a potential historic district based on its own merits. This report contains the findings from the study of the Rackham Golf Course. MEMBERS OF THE COMMITTEE Richard Dimanin – an attorney; owner and restorer of the historic Baker Farm House, listed on the State Register of Historic Places. Jonathan Disbrow – a registered architect with the State of Michigan; architecture instructor at the University of Michigan; former architecture instructor at Lawrence Technological University; project architect for the restoration of the Max Jacob House at Wayne State University (restored from office space back into a residence and is now the home of the University president), architect for several other historic homes including a 1930s modern home by Wallace Frost, a project nearing completion. Mark Fink – an attorney whose practice includes zoning and land use issues; 32-year owner and renovator of the 1927 Theron Chase House in the Hill Historic District. Robert Lebow – an interior designer working in historic restorations; member of several preservation organizations; involved in the preservation of MacGregor House at Wayne State University; Chairman of the Historic District Study Committee. Rae Ruskin – a member of the American Society of Interior Designers (ASID); her projects have included historic homes designed by renowned architects Minoru Yamaski, Wallace Frost and Albert Kahn; and the Rackham Building in Detroit. Martha Shrode – an art teacher in the Royal Oak School District with a Bachelor’s degree in Visual Arts and a Master’s degree in Art Education; currently working on a W.P.A. mural restoration project. 1 Louise Wibbelman – a freelance writer who has had articles published in the Detroiter Magazine about the restoration of significant theaters in the City of Detroit (Fox Theater, State Theater, Orchestra Hall); member of the Michigan Historic Preservation Network; resident of the Hill Historic District, currently restoring the district’s c. 1917 Hathaway/Bratton House; Vice Chairman of the Historic District Study Committee. Kim Zurawski – a marketing consultant with an associate’s degree in Architectural Design and Construction and a Bachelor’s degree in Art Education, owner and restorer of the 1928 Sydney Powell House in the Hill Historic District. Staff: Bonnie Cook - City Planner; staff consultant to the Hill Historic District Study Committee; founding member of the Michigan Historic Preservation Network; former Planning Director of the City of Birmingham involved in the creation and administration of Birmingham’s historic districts. Hank Berry – Planning Assistant; staff liaison to the Historic District Commission and the Historic District Study Committee; former Planning Commission Chairman; former Zoning Board of Appeals Chairman; former Historic District Commission Chairman; member of Preservation Wayne; member of the Michigan Historic Preservation Network. DESCRIPTION AND BOUNDARIES The proposed Rackham Golf Course Historic District is located in the south-central section of the City of Huntington Woods, immediately west of the Detroit Zoo and north of Ten Mile Road/I-696. It contains over 120 acres of land developed as an 18-hole public golf course. Also on the property is a large clubhouse, a greenskeepers’ building, three other out-buildings, and a cell tower. The clubhouse is located near the southeast corner of the property facing west toward the golf course. The greenskeepers’ building is on the far west side of the course with access from Scotia Road. The other buildings, two cart barns and a maintenance building, are just north and behind the clubhouse. The cell tower is next to the parking lot and Ten Mile Road (also known as the I-696 service drive). Many mature trees of varying species can be found on the site as well. Large oak trees frame the clubhouse. The course sits on the southern and western end of a Great Lakes beach ridge that runs from roughly Woodward Avenue and Eleven Mile Road southwest to the I-696 service drive. This geological feature is a large ridge of sandy soil with a base of clay. It provides a slightly elevated view of the course from the clubhouse. The boundaries of the proposed district are shown on the map below. Additional maps and aerial photographs are found in Appendix A of the report. The boundaries of the proposed district are described as follows: 2 Part of the S.E. 1/4 of Section 20, T1N, R11E, commencing at the S 1/4 corner of said Section 20; thence N 02E 33’ 21” W along the north-south 1/4 Section line, 221.65 feet to a point on the northerly right-of-way line of Interstate 696 (Walter P. Reuther freeway); thence S 89E 07’ 21” E along said line, 43.08 feet to a point on the easterly line of Scotia Road, said point being the point of beginning; Thence N 02E 33’ 21” W along the easterly line of Scotia Road, 1932.36 feet to a line which is 50.0 feet south of the north line of Ludlow Ave.; thence N 87E 39’ 07” E along said line 2661.39 feet; thence S 01E 47’ 44” E along the easterly line of Section 20, 2126.68 feet; thence along the northerly right-of-way line of Interstate 696 for the remaining six courses, beginning with a curve, concave to the north, having an arc length of 285.02 feet, a radius of 1882.96 feet and a long chord of 284.75 feet which bears N 84E 19’ 15” W, to a point of tangency; thence N 79E 59’ 04” W 198.86 feet to a point of curvature; thence 835.05 feet along the arc of the curve, concave to the south, having a radius of 3941.72 feet and a long chord of 833.49 feet which bears N 86E 03’ 12” W to a point of tangency; thence S 87E 52’ 39” W 888.65 feet to a point of curvature; thence 298.59 feet along the arc of the curve, concave to the north, having a radius of 5702.58 feet and a long chord of 298.55 feet which bears S 89E 22’ 39” W to a point of tangency; thence N 89E 07’ 21” W, 142.36 feet to the point of beginning (also known as Sidwell #25-20-476-002). SIGNIFICANCE OF RACKHAM GOLF COURSE The Study Committee has determined that Rackham Golf Course is significant under criteria A, B and C of the Secretary of the Interior’s eligibility criteria for the National Register of Historic Places and as a Cultural Landscape as defined in the National Park Services Preservation Brief 36. (For further information, see the History, Clubhouse, Greenskeepers’ Building and Golf Course chapters). 3 Criterion A – Association with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad patterns of our history. Rackham Golf Course is associated with the national phenomenon that occurred between 1900-1930 resulting in the game of golf becoming one of the most popular recreational pastimes in the United States. This phenomenon reached its peak in the 1920s, which is often referred to as the “golden age of golf.” The single most significant event associated with Rackham, however, was the construction of the golf course itself. For a wealthy white man to hire the nation’s leading golf course designer to design a course so superb that one had to qualify on other courses in order to play it, hire a Harvard-educated architect to design a clubhouse so stately that it parallels those of private country clubs, and then donate it all to the City of Detroit for the express purpose of allowing all persons to play it; black and white, rich and poor, male and female, was an act of kindness unfathomed in 1925. It was an anomaly at this time in our history when throughout the country, African-Americans were only allowed to set foot on golf courses if they were serving white men; as caddies, waiters or locker room attendants. Rackham continued to be a forerunner of the civil rights movement. In 1936, Earlon “Ben” Davis was hired as a golf professional, and later became the first AfricanAmerican head golf professional at a municipal course in the United States.1 In the 1940s, Rackham was the host course for the widely popular Joe Louis Open Golf Tournaments; one of only a handful of tournaments across the nation where blacks were allowed to enter. In 1940 and 1961, Rackham hosted two national public links championships, again tournaments where African-Americans could participate. Rackham Golf Course is also associated with the development of the City of Huntington Woods, in which it is located. The very existence of the course encouraged the development of the area around it, including high quality housing and the early incorporation of Huntington Woods, first as a village and then as a city. Criterion B – Association with the lives of persons significant in our past. Rackham Golf Course was designed by Donald Ross, considered to be the greatest golf course architect in America from 1910 – 1930. The course was donated to the City of Detroit by Horace and Mary Rackham, noted Michigan philanthropists whose gifts not only included the Rackham Golf Course but the Horace and Mary Rackham Fund at the University of Michigan; the Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies at the University of Michigan; the Horace H. and Mary A. Rackham Building at Eastern Michigan University; the Rackham School (at Eastern Michigan University) for children with special needs; the Rackham Building in Detroit; and additional land for the Detroit Zoo. The golf course is significant for its association with Joe Louis Barrow (better known as “Joe Louis”), heavyweight boxing champion of the world, who popularized and encouraged the use of the Rackham course through his sponsorship of the Joe Louis Open Golf Tournaments. It is significant for its long association with Ben Davis, who was instrumental in breaking down the race barriers in golf and who together with Joe Louis, founded the Joe Louis tournaments. As one of only a handful of courses on the United Golf Association (UGA) Tour, it was played by all the early black pro golfers; Teddy Rhodes, Bill Spiller, Charlie Sifford, Pete Brown, Calvin Peete and others.2 It is also significant for its place in Motown history by being the course of choice for Motown founder Barry Gordy, Jr., Smokey Robinson, Marvin Gaye, members of The Four Tops, 4 The Temptations, The Miracles, and many more greats,3 some of whom still play there today. Criterion C – Embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of construction, or that represents the work of a master, or that possesses high artistic values, or that represents a significant and distinguishable entity whose components may lack individual distinction. The design and construction of the Rackham clubhouse is representative of the Arts & Crafts movement in architecture. It was designed by Niels Chester Sorensen, the noted Detroit architect whose works included Detroit’s original Cass Technical High School and Detroit Western High School. The extensive use of Pewabic Pottery tiles on both the interior and exterior of the building is one of its pure Arts & Crafts elements. Pewabic Pottery itself is a designated National Historic Landmark in the City of Detroit. The golf course was the work of world renowned master golf course designer Donald Ross, whose designs were and still are among the finest in golf today. The revisions to the course, necessitated by construction of the I-696 freeway, were done by Jerry Matthews, another noted golf course architect whose own course designs are some of the finest in the Midwest. Cultural Landscapes – There are four general types of cultural landscapes. Rackham Golf Course is significant as both a Historic Designed Landscape and as a Historic Site. Historic Designed Landscape – a landscape that was consciously designed or laid out by a landscape architect, master gardener, architect, or horticulturalist according to design principals, or an amateur gardener working in a recognized style or tradition. Rackham golf course was consciously designed and laid out by renowned golf course architect Donald Ross. In 1925, Horace Rackham described the development of the land “from a flat, marsh-like field to its present beautifully-greened, smoothly-fairwayed, cunninglyroughed and expertly-bunkered terrain.”4 Historic Site – a landscape significant for its association with a historic event, activity, or person. Rackham’s association with the Joe Louis Open, the UGA and the USGA tournaments make it significant as a historic site. Its association with Horace and Mary Rackham, Donald Ross, Ben Davis, Joe Louis, the UGA professional golfers, several Motown entertainers and local civic leaders makes it significant as a historic site. Of the 5,200 plus golf courses in the United States in 1939, only 20 allowed African-Americans to play.5 Rackham was one of them. Of the 400 Donald Ross designed courses in existence at that time, it is believed that only one allowed African-Americans to play. Rackham was that course. Its association with African-American history makes it significant as a historic site. For more background on the people and events associated with Rackham, see the History Chapter. PHYSICAL INTEGRITY OF RACKHAM GOLF COURSE The Study Committee used the Secretary of the Interior’s seven criteria to assess the integrity of Rackham Golf Course. Of the seven criteria (listed below), the most relevant is Association. Next, and of roughly equal importance are Design, Workmanship and Materials. The lesser relevant criteria, yet still important, are Feeling, Setting and Location. (For further information, read the History, Clubhouse, Greenskeepers’ Building and Golf Course chapters). 5 Location: the place where the resource was originally constructed or where a historic event took place. Rackham Golf Course is owned by the City of Detroit but located approximately two miles north of the Detroit city limits in the City of Huntington Woods. It is adjacent to the Detroit Zoological Park, also owned by the City of Detroit. Horace Rackham originally bought 155 acres of land, giving 22 acres to the zoo and using the remaining 133 acres for the golf course. To the north and west of the golf course are residential neighborhoods that developed, in part, because of their proximity to the golf course. The golf course remains in the same location where it was originally constructed, although slightly reduced in size by the construction of Interstate 696 along its southern border. Design: the combination of elements that create the form, plan, space, structure and style; the result of planning, function, technology, and/or aesthetics. Donald Ross designed Rackham Golf Course on approximately 130 acres of land. It was smaller than most courses of that time period, yet he still managed to design a 6,445-yard championship course. The golf course has recognizable Donald Ross features such as a 9th hole return to the clubhouse, a feature he brought to America from his apprenticeship under Englishman “Old” Tom Morris, considered to be the father of modern golf course design. The course also has small well-bunkered greens, a common feature on his smaller courses. The 1980s brought Interstate 696 through the southernmost edge of the Rackham course, reducing the size by approximately 11 acres and necessitating the redesign of the southwestern part of the course. Eleven of the 18 holes are the original Donald Ross design. The clubhouse, in the Arts & Crafts style, with a sweeping veranda, asymmetrical facades, exposed timbers and use of natural materials typifies the work of the 1920s. The exterior design of the building is essentially unchanged since its construction in 1924. The greenskeepers’ building is original in its Tudor Revival Storybook styling and form, but the south elevation (originally with large doors) has been bricked in. The Committee was unable to confirm the date when this change took place. Setting: the physical environment of a historic property. Setting is how and where a resource is situated in relationship to natural or man-made elements such as topography, vegetation, paths, open space or relationships to other buildings. The property before construction of the golf course was primarily low-lying, nearly flat, marsh-like land. The construction of the golf course added more relief in the topography and more vegetation in the way of trees and grasses. Along the eastern edge of the property is a ridge. The clubhouse was constructed on the highest point of the ridge overlooking the course. It is visible from virtually every point on the course. Mature oaks surrounded the clubhouse and some of them still exist today. The entire property is an oasis of green land and trees in an older, well-established suburban community. If the newer outbuildings were removed from the site, it would leave the property essentially the same as it was 80 years ago. Materials: the combination of physical elements that were combined during a particular time period and in a particular pattern to form a historic property. According to a Detroit Times article written shortly before the opening of the golf course in 1925, “no expense was spared in making it the finest links of its kind. Every green and every tee is in bent grass, considered by turf experts to be the best turf for golfing purposes there is to be had.”6 6 The clubhouse is constructed of the finest of materials of the period. Its exposed timber framing, brick and stone walls, terra-cotta roof, hand-crafted metal luminaires and Pewabic tile have stood the test of time. Only one major change in material has taken place; the midsection of the clay tile roof (approximately 20% of the entire roof) was removed and replaced with asphalt shingles approximately twenty years ago. Two of the original light fixtures have been lost and a few of the original glass panes in the wood frame windows have been replaced. In the greenskeepers’ building, the original red brick, cut limestone blocks and half-timbered gable are still the most distinctive features. The original stable doors have been bricked in and three of the windows have been boarded. The building has a newer asphalt roof and newer doors. Workmanship: the physical evidence of the crafts of a particular culture or people during any given period in history or prehistory. Rackham Golf Course is just one example of the early 20th century influence of Scottish-borne design on the construction of golf courses at a time when golf was becoming a game of choice for many Americans. Donald Ross was considered to be the preeminent golf course designer of the time. Built to be an impressive structure, the clubhouse was constructed to be used and enjoyed for many generations. The precision of construction, strong materials, and attention to details are typical of early 20th Century architecture and craftsmanship. The old growth timber used in the building’s construction was more than 150 years old at the time and is now approaching 250 years. The decorative tiles and handcrafted luminaires have also stood the test of time. More than 80 years later, the building exemplifies, retains, and showcases the attributes of not only early 20th century workmanship but the craftsmanship so typical of the time. It still serves as an outstanding example of historic traditional building methods and materials. Feeling: the expression of the aesthetic or historic sense of a particular period of time. Built at a time when Detroit was enjoying the prosperity associated with its burgeoning automotive industry, this golf course with its modern and luxurious amenities of the day, typifies a bygone era of high-style and design. Association: the direct link between a resource and a historic event or person. Rackham Golf Course was gifted to the City of Detroit by wealthy Detroit-area philanthropists Horace and Mary Rackham, it was designed by Donald Ross, the most sought-after golf course designer of the day; it is where heavyweight boxing champion Joe Louis (Barrow) held his Joe Louis Open golf tournaments for amateur black golfers; it was where Ben Davis became one of the nation’s first black golf pros; it was one of only a handful of golf courses where the UGA could hold its national tournaments; it was where many local civic leaders and celebrities learned to play the game including former Detroit Mayor Dennis Archer and several Motown entertainers. HISTORIC AND NON-HISTORIC RESOURCES The Rackham Golf Course property consists of the golf course, the clubhouse, the greenskeepers’ building, three newer out-buildings (two cart barns and a mechanic’s shed) and a cell tower. If the newer out-buildings and cell tower were removed from the property, it would have much of the look and feel that it had 80 years ago. The 7 greenskeepers’ building, although modified, still retains most of its character. The exterior of the clubhouse is essentially unchanged. Although the golf course itself cannot be restored to its former layout because of I-696, the vast majority of the original Donald Ross layout is still intact. The Committee has determined that the designations for the golf course features should be as follows: Golf course – historic Clubhouse – historic Greenskeepers’ building – historic Out-buildings and cell tower – non-historic The Historic District Commission concludes that, at a minimum, 75% of the Rackham Golf Course property is comprised of historic resources. HISTORY In 1821, Territorial Governor Lewis Cass of Oakland County concluded a treaty with the indigenous people, whereby they ceded the rights to the land in the southern Michigan Territory that included the present day City of Huntington Woods. In 1832, the Township of Royal Oak was established, bounded by 8 Mile Road on the south, 14 Mile Road to the north, and by Greenfield Road and Dequindre Road on the west and east respectively. Between 1830 and 1837, the land that now constitutes the City of Huntington Woods was ceded to a dozen landowners in parcels ranging from 40 to 320 acres. In 1836, 320 acres were awarded to Mr. Douglass Houghton, Sen. Henry G. Hubbard, and Dr. Thomas H. Hubbard. In the late 1840s, Houghton sold his interest in the land to the Hubbard brothers who, in 1886, leased the land to an oil prospector who had limited success due to the marshy, swampy nature of the land. Douglass Houghton is an important figure in Michigan history. He was the youngest person ever elected Mayor of the City of Detroit. He was also appointed as the State’s first official geologist, charged with the survey of the State, including the Upper Peninsula. At the age of 36, Mr. Houghton died while engaged in a new government survey in the Upper Peninsula. He drowned in Lake Superior when his boat capsized during a snowstorm. Places in Michigan named for this early Michigan statesman include Houghton Lake, Houghton County, and the City of Houghton. In 1890, Fred A. Baker and his partner, William Campbell, bought the Hubbard holdings for $13,400. Two years later, Campbell sold his interest to Baker, who incorporated the Black Meadow Dairy Company. Fred Baker was a Detroit attorney who was admitted to the bar in 1867 and served as a state legislator beginning in 1877. Among his other positions, he served as corporation counsel for the City of Detroit for three and a half years; was a member of the Detroit Bar Association; and was a member of the Detroit Board of Commerce. Baker attended Michigan Agricultural College (now Michigan State University) and was a graduate of Eastman’s Business College in New York. Baker studied law under Colonel Sylvester Larned in Detroit. In 1916, Baker and his associates formed the Baker Land Company and appointed Charles R. Talbot as its 8 president. Soon after, Talbot began purchasing the land, paying $1,000 for each acre of the Baker holdings. Today, this area includes the Bronx Subdivision in the center of Huntington Woods and the Rackham Golf Course. HORACE AND MARY RACKHAM In 1924, Detroit attorney Horace H. Rackham and his wife Mary acquired approximately 150 acres of land from the Baker Land Company. It was located north of 10 Mile Road, in what is now the City of Huntington Woods. They gave 22 acres to the Detroit Zoological Society and used the remaining land to develop the golf course. It was reportedly the first 18-hole public golf course constructed in the State of Michigan. Mr. and Mrs. Rackham were both avid golfers and members of the Detroit Golf Club. They built the course and donated it to the City of Detroit because in Mr. Rackham’s words, “we should give those who can’t afford to belong to private clubs, the same opportunity to play and have tournaments.”7 Horace H. Rackham was born in Macomb County, Michigan in 1858. As a young man, he worked a variety of jobs in Detroit and studied law at night. In 1894, he opened a law firm. In 1903, Rackham’s neighbor, Henry Ford, asked him to draw up incorporation papers for his fledgling automobile business. Having little money at the time, Ford paid Rackham $25 and persuaded him to invest $5,000 in his new company. Disregarding the advice of the Michigan Savings Bank president who, in an infamous quote, told Rackham “The horse is here to stay, but the automobile is only a novelty, a fad,” Rackham borrowed $5,000 and purchased 100 shares of Ford Motor Company stock. In 1908, the Ford stock split 20-1. Rackham quit his law practice and began his career as one of the area’s more generous philanthropists. The $12.5 million Rackham realized from his initial investment would be the equivalent of approximately $150 million today. Throughout the remainder of his life, he and his wife gave the majority of their charitable and philanthropic gifts anonymously. The magnitude of the Rackham Golf Course donation, however, forced the Rackhams to accept a more public role in its creation. During the winter of 1914 at age 56, while recuperating from poor health, Horace Rackham took up golf at Pinehurst, North Carolina. There he met Alex Ross, a professional golfer, who gave the Rackhams their first golf lessons. In 1916, Rackham persuaded Alex Ross to become the summer pro at the Detroit Golf Club, where Rackham was serving as president. The Rackhams never had any children and spent a great majority of their time sharing hobbies such as golf. Horace Rackham routinely played three or four times during the week and Mary, his wife, often joined him. It was the Rackhams’ friendship with Alex Ross that would bring Alex’s brother, the famous golf course designer Donald Ross, to Michigan to design the Rackham Golf Course a decade later. When the Baker Land Company sold the land to the Rackhams there was but one restriction on the transfer of the land, “it … shall be used only as a public park or golf course or for other similar purpose.” (Appendix B). When the Rackhams gave the golf course to the City of Detroit, they further restricted it by stating in the deed, “The said premises shall be perpetually maintained by said party of the second part (City of Detroit) exclusively as a golf course for the use of the public and reasonable rules, regulation and 9 charges is established by the second party (City of Detroit).” The transfer of the property was made on November 4, 1924 (Appendix B). The golf course and clubhouse took over two years to complete. According to the Detroit Times, “no expense was spared in making it the finest links of its kind.”8 The course was actually finished in 1923 but Mr. Rackham did not allow it to be used until the turf could withstand the wear and tear of public play. The clubhouse had “all the conveniences of a modern country club including showers, lockers, lounge, lunch room, executive offices, employee’s quarters and a veranda across the front from which every hole of the course can be seen.”9 The entire cost of the gift was estimated to be over $500,000. The golf course opened to the public on May 19, 1925 with Mr. and Mrs. Rackham, along with their close friends Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Guest, playing the first round. John C. Lodge, then a Detroit City Councilman and later Detroit Mayor, heralded it as “the most magnificent gift the city has ever received.”10 The Detroit News said the clubhouse was, “one of the most pretentious structures of the kind in the district.”11 The Detroit Times said it “is regarded by experts as the finest public links in the United States, if not the world.”12 The greens fees to play were $1.00 for 18 holes, $1.50 for unlimited play or 50 cents for twilight golf. Before playing Rackham, players had to qualify at one of Detroit’s other courses. Horace Rackham’s caddy, William T. Merriweather Jr., is quoted as saying that on more than one occasion the Rackham manager gave a player his money back and told him to qualify at Palmer Woods before coming back.13 Horace Rackham was a stickler for etiquette as well as knowledge of the game. He wanted everyone to play the course but insisted on basic knowledge of the game and rules. Once that was established then all were welcome. Horace and Mary Rackham took very seriously the social responsibility that came with their great wealth. Not only during but also after their lifetimes they supported many charitable organizations, including the University of Michigan, many children’s charities, and others too numerous to name. Upon their deaths, the Horace H. and Mary A. Rackham Fund was created to be used expressly “for such benevolent, charitable, educational, scientific, religious and public purposes as…will promote the health, welfare, happiness, education, training and development of men, women and children, particularly the sick, aged, young, erring, poor, crippled, helpless, handicapped, unfortunate and underprivileged, regardless of race, color, religion or station.”14 Horace Rackham included people of all races, religions and socioeconomic backgrounds in his will. Mary Rackham continued giving in her husband’s name until her death in 1946. It was clear that Horace and Mary Rackham, in life and in death, had the public’s interest at heart. 10 (Walter P. Reuther Library, Wayne State University) (Walter P. Reuther Library, Wayne State University) Horace and Mary Rackham in front of the Rackham Golf Course clubhouse (c. 1925) THE GOLF COURSE AND DONALD ROSS The Rackham Golf Course was designed by the leading golf architect of the time, Donald Ross.15 Born in Dornoch, Scotland in 1872, Ross was 14 when he began his foray into the golf world as a carpenter, building tee boxes filled with sand. Because wooden tees were not yet available, tee shots were hit off small mounds of sand. The caddies would fetch the sand for the “tees” out of sand boxes, which became known as “tee boxes.” Ross’ interest in golf and his skill as a carpenter served him well. In 1894, Ross was hired by John Sutherland, Secretary of the Dornoch Golf Club, to be head professional, club maker and greenskeeper. Ross’ younger brother Alex later became his assistant. His interest in course design began during his years at Dornoch. Alex would later become Horace Rackham’s connection to Donald Ross. 11 Robert Willson, an astronomer from Harvard, met Donald Ross during a visit to Dornoch and recruited Ross to be the pro at his newly formed Oakley Country Club in Massachusetts. By this time, both of the Ross brothers were accomplished golfers. Donald Ross redesigned the Oakley course and it reopened in 1901. This was Ross’ first work in the United States and it was heralded as revolutionary, setting a standard that defined the game and course design for years to come. (Tufts Archives) Donald Ross displaying his champion-caliber swing Ross left Oakley for the prestigious Essex Country Club in Massachusetts, where members included then U.S. President William Howard Taft. He went on to design and redesign many courses during the heyday of course design (1910 – 1930). He ended up in Pinehurst, North Carolina, a town that was laid out by the famous firm of Olmsted, Olmsted & Elliot of Brookline, Massachusetts and developed by James Walker Tufts. Tufts had invited Ross to visit Pinehurst in 1900. In 1901, Pinehurst management gave public notice that the 27 existing holes of golf would be under the care of Donald and Alex Ross, the well-known professional players from the Oakley Club. During his time at Pinehurst, Donald Ross designed the world famous Pinehurst #2, which opened in 1907. The course would undergo other revisions by Ross during his tenure there. This course is part of a larger area listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Ross returned to Britain for a time and while there, he played and finished eighth in the 1910 British open. 12 (Tufts Archives) Pinehurst Country Club, North Carolina During his career, Ross designed more than 400 courses throughout the United States, Canada, and Cuba, yet he only designed 22 public courses. Rackham Golf Course, an approximately 6,445-yard AGC (American Golf Council) championship course, is one of them. Not only did he design the Rackham course, he oversaw its construction and layout, and was present at its completion. This is significant because many of the courses he designed were constructed in his absence. He would design a course at his studio using topographical maps and send his trusted construction crew to complete the job. Rackham was a course where he was personally involved, staying at the Hotel Tuller in Detroit during the construction. Other local courses designed by Ross include Oakland Hills Country Club (site of such major competitions as the Ryder Cup), Franklin Hills Country Club and the Detroit Golf Club. Internationally famous course designs like Inverness in Ohio and Pinehurst #2 in North Carolina, as well as his work at Dornoch, Scotland, made him a world-renowned designer. According to the Donald Ross Society, “more national championships have been played over courses designed by the Scottish-born architect, Donald Ross, than by any other designer.”16 From 1919 through 1931, eight of thirteen U.S. Opens were contested on layouts he had done or redesigned.17 13 (Tufts Archives) Note from Donald Ross referencing his completion of Rackham 14 Ross was a founder of the American Society of Golf Course Architects in 1946 and served as its president until his death in 1948. Ross’ resume includes more than 400 courses, including: Seminole Dunedin Country Club Augusta Country Club Oak Park Country Club Springfield Country Club Oakland Hills North and South Pinehurst #2 Inverness Club Royal Dornoch Oak Hill East and West Detroit Golf Club Franklin Hills North Palm Beach Dunedin Augusta Oak Park West Springfield Bloomfield Hills Pinehurst Inverness Dornoch Rochester Detroit Farmington Hills Florida Florida Georgia Illinois Massachusetts Michigan North Carolina Ohio Scotland New York Michigan Michigan (Tufts Archives) Franklin Hills Layout 15 (Tufts Archives) Donald Ross’ Original Design For Course 16 (Jerry Matthews) Donald Ross Course as completed THE CLUBHOUSE AND NIELS CHESTER SORENSEN Niels Chester Sorensen, architect with the firm of Malcomson & Higginbotham, was hired by Rackham to design the clubhouse.18 How these two gentlemen came to know each other is unknown, but for a time, both had their offices in the Moffet Building in Detroit.19 According to the Michigan Society of Architects, Mr. Sorensen graduated from the University of Illinois in 1913 with a degree in architecture. Thus armed, he went to Minneapolis, Minnesota, where he “took charge” of the Architecture Department at Dunwoody Vocational School. In 1915, with a scholarship in hand, Sorensen went to Harvard, where he earned his Masters Degree in Architecture. By 1917 Mr. Sorensen was the Chief Architectural Designer at the prestigious architectural firm of Malcomson and Higginbotham in Detroit. Sorensen held this position for nearly 10 years. One his first projects was the old Cass Technical High School. Detroit’s Western High School is another Sorensen design. Malcomson and Higginbotham did a great deal of work designing both ecclesiastical and educational facilities along with residences. In the late 1920s, Sorensen left the employ of Malcomson and Higginbotham and began to work with W.E.N. Hunter, an eminent architect of churches and homes. 17 Sorensen continued to work in the Detroit area for many years and, in the early 1940s, gained fame as a futurist designer. His futurist plans included an elevated, high-speed rapid transit system for metropolitan areas. Although never constructed, his ideas can be seen today in the design of the modern freeway system. (Walter P. Reuther Library- Wayne State University) The Rackham Clubhouse, shown here as the course nears completion RACKHAM GOLF COURSE AND THE CITY OF HUNTINGTON WOODS Huntington Woods was incorporated as a village in 1926 with only 150 homes and 500 residents. It would not officially become a city until 1932. The construction and opening of Rackham Golf Course thus preceded the establishment of the city by several years. Woodward Avenue was just becoming a major thoroughfare linking Detroit with Pontiac and the small, relatively isolated communities between them, just as the I-696 freeway linked the east and west suburbs many years later. Although Woodward was the first paved road in the country, it was clearly not the major artery that it is today, and would experience major widening in the years to come. The City of Detroit was known as the “Paris of the Midwest,”20 and Huntington Woods was beginning to develop with some of the same high-quality housing seen in the city. Rackham Golf Course was pivotal in the development of Huntington Woods and its importance cannot be underplayed. The city literally grew up around the active and popular golf course. Lots were sold to prospective residents by realtors who touted the 18 uniqueness of Huntington Woods with both a new zoological park and state-of-the-art municipal golf course (see below). These amenities were, and continue to be, a significant inducement to reside in Huntington Woods, and have been reflected over the years in the premium prices prospective purchasers are willing to pay. “No Other Subdivision in the Whole Wide World has These Advantages” AFRICAN-AMERICANS AND THE GAME OF GOLF The Professional Golf Association (PGA) had a rigid Caucasians-only policy that barred all non-whites from membership in the PGA.21 The clause existed in their official bylaws from 1934 until 1961 but was practiced by the PGA from its inception in 1916. The United States Golf Association (USGA) did not have such a clause but the wealthy white men who dominated the organization did nothing to promote racial equality. The AfricanAmerican golfers had no choice but to form their own United States Colored Golfers Association, later to become the United Golf Association (UGA). This black-run organization was every bit as serious about golf as its two white counterparts. 19 “The UGA and other predominantly black organizations could not have existed if there hadn’t been facilities available to people of color. Before World War II, AfricanAmericans were denied access to most municipal courses and private clubs. In 1939, there were 5,209 golf facilities in the United States. More than 3,000 of them were private, 1,200 daily fee and 700 municipally owned. Fewer than 20 were open to blacks... The UGA took its annual showcase event to Sunset Hills near Kankakee, Ill., Douglass Park in Indianapolis, Rackham in Detroit, Mohansic in New York, Highland Park in Cleveland, Cobbs Creek in Philadelphia and Palos Park in Chicago.”22 Of the above courses, Rackham was the only golf course designed and built by Donald Ross. To understand the importance of Rackham, one must understand what life was like for an African-American golfer for most of the last century. When Horace and Mary Rackham gave their golf course to the City of Detroit in 1925, it was with the understanding that it was open to all people regardless of their race or gender. Blacks could play golf, eat at the same lunch counter, and use the same lockers and shower facilities as whites. This was at a time when blacks were not only barred from golf courses, including Detroit’s other golf courses, they were prohibited from buying houses in “white neighborhoods” and were forced to use separate sections of restaurants, theaters, public restrooms, busses and other facilities. “Shortly after Joe Louis retired from the ring (in 1951), he flew to New Orleans for a boxing exhibition. He was accompanied by Leonard Reed, his confidant/advisor. The two of them thought they’d get a round of golf in that morning before the exhibition, so they boarded an airport shuttle van to the hotel to drop off their baggage and race to the course. After a few minutes, Reed got off the van and asked the driver, who was standing curbside, what was the delay. The driver responded, ‘Mister, I can take you but I’m not allowed to take no Coloreds.’ Reed, a light-skinned black, turned two shades of red. ‘Do you know who that man is?’ he asked. ‘That’s Joe Louis.’ ‘Don’t matter,’ said the driver. ‘I still can’t ride no Coloreds.’ Louis, who had overheard the confrontation, got off the van and hailed a taxi. As the two of them started to get into the cab, the driver ... stopped them. ‘Sir, I don’t mean no harm but I can’t ride no white man,’ he said. ‘This here cab’s for Coloreds only.’ Reed and Louis didn’t even try to explain. Louis got in the taxi; Reed hailed another one; and the two of them headed for the hotel .…”23 Six years before golfer Pete Brown played in the 1962 Michigan Open, he was lying in Herman Kiefer Hospital in Detroit. He had come to Detroit from Mississippi to teach successful businessman Randolph Wallace and his family how to play golf. He contracted a form of polio that left him virtually paralyzed. His recovery was slow but after a full year, he was able to leave the hospital and return to Mississippi. Through sheer determination, he worked his way back to health and golf. In August 1962, he entered the Michigan Open. It was the first time the tournament was opened to blacks.24 As Pete Brown was about to stroke a putt at the Farmington Country Club, someone yelled out, “Hey, Nigger! What are you doing?” The crowd froze. The shout had violated one of golf’s cardinal rules – silence while players are striking their shots. Brown had handled hecklers before, he was from the deep south, but this was an important tournament and he did not expect this in the north. Brown shook his head and laughed. The crowd laughed nervously with him and the moment passed. Nevertheless, his concentration was broken and he missed the putt.25 20 Teddy Rhodes was a handsome and charismatic golfer who was no stranger at Rackham. He grew up in Nashville where he began playing golf in the city’s public parks because he was not allowed on the city’s golf courses. He eventually became a caddy, which is how most black golfers learned the game. In the 1930s, he joined the Civilian Conservation Corps and then, during World War II served in the Navy. At the end of the war, he was hired by Joe Louis to be Joe’s personal instructor. Being on Louis’ payroll gave him the resources he needed to join the tour. Between 1946 and 1947, Rhodes won six consecutive tournaments culminating at the 1947 Joe Louis Open at Rackham where he scored 8 under par.26 Years later, Teddy and Joe “left the locker room and headed for the first tee, only to encounter a woman who stared at them with such unvarnished hatred that they stopped in their tracks. Before they could get off the first tee, the woman had gathered enough support from others to force them to move their belongings out of the locker room and into the caddies’ quarters. They did so courteously, quietly, without complaint.”27 Such were the indignities that all black golfers had to endure. The Wake Robin Golf Club was formed in 1937 and became the first formal organization of African-American women golfers. For years, these women golfers in Washington D.C. had coped with both racial and gender discrimination. When they asked to become an auxiliary of the Royal Golf Club, they were rejected by their own male counterparts. They decided to form their own club with the help of a few “defectors” from the Royal Golf Club. At Wake Robin Golf Club’s 50th anniversary in 1987, one observer noted, “Under a system of racism, in an atmosphere of sexism, black women playing golf was not a light matter. It was a political act.”28 In 1941, the women were successful in getting the Secretary of the Interior to desegregate the public courses in Washington D.C. They also protested their exclusion from leadership positions in the UGA, and they paved the way for black women golfers to compete in national tournaments. One of the first was Ann Gregory, the first African-American woman to play in the U.S. Women’s Amateur. The year was 1956. In the 1960s, Ann confronted the bigoted officials at the Gleason Park public golf course in her home town of Gary, Indiana. Until that time, black golfers were confined to a 9-hole course while white golfers enjoyed an 18-hole course. As a taxpayer who paid to support the courses, she demanded her right to play. She paid her fee and played a round without interference. Through her action, park officials abandoned their racial double standard.29 Just after Charlie Sifford had taken the lead in the 1962 Canadian Open, a message was posted on the bulletin board announcing that, “The Masters Golf Tournament will not offer an automatic invitation to the winner of this year’s Canadian Open.” When asked if this was a coincidence Charlie responded, “I don’t think so.”30 Sifford went on to become the first African-American to win a PGA event in 1967. The Master’s Golf Tournament at the Augusta National Golf Club was one of the last battlegrounds for emancipation. In the late 1950s, Clifford Roberts, one of the club’s founders and long-time chairman of the Masters Committee, said in response to growing criticism, “As long as I live, there will be nothing at the Masters besides black caddies and white players.”31 Ironically in 1975, Roberts himself welcomed Lee Elder, the Masters’ first African-American player. In 1997, Eldrick “Tiger” Woods made history when he became the first AfricanAmerican to win the Masters Tournament. He said, “I must admit, the first time I drove 21 down Magnolia Lane I was not thinking about Bobby Jones or all the Masters stood for. I was thinking about all the great African-American players that never got a chance to play there.”32 In the foreward to Pete McDaniel’s book, Uneven Lies, Tiger wrote, “Golf has afforded me a stage for free expression. That freedom, however, was a gift paid for by many determined people who endured all kinds of indignities just to be able to play the game. I and every person of color who enjoys this great game can do so because of their determination and grit. I’m reminded of that every time I tee up. I know where I’ve been.”33 BEN DAVIS In 1936, Rackham Golf Course became home to well-known golfer Ben Davis. Born in 1912 in Pensacola Florida, Davis began his golf odyssey as a caddy at the Oceola Country Club at the age of 7. It was there that he learned to play golf. Ben was left handed, but at that time there was no such thing as left-handed equipment so he had no choice but to learn to play right handed. He was taken under the wing of Mark Myers, a prominent Florida businessman. Myers bought clubs for Ben and invited him to play the course on days that caddies were allowed to golf. Myers’ help allowed Ben to get better at the game. According to Ben, his father (a butcher by trade) would slaughter a cow and sell the meat to local markets door to door. It was hard work and money was tight for the Davis family. Ben later moved to Detroit and found work in the Packard Motor Car factory. He was initially hired in 1933 to work at Detroit’s Palmer Park course, but in Ben’s words, Rackham was the “father” and everyone wanted to work there.34 In 1936, Ben was offered the job of assistant golf pro but was only allowed to teach African-Americans. When Lou Powers took over as head professional at Rackham in 1948, he allowed Ben to teach full time and to teach white students as well. Powers took a chance hiring an African-American as a full-time professional at a time when it wasn’t clear if he would be accepted. When Lou Powers retired in 1968, Ben assumed the duties of head pro at Rackham, the first time the nation would see an African-American man hold that position.35 Ben had gained a strong following and his clientele slowly grew as did his reputation for being one of the best golfers in the area. 22 Ben Davis (Irving and Betty Baron) Davis featured in Michigan Golfer magazine (Michigan Golfer-Art McCafferty) Well-known civic leaders, judges, athletes and musicians sought lessons and golf advice from Ben Davis. Hall of Fame Detroit Lions Cornerback Lem Barney was a regular at the course as well as Bob Lanier and Dave Bing of the Detroit Pistons. Mayor Coleman Young and other local politicians also played Rackham and took lessons from Ben. From the pounding fists of Joe Louis to the sweet sounds of Motown, Ben Davis taught them all. Davis’ long and successful teaching career at Rackham spanned some sixty-plus years.36 In addition to teaching, Ben entered a few of the tournaments open to blacks, such as Tam O’ Shanter in Chicago, organized by George May in the 1930s and 1940s. When asked how he did in tournaments he simply states, “ I held my own.”37 Mostly he stayed in Michigan and Florida because he didn’t have the financial backing necessary to pursue a touring career. While the others battled the color line across the nation, Ben had his own battles here and in Florida, where he went to play during the winter months on what became known as the Florida mini-tour. Detroiter Betty Baron had come on the scene as Ben’s manager and ran his lessons and tour schedule. It was then she discovered that Ben, while playing and playing well on the Florida tour, was being charged three times the entry fee and twice the room and board of his white counterparts. Ben then gave up the Florida tour. When asked about the discrimination he experienced over the years, Ben said, “I never dwelled on that, it wasn’t good. I like to look forward not back. My thoughts were how and when would I get to play again, just get me to the next tee.”38 Another time, while playing a tournament in Battle Creek, Davis and Baron recalled that when he tried to get his cart for the event, they refused to give it to him. Baron explained to the starter that he was a touring pro and was participating in the event. Finally, the official just threw the keys at him. Again, while being questioned about the trials he faced 23 as an African-American golfer, he said “the only thing that really bothered me was that I couldn’t play with the same guys that I would golf with out here at Rackham every day.”39 In 1994, the Golf Association of Michigan honored Ben with the Distinguished Service Award.40 He is also a member of the African-American Hall of Fame, the Michigan Golf Hall of Fame and was named Golf Man of the Year by the March of Dimes in 1974.41 Karen Peek, one of Ben’s former students, LPGA Professional and also an AfricanAmerican said, “I’ve seen a lot of parallels between Jackie Robinson’s life and Ben Davis’. He’s the consummate gentleman.”42 JOE LOUIS During World War II and the years leading up to it, Detroit’s Joe Louis was one of the most famous athletes in the world. Americans, black and white, thought of Joe’s matches with Germany’s Max Schmeling as symbolic of the Western Allies fight against the Nazis. On June 19, 1936, when all of America had their radios tuned in for the fight, Schmeling knocked Louis out in the twelfth round. Everyone in America felt defeated. Years later, Louis admitted that golf was partially to blame. Instead of relaxing and putting on weight before the bout, as his trainers advised him to do, Louis was out on the golf course practicing his newly acquired passion. Two years later, Louis got a rematch with Schmeling and this time, he was ready. John H. Kennedy, in his book A Course of their Own said, “Hitler’s Superman lasted only two minutes and four seconds in the first round, and then recovered in the hospital. It was redemption -- for America, for Louis, for Negroes.”43 As Joe Louis’ career expanded, so did his love of golf. In 1941, Rackham Golf Course became the place where the world heavy weight boxing champion would hold his Joe Louis Open, a United Golf Association tournament for black golfers.44 Louis was one of Ben Davis’ star pupils. Davis, together with Bob Seymour, “conceived the idea of establishing the Joe Louis Open golf tournament. The ‘Brown Bomber’ wholeheartedly endorsed the proposal.”45 24 (Detroit Free Press) Joe Louis practicing his putting stroke at Rackham Louis donated the $1,000 purse for the tournament and also paid entry fees and transportation costs for many of the black golfers who would not have been able to participate without his financial assistance.46 When Louis was drafted to serve in World War II, the Joe Louis Open Tournament took a temporary hiatus. However, in 1945 a Joe Louis Open was held and he was given special permission from his superiors to attend. When Louis returned from his military commission, he restarted the tournaments with a larger, $2,000 purse. The tournament was a popular event on the black circuit and Louis was regarded as “patron saint of black golfers.”47 Louis also had a penchant for gambling. He often played matches with better golfers because he knew they needed the money but were too proud to take an outright gift. It is estimated that he lost more than $500,000 on the golf course. Because of his fame and wide acceptance by whites, Joe Louis became the first black man to play a number of private country clubs across the country. In 1952, he was invited to play in the San Diego Invitational. The week before the tournament, he was informed by Horton Smith, the then President of the Professional Golf Association (and head golf pro at Detroit Golf Club) that he and two other black players would not be allowed to play. Joe said, “all this made me mad as hell.”48 He called Walter Winchell and had the story on the national news that night. Winchell said “…the PGA President would not give an OK to the ex-champion to play in that Open, because … he is a Negro.”49 Louis left 25 for San Diego the next day to confront the PGA. He said “I want the people to know what the PGA is. We’ve got another Hitler to get by.”50 A lot of negotiations took place, and in the end Louis, but not the others, was allowed to play. The racial barriers of the PGA were beginning to break down. Louis told reporters that it was “the biggest fight of my life.”51 U.S.G.A. PUBLIC LINKS CHAMPIONSHIPS The United States Golf Association held four tournaments a year; The National Amateur, The National Open, The National Women’s and The National Public Links Championship. The National Public Links Championship was the brainchild of James D. Standish, Jr., a native Detroiter who wanted a tournament for all amateur golfers who could not afford to belong to country clubs. In fact, it was a requirement that its participants play only on public courses. There were no entry fees for either the players or the spectators. It was a radical idea at a time when golf was considered a sport of the elite and, initially, Mr. Standish did not get a lot of support for his idea. The first tournament was held in Toledo in 1922. Every year it was held in a different city and every year its popularity grew. By 1938, it was the single largest tournament in the U.S. The U.S.G.A. had to initiate sectional qualifying rounds to determine the tournament entry list. In 1940, when the tournament came to Rackham Golf Course, 38 locations throughout the country held qualifying rounds for the 2,600 entrants. The final 192 entrants were from 31 states, districts and territories. J.D. Salsinger wrote, in the tournament program, “No one who plays golf today is denied an opportunity to compete for a national title,”52 a philosophy of equality practiced at Rackham since its inception. A second Public Links Championship was held at Rackham in 1961.53 RACKHAM GOLF COURSE AND MOTOWN The late 1950’s and 1960’s brought a new beat to Rackham. Motown recording artists discovered golf and found solace from the road at Rackham. It became a place where they could unwind and enjoy the camaraderie. Abdul “Duke” Fakir, Motown recording artist and original member of the The Four Tops, began his career in the 1950’s with friends Renaldo “Obie” Benson, Lawrence Payton, and Levi Stubbs. Barry Gordy, Jr. put them together with the Holland/Dozier/Holland songwriting team in 1964. They combined on such mega-hits as “I Can’t Help Myself,” “Baby I Need Your Loving,” and “Reach Out I’ll Be There.” Fakir recently described Rackham as “Motown’s golf course.”54 He still plays there today, and in his opinion, “it is one of the finest public golf courses anywhere in the country.”55 He also said: “In my career as a recording artist with Motown and The Four Tops, I have seen segregation, prejudice and discrimination. Rackham was a place that exemplified all that was right with society…I support the creation of a Historic District at Rackham and strongly urge interested parties NOT to destroy Detroit’s History” (Appendix C, p 35). In addition to The Four Tops, Rackham was the home course for other Motown greats such as Smokey Robinson, members of The Miracles and The Temptations, and Marvin 26 Gaye. Marvin Gaye’s collection of hits includes “Ain’t that Peculiar,”a re-release of “Heard it through the Grapevine,” and “Dancin in the Streets” which he co-wrote with Martha Reeves. Martha Reeves, whose hit song “Heatwave” is still a crowd favorite, took lessons from Ben Davis at Rackham. She is currently serving on the Detroit City Council. Motown manager, Barry Gordy Jr., also a regular at Rackham, was so enamored with Ben Davis that he took him with him on trips and tours as his personal golf instructor. Chet Jawor, head professional for Detroit’s six municipal courses in the 1960s, kept his headquarters at Rackham. He said, in addition to the Motown entertainers, Rackham was the place to meet and play for many of the area’s judges, doctors, politicians, top athletes and media personalities, many of whom were members of private clubs.56 RACKHAM GOLF COURSE AND JERRY MATTHEWS The 1980s brought Interstate 696 (I-696) through the southernmost edge of the Rackham course and necessitated the redesign of parts of seven holes. I-696 is part of the original interstate highway system outlined in 1956-58. It was built in three stages with the first one opening in 1962, and the last in 1989. It links I-96 on the west side of the Detroit metro area, I-75 in the center, and I-94 on the east side. I-696 is also known as the Reuther Freeway, named after UAW labor leader Walter P. Reuther. It travels through Detroit’s northern suburbs and has proven to be a vital part of Detroit’s highway sysem. The last stage of construction included the segment that affected Rackham Golf Course. This section has some of the most unique features of any freeway in Detroit and, indeed, the nation. It has three tunnel sections in less than three miles between Coolidge Highway and Southfield Road on which parks have been constructed and maintained by the Michigan Department of Transportation. Along Rackham Golf Course, the freeway runs below grade while the service drive is at grade level. This design minimizes the noise and visual impact on the golf course. To accommodate the loss of approximately ten acres of the golf course in a manner consistent with and requiring the least reconfiguration of the original Donald Ross design, prominent Michigan-based golf course architect Jerry Matthews was hired to make the necessary changes. He modified only what was necessary, with a deliberate eye to maintaining the character and integrity of the course, in some cases using parts of one hole in the redesign of another. For example, the new hole #2 has most of the original fairway and the original green of Donald Ross’ hole #3. In the end, parts of seven holes were changed to varying degrees but only six tees and greens were reconfigured. For a map of the changes, see the Jerry Matthews’ diagram below. 27 (Jerry Matthews) Matthews himself is an award-winning designer with many accomplishments to his credit. His experience and familiarity with Donald Ross, and his respect for Donald Ross’ course designs made him a natural choice to help with the alterations. His approach to the changes needed at Rackham is embodied in his following statement: “Greatness is only determined over a long period of time. History is the only thing that can tell which courses are great. Look at the work of Donald Ross. Over the years, his work stands the test of time. You don’t remodel or do a lot with his courses, because they are great to start with.”57 Matthews’ list of credentials includes: • • • Member of American Society of Golf Course Architects (ASGCA) for more than 35 years serving as its Treasurer, Co-chairman of the Environmental Impact Committee, Chairman of Speaker’s Bureau, Secretary, VicePresident, and in 1993, President. State of Michigan Board of Landscape Architects – Appointed by Governor 1988-94 National Golf Foundation Board of Directors - 1993-94 28 • Michigan State University Instructor “Golf Course Design and Construction Techniques” - 1993-2004 Awards to Jerry Matthews’ courses include: • • • • • • • • Chena Bend, Alaska - Best Courses in Alaska 1999-2000 - Ranked 2nd Golf Digest Chena Bend, Alaska - Best Courses in Alaska 2001-2002 - Ranked 2nd Golf Digest Elk Ridge, Atlanta, Michigan - Best New Public Golf Course 1991 - Ranked 2nd Golf Digest Elk Ridge, Atlanta, Michigan - America’s Top 75 Upscale Public Courses 1996 Ranked 47th Golf Digest The Lakes Course at Michaywe, Gaylord, Michigan - Best New Public Golf Courses 1988 - Ranked 3rd Golf Digest St. Ives Golf Club, Stanwood, Michigan - Top Ten in America Best Courses for Women 1999 - Ranked 6th Golf for Women St. Ives Golf Club, Stanwood, Michigan - Best New Affordable Golf Course 1997 - Ranked 5th Golf Digest Timber Ridge Golf Course, East Lansing, Michigan - Places to Play in North America 2002 - Ranked in top 12 Golf Digest Readers Other courses designed by Matthews include: The Torch at A-Ga-Ming Twin Lakes Golf Club The Grand Hotel Golf Course Antrim Dells Wildcat Creek Golf Course Kewadin Rochester Hills Mackinac Island Ellsworth Kokomo Michigan Michigan Michigan Michigan Indiana Course designs such as the ones above, along with Matthews’ impressive credentials, clearly cast him as one of the top golf course designers in the Midwest. (Jerry Matthews) Matthews’ philosophy of allowing the topography of the land to govern the layout and changes to courses is evidenced by one of his personal favorite holes, #13 at Antrim Dells in Ellsworth, Michigan. 29 RACKHAM’S 65TH ANNIVERSARY In July 1990, the Friends of PARTNERS, an organization of volunteers from the metropolitan Detroit area who commit their time and talents to the City of Detroit’s Recreation Department, organized a golf tournament and celebration to salute Rackham Golf Course on its 65th anniversary. Lem Barney, Chairman of the Friends of PARTNERS, was the Master of Ceremonies. Ben Davis along with Lou Powers, Rackham’s Pro from 1950-57 and Walton Lewis, who led an effort to renovate the clubhouse in the 1980s, were honored for their dedication to Rackham. Also recognized was the Junior Golf Program, begun at Rackham by Powers in the 1950s. In the 1960s, Chet Jawor held golf schools in conjunction with the Detroit Free Press, Detroit Times and Detroit News. Among the alumni of the junior golf program are Joyce Kazmierski, an All-American at Michigan State and LPGA Tour player who became President of the LPGA and was inducted into the Michigan Golf Hall of Fame; Bob Proben, who played the PGA Tour, and Janina Parrot Jacobs, who is one of the leading amateurs in the State. In 1990, there were over 1600 participants in the junior golf program. In letters honoring Rackham’s 65th anniversary, many state and local officials, including former Governor Jim Blanchard and former Detroit Mayor Coleman A. Young, touted Rackham’s place in Detroit’s history (Appendix C). These accolades included the following: “Donated to the City of Detroit by Horace Rackham in 1925, Rackham Golf Course was for many years the only course on which black citizens could play golf. Host site of the Joe Louis Golf Tournaments in the 1940s and 1950s, Rackham Golf Course has for decades fostered true sportsmanship through its unmitigated commitment to equal opportunity for all.” ⎯ Former Michigan Governor James Blanchard “Horace H. Rackham’s gift to the City of Detroit has become an institution in the world of golf. True to Rackham’s wish, golfers from every walk of life have enjoyed the excellent design of its public fairways.” ⎯ ⎯ Former Detroit Mayor Coleman A. Young “Sixty-five years ago much of the land in the area was open fields and farms, and the fulfillment of the dream of integrated recreation facilities and other institutions was decades away. …Rackham has earned a distinguished place in the history of this region and the State of Michigan, and continues to serve as a reminder of past achievements in the struggle for racial equality.” ⎯ Former Royal Oak Mayor Patricia Paruch 30 “It is important that we acknowledge those who recognized the need, and gave unselfishly of their means in order that others may also benefit and enjoy the treasures of Detroit.” ⎯ Former Detroit City Council President Maryann Mahaffey RACKHAM’S RECENT HISTORY Karen Peek began playing at Rackham as a junior golfer in the late 1960s and watched the course’s steady decline through the 1970s and 1980s due to Dutch Elm disease and cuts in the city budget. She was hired at Rackham by Kelly Sullivan, the golf pro shop manager, in 1982. Peek, an African-American LPGA Professional, is a former student of Rackham’s Ben Davis. Peek became head pro in 1988 and was later appointed General Manager, becoming one of the few African-American females in the 1980s to hold that position. In 1988, she said “I think the course has gotten better in each of the last three years. The City of Detroit … has made a commitment to making Rackham once again assume the position of a major factor on the local golf scene.”58 When Peek was promoted to General Manager of Rackham it was just beginning its slow journey back to its glory days of the public links championships of 1940 and 1961 and Peek wished for some help to bring it back to its original luster. “ I love this course,” Peek said. “This, to me, is more than just a job. It’s always been a place that I love to be.”59 Her help came in the form of American Golf Corporation and the course saw immediate results with 61,000 rounds played in the 1991 season. Peek said, “ People always related to Rackham, it was a comfortable course to play.”60 Karen Peek left Rackham in 2005 and to this day she says, “ Rackham is tremendously important to golf and history.”61 Looking to privatize the management of it courses, the City of Detroit entered into a tenyear contract with American Golf to manage four of the city’s municipal courses (Rackham, Chandler Park, Rouge Park and Palmer Park). Changes were immediate. American Golf quickly forged a partnership with local business leader, Detroit Piston and NBA Hall of Famer Dave Bing, and the company invested $2 million in the four courses. Improvements included planting trees, turf repair, bunker restoration and much, much more. At the time American Golf assumed management of the course, Rackham had been maintained more as a lawn rather than a golf course, with many of Ross’ trademark rectangular- or square-shaped green’s sheared into a more standard round. Working with an architect and old aerial photographs of the course, American Golf’s Dave Hollens began to implement his plan to restore the famous course back to its original challenging splendor.62 In three short years, the restoration process was seeing its effect as Rackham was named as one of the top 10 municipal courses in the state by Michigan Golfer magazine.63 In 2002, it was named one of the top 10 public courses designed by Donald Ross in the United States by Travel and Leisure Golf magazine.64 With its new drainage system, defined and maintained tees and greens, Rackham has been restored and is currently the only one of the four courses to turn a profit. 31 THE FIRST TEE - MICHIGAN In addition to its role of welcoming adult golfers, Rackham is also part of the The First Tee family of courses. The First Tee is an ambitious cooperative program instituted by the PGA TOUR. Its national director is the famously named son of boxing legend Joe Louis, Joe Louis Barrow, Jr. The mission of The First Tee program is to impact the lives of young people around the country by providing learning facilities and educational programs that promote character development and life-enhancing values through the game of golf. The goal of The First Tee of Michigan is to provide youngsters with a total golf experience - one that encourages kids to learn the lifelong game of golf as a fun pursuit or as a sport they might play at the highest level. At the same time, an equally important goal is to expose the participants to personal and social skills, along with the core and life values that golf teaches. 32 The Clubhouse (Hank Berry / Robert Lebow) This Arts & Crafts Movement structure has Prairie and Romanesque Revival influences. It is constructed of brick, stone, wood and decorative Pewabic tiles. The brick is laid in a common bond pattern with header courses every fifth course. Decorative brick panels with a buff colored brick as a frame and Pewabic tile decorative elements in the center of each are found throughout the entire structure. In addition to the Donald Ross-designed course, the Rackham clubhouse is a magnificent structure designed by architect Niels Chester Sorensen. Reminiscent of great Arts & Crafts buildings by Eliel Saarinen, Edwin Lutyens and Albert Kahn, Sorensen created a structure that successfully marries characteristics of the Romanesque Revival style and the Arts & Crafts movement through his use of a Prairie-style roofline, asymmetrically balanced facades, exposed timbers, and incorporation of naturalistic materials. The clubhouse included marble baths, 100 lockers, a lunchroom and lounge, and living quarters for the course manager. Beyond the basic structure of the clubhouse, the decorative aspects are most important to recognizing the overall beauty and relevance of the design for that time period. 33 Windows, doorways and balustrades are sized and arranged to create horizontally implied lines across each façade. All brick is layered four courses end-to-end with shallow raking. The common bond brick pattern with header courses also creates a strong horizontal pattern which directs the viewer’s eye across the façade. It provides visual interest which is stimulating yet subtle. Throughout the entire structure, decorative brick panels are created by using buff colored brick as a frame and integrating tiles into the pattern to accent or bring emphasis to the panels like jewels might accent a chalice. This is in keeping with the Arts & Crafts affinity for decorative aspects of medieval design. A similar pattern is created to enhance archways, again using the buff-colored bricks and Pewabic tiles. The tiles are glazed in a limited palette of earth tones, turquoise, and the iridescence for which Pewabic Pottery was so famous. These colors are also repeated in the original roof tiles and serve to visually tie the building together and give it a grounded feel. This large building appears to hug the ground. Through its unique design, the architect was successful in setting a very large structure naturally into the landscape. 34 (Hank Berry/ Robert Lebow) (Hank Berry/ Robert Lebow) Brickwork detail with Pewabic Pottery Inlays 35 (Hank Berry/ Robert Lebow) Arch Detail with Pewabic tile inlays shown with limestone key 36 (Hank Berry/ Robert Lebow) . In order to understand the significance of this architectural gem, one must be aware of the views that were driving the Arts & Crafts Movement. Born out of response to the Industrial Revolution, this movement was concerned with the degradation of work and destruction of the environment due to the rise of factories. The shift in work from craftsman to mere production by unskilled laborers changed the quality of goods and redefined the way in which society now lived. Arts & Crafts advocates believed that a return to hand craftsmanship would restore individuality and quality to the work process. The interpretation of this thinking resulted in a style of art and architecture which advocated simplicity, unity, and decorative motifs inspired by nature in place of elaborate ornamentation, brilliant colors and multiple patterns popular in Victorian design. It was not a movement confined to a single style but drew upon many styles, chosen on moral as well as aesthetic grounds. The reformers condemned as artificial the principles of symmetry and proportion characteristic of classical architecture. They rejected styles 37 developed for grand buildings and noble patrons as unresponsive to human needs. They turned instead to artistic and architectural solutions that had evolved in response to climate and geography. The idea that buildings and their contents should be integrated with the landscape and should use indigenous materials was central to the Arts & Crafts movement.65 Architects and designers were particularly inspired by Gothic churches for several reasons. In contrast to Classical and Renaissance buildings, they were asymmetrical and their exteriors reflected the arrangement of interior spaces. Their ornamentation was based on motifs found in nature and they were perceived as having been hand built by artisans who took pride in their work.66 In viewing Sorensen’s clubhouse design, one can clearly see how aspects of the Arts & Crafts Movement affected the outcome. This design is truly reflective of the time in which it was created and serves as a visual reminder, if not the epitome, of the history of this region. (Hank Berry/ Robert Lebow) 38 (Hank Berry/Robert Lebow) An added feature of Sorensen’s design was his decision to use Pewabic tile for the decorative patterns and motifs. Artist/craftsman Mary Chase Perry Stratton, founder of Pewabic Pottery, was an important figure in her own right. She and her partner, Horace Caulkins (developer of the Revelation Kiln), founded Pewabic Pottery in 1903, at the height of the Arts & Crafts Movement in America. The Pottery’s first home was a stable on Alfred Street in Detroit. Four years later, Pewabic Pottery moved to a new facility on East Jefferson designed by architect William Buck Stratton in the Tudor Revival style. In 1991, the building (which still houses Pewabic Pottery) and its contents were designated a National Historic Landmark and today is Michigan’s only historic pottery.67 An important figure in Detroit’s artistic and cultural life, Mary Stratton was a founding member of the Detroit Arts & Crafts Society and later served as a trustee of what is now the Detroit Institute of Arts. She established the Ceramics Department at the University of Michigan, taught students in Wayne State University’s ceramic program and received honorary degrees from both schools in recognition of her accomplishments. In 1947, she received the coveted Charles Fergus Binns Medal, the nation’s highest award in the field of ceramics. Stratton died in 1961, but the pottery continued to operate for another five years under the direction of her former assistant. In 1966, ownership was transferred to Michigan State University, which operated the Pottery as part of its continuing education program. In 1979, the private nonprofit Pewabic Society was established to administer the Pottery’s operation and in 1981 Pottery ownership was transferred to the Society, whose board of trustees continues to serve as the Pottery’s governing body. 39 West Elevation (Hank Berry / Robert Lebow) (Hank Berry/ Robert Lebow) 40 WEST ELEVATION The two-story portion of this structure is oriented to the west, centered within long low wings oriented to the north and to the south, each end having a gable projection. The center structure has a large clipped roof with a row of double hung wood windows, ganged in pairs, tucked in below the exposed eaves. Above the windows, running the entire façade and immediately below the eaves is a series of diamond shaped medallions built of decorative brick and Pewabic tiles. The windowsills are limestone with decorative brick soldiering below the sills. Below the windows are a series of three arches elaborately trimmed in Pewabic tile, decorative brickwork and keystones in the shape of a shield. The same treatment is found on the interior of the arches. This is the main entry to and from the fairways. (Hank Berry / Robert Lebow) The Pewabic tiles are used on the interior arch, and both arch faces. Every seventh course of brick is replaced with seven Pewabic tiles; two square and five rectangular tiles, creating a frame. The use of Pewabic tiles in bands and decorative brickwork link the three arches. The Clubhouse veranda extends the entire length of the west façade, offering uninterrupted panoramic views westward to the greens. The veranda has an arched entry at both the north and south ends. Centered between the two is the main triple arched entry. Facing west is another arch, detailed with Pewabic tiles, four large rectangular openings, viewing portals, followed by a tall vertical recess and finally the main entrance. The design is repeated from the north moving south to the main entrance. 41 The brick columns forming the eight large rectangular openings are octagonal, terminating in the wooden roof structure. The interior of the roof, which forms the veranda ceiling, is exposed timbers and planking. A total of eight timbers form the support. Between each set of timbers is an original suspended luminaire built of metal and glass in a traditional cylindrical lantern form with detailed vertical dividers and a cone shaped cap. The entire veranda interior is a blast of decorative brickwork and Pewabic tile used in profusion. Within every arch is a keystone and layers of decorative brickwork. The views offered from the veranda are exceptional. The roof over the north and south wings is the original heavy red/orange/yellow and blue tile roof. The roof over the center section has been replaced with asphalt shingle. With the exception of center roof, a few windows, and two light fixtures, all appears to be original. (Hank Berry) Terra Cotta roof tiles with internal gutter system 42 The west elevation is framed by some of the original oak trees. (Walter P. Reuther Library, Wayne State University) Note the trees as they were during construction of the course. ( Hank Berry ) Note the same trees in their present state. By virtue of their original and current sizes, date it can be ascertained that these trees are in excess of 100 years old. The tree labeled #1 shows evidence of storm damage suffered in August 2006. 43 South Elevation ( Hank Berry / Robert Lebow) SOUTH ELEVATION The south façade shows an asymmetric roofline with the Western portion dropping low to create the veranda roof. Within the veranda roof is a small gable articulated with an arched opening. The tile roof includes a hidden gutter system terminating in copper downspouts at both the eastern and western ends of the south façade. The hidden gutter creates a strong horizontal element within the softly hued tile roof. The juxtaposition of arched tiles and the straight edges of the recessed gutter is striking. Under the exposed eaves and rafters is a row of six wood framed windows with cut stone sills. A similar row of six windows is aligned directly below the upper six. The lower six windows are taller than the upper six and are separated by decorative brickwork and a centered Pewabic tile medallion. The decorative brickwork is a vertical link from the sill of the second floor window to the top of the first floor window. The effect is one of strong vertical elements, similar to a column. An arch with stone steps, brick walls and stone caps create the veranda entrance at the western end of the south façade. A course of limestone runs from the top step of the entrance terminating at the southeast corner of the structure. 44 North Elevation (Hank Berry/Robert Lebow) NORTH ELEVATION Two banks of symmetrically arranged windows, each bank composed of four windows on either side of centered window and juxtaposed with an elaborate and grand arched entrance to the veranda. The windows at grade level are composed of a rectangular on the vertical axis lite with an upper and lower rectangular on the horizontal axis lite. The emphasis is on the height of the windows and it’s visual relationship with the towering chimney. These windows are wood framed and glazed. The second story windows are shorter with only two divisions, the main lite and a second lite at the top of the main glazed area. The visual affect of the two windows above one another is one of a towering narrow section as the grade and upper story windows are linked by decorative brickwork. The rhythm of the taller windows at grade and shorter windows at the second level mimic the brick and stone divisions on the chimney rising behind these windows. As the grade level windows are designed to impart the feeling of height, the second story shorter windows do the opposite by hunkering in just under the generous and heavy eaves. Between the east and west banks of windows is a solitary window slightly higher than midway up the façade. At the east end of the north façade is the arched opening to the veranda, this arch, two banks of windows and center window very neatly and discretely divide the façade into beautifully balanced thirds. Decorative brickwork and Pewabic tiles adorn the exterior and interior of the arch. The dramatic and elegantly sloping roof of the veranda bring a beautiful quality of human scale to a large structure set in open land. 45 East Elevation ( Hank Berry/Robert Lebow) ( Hank Berry/Robert Lebow) Note the highly articulated brickwork and the original lighting fixture over the doorway. Also visible are the carved rafter ends and the tile roof. 46 (Hank Berry) Chimney with limestone and Pewabic tile rising above the clay tile roof. EAST ELEVATION The east elevation is the service façade of the structure. Architectural details are the same as in the balance of the building with the addition of a massive chimney built of brick, cut stone and Pewabic tiles. The chimney is truncated in Art Deco styling with a cut stone cap, two horizontal stone bands close to the top, and a center horizontal band with a Pewabic medallion composed of nine tiles. Just above the chimney base are sculpted blocks of stone serving as a visual anchor and suggesting vertical movement to elevate the viewer’s eye to the medallion and on to the chimney cap. The greater overall influence of the structure is the sweeping horizontal movement anchoring the clubhouse to the grounds. The luminary over the south service door is original, the one over the north door was replaced in the 1980s. 47 Greenskeepers’ Building (Stable) This attractive little building is a Tudor Revival Storybook style. Storybook styling gained popularity in the early 1920s and imbued a sense of fantasy. The somewhat exaggerated elements of this building lend it to the Storybook style. The structure was built with high quality red brick, cut limestone blocks and half-timbering. Copper gutters, downspouts and roof valleys follow the structural materials in quality and may indicate an original roof of slate or tile. The roof style is hip with one gable end. Currently, the building has an asphalt roof. Building corners and strapping are limestone. From an inspection of the original stalls still visible on the interior of the building and discussions with current and former staff, the Committee believes the building was originally used as a stable for horses that pulled the grass cutting equipment. This little jewel of a building must have been impressive when new, set amidst the rolling fairways of the golf course and surrounded by open fields. East Elevation ( Hank Berry/Robert Lebow) 48 ( Hank Berry/Robert Lebow) EAST ELEVATION The east façade of the greenskeepers’ building is asymmetrical incorporating a large garage door in the center and a smaller single garage door, currently bricked in, to its south. Originally the bricked in garage bay would have been fitted with heavy wooden doors. The columns adjacent to the garage bays and on the corners are alternating courses of cut limestone block and brick. A small window is tucked in under the eave at the south end of the wall. To the north of the large bay is small bump-out with two rectangular windows, each with four lights. Cut limestone blocks act as sills and headers to the windows with a Proto Art Deco arrangement of header blocks. The corner blocks are a device used in Art Deco styling but, as this building pre-dates the Art Deco movement, it is termed “Proto Art Deco.” The cut limestone sills form a strap across the face of the building. 49 South Elevation ( Hank Berry / Robert Lebow) SOUTH ELEVATION This simple façade is beautifully scaled and balanced by a well-proportioned hip roof and modest overhang. The original wooden doors most likely filled the entire area currently bricked in, creating a very balanced and yet simple form. The opening has been filled in with brick that does not match the original brick and a new single door is centered in the space. 50 North Elevation ( Hank Berry / Robert Lebow ) NORTH ELEVATION This is the only original façade of the structure. It has a half-timbered gable of wide planks and hand stuccoing not found anywhere else on the structure. There are three rectangular windows trimmed with the same stone treatment as all other windows. This end of the structure is narrower than the rest of the structure and projects out, creating its own Storybook appearance. The limestone banding creates a strong visual rhythm and the horizontal emphasis is enhanced by the half-timbering of the gable. 51 West Elevation ( Hank Berry/Robert Lebow ) (Hank Berry/Robert Lebow ) WEST ELEVATION The limestone quoining and banding continues on this façade. The north end offers a change in roof height and roof style. Toward the north end, the building bumps out slightly with a nicely scaled hip roof and two smaller windows. The metal door is not original. South of the bump-out are two bays, currently bricked in, but originally were most likely fitted with large wooden doors. 52 The Golf Course Rackham Golf Course was designed by Donald Ross and is a 6,445-yard AGC Championship course. It has an 18-hole layout with a large putting green directly in front of the clubhouse. The course was specifically designed with spacious tees, intermittent grassy roughs, defined bunkers, rolling greens and plenty of sand traps. There is no water on the course. It was designed to accommodate more than 600 players a day. The grounds are well maintained by American Golf Corporation, a private company under contract with the City of Detroit to operate the golf course. Unique to Rackham alone, is its location next to the Detroit Zoo. Golfers on the 15th hole are regularly treated to the smiles and waves of passengers traveling on the zoo train between the African Safari and North American stations. They are occasionally treated to “birdies” of a different sort calling from next door, as well as the sounds of other exotic animals. Current scorecard and configuration 53 The following is a pictorial 18-hole tour of Rackham Golf Course (Hank Berry) ( Hank Berry ) View from 1st tee down the fairway 54 ( Hank Berry) Fairway shot showing the well placed bunkers in front of the green ( Hank Berry) 1st green with sand traps 55 (Hank Berry) ( Hank Berry) 2nd hole tee and fairway 56 ( Hank Berry ) 2nd hole green with pin placement 57 (Hank Berry ) (Hank Berry) 3rd hole tee showing fairway framed by trees 58 ( Hank Berry ) 3rd hole approach ( Hank Berry ) 3rd hole approach and green 59 (Hank Berry ) ( Hank Berry ) 4th hole tee with dogleg back to the right 60 ( Hank Berry ) 4th fairway (Hank Berry ) Approach over rolling fairway 61 (Hank Berry ) 4th green 62 (Hank Berry ) (Hank Berry ) 5th hole tee with the cart path off to the left 63 ( Hank Berry) 5th hole approach (Hank Berry ) Side view of the green showing pitch 64 ( Hank Berry) View from 6th tee 65 (Hank Berry) 6th fairway approach ( Hank Berry ) 6th approach with green in background 66 ( Hank Berry) Sixth green at the corner of Ludlow Ave. and Scotia Road. This is one of the most visible points of the course. Walkers, joggers and cyclists can take in the game from just outside this point. 67 (Hank Berry ) ( Hank Berry ) View from 7th tee 68 ( Hank Berry ) 7th fairway view (Hank Berry ) 7th approach 69 (Hank Berry) 7th green with trap 70 ( Hank Berry) (Hank Berry) View from tee of the par 3 number 8 hole 71 ( Hank Berry) 8th green with bunkers and pin placement on the green ( Hank Berry ) Direct approach to the green 72 (Hank Berry ) ( Hank Berry ) The 9th hole return to the clubhouse 73 (Hank Berry ) 9th fairway (Hank Berry) Elevated green with tile roof of the clubhouse in background 74 (Hank Berry ) The 9th green with full view of the clubhouse 75 ( Hank Berry ) ( Hank Berry ) View from 10th tee 76 (Hank Berry ) Approach to the green. ( Hank Berry ) Pin placement on the green surrounded by bunkers 77 (Hank Berry) ( Hank Berry) View off the 11th tee 78 (Hank Berry ) Approach to the green bordering Ludlow Avenue (Hank Berry ) Approach to the green 79 ( Hank Berry ) Pin placement on the green with Ludlow Avenue homes in the background 80 (Hank Berry) (Hank Berry) 12th tee and fairway 81 (Hank Berry) Approach to green (Hank Berry) Sand trap and pin placement 82 ( Hank Berry) (Hank Berry) The approach with Ludlow Avenue in the background 83 (Hank Berry) The green with a right side pin placement (Hank Berry) Side view of the green 84 (Hank Berry) (Hank Berry) Approach to the green 85 (Hank Berry) Elevated green with a left to right slope (Hank Berry) Pin placement and a side view of the green 86 (Hank Berry) The 15th hole shares a border with the Detroit Zoological Park on its left 87 (Hank Berry) Zoo Train through east boundary fence (Hank Berry) The green with traps flanking the approach 88 (Hank Berry) ( Hank Berry) View from Tee 89 (Hank Berry) Approach to the green (Hank Berry) View of the green from the side 90 ( Hank Berry) ( Hank Berry) Hole 17 is a shorter par 4 91 (Hank Berry) Traps and bunkers (Hank Berry) Green next to Ludlow Avenue 92 (Hank Berry) Hole 18 heads back toward the clubhouse (Hank Berry) 93 (Hank Berry) Approaching the green (Hank Berry) 94 (Hank Berry) Side view of 18th green (Hank Berry) View of the Clubhouse from the top of the green 95 (Hank Berry) View from green up to clubhouse As one finishes hole #18 and heads up the cart path, the architecture of the clubhouse clearly unfolds before the viewer’s eyes; the elongated veranda, the colorful tile roof and the articulated chimney rising above the roofline. This completes 18 holes on what was described by the as the “most splendid public course in the country.” 96 Cell Tower (Hank Berry/Robert Lebow) East elevation (Hank Berry/Robert Lebow) North elevation Constructed on the south end of the property in the 1990s, this structure was built to replicate the architecture of the clubhouse. While it is not nearly the quality of the clubhouse, care was taken to match its brick, roofline and colors, even adding decorative panels on the sides. 97 Cart Storage and Repair Facilities (Hank Berry/Robert Lebow) (Hank Berry/Robert Lebow) (Hank Berry/Robert Lebow) These three buildings serve as the storage and repair facilities for the more than 72 carts used on Rackham Golf Course. They are newer non-historic structures. 98 CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS After nearly nine months of intensive study, it is clear that Rackham Golf Course, from its very inception in the 1920s, was destined to be an important part of Detroit’s history and by association, Huntington Woods’ history. The indelible mark it has left on the historic fabric of the city and the region is without a doubt significant from many different perspectives. When Horace and Mary Rackham decided to gift a golf course to the citizens of Detroit, it was with the understanding that all people no matter of race, religion, sex, economic station, etc. would be welcome to play. Although it was intended to be given anonymously, the magnitude of the golf course gift made it impossible to keep the Rackhams’ secret. The act thrust the Rackhams into the limelight from which they had so often avoided, sometimes even threatening to rescind the gifts they had pledged if they were named as the donors. Through a friendship with his brother Alex Ross, the Rackhams hired the renowned golf course designer of the day, Donald Ross to design this notable municipal golf course. Unlike many of the courses that Ross designed in-studio, he was present at the Rackham site personally overseeing its development. This golf course is one of the few jewels from Detroit’s prosperous and opulent past that lies outside the city’s limits. Its stately clubhouse designed by Niels Chester Sorensen is true to the Arts & Crafts style that was so prevalent at that time in our nation’s architectural and design history. It is complete with its Pewabic Pottery details, metal luminaires, tile roof and hidden copper gutter system, seeing minimal changes over the years. It stands today true to the day it was built. At a time when the nation was segregated along racial lines and feminism was in its infancy, Rackham Golf Course, like the zoo to its east, was barrierless, a non-segregated course in a city whose deed restrictions forbid non-Caucasians from living within its borders. This trend of progressive tolerance toward different races continued through the 1930s and beyond with noted African-American golfer Ben Davis becoming one of the first black golf pros in the country. Then again with Detroit’s own heavyweight boxing champion Joe Louis holding his own golf tournament for amateur black golfers at Rackham, years before he would confront the leaders of the PGA, forcing them to reconsider their race restrictions that barred him from playing on their courses. Louis would become the first black golfer allowed to play in a PGA Tour event; the 1953 San Diego Open. Throughout these past 80+ years, Rackham Golf Course has welcomed local and national sports figures, political leaders, musicians, and golf enthusiasts of every skill level. It has also stayed true to the Rackhams’ dream of making the game of golf available to all people. The incredible genius of Donald Ross has been painstakingly resurrected by Rackham’s management company through a long and deliberate restoration process and their continued maintenance of the course. Rackham Golf Course has never faltered in its perennial indenture to the public. It has proven itself to be an enduring mirror of the time in which it was built and has stayed true 99 to the ideals of its inception whereby “the common man should be given a chance to play golf too.”68 It is the belief of the Historic District Study Committee that it has complied with the requirements of the Local Historic Districts Act, Public Act 169 of 1970 as amended. The Study Committee finds that Rackham Golf Course is significant under the Secretary of the Interior’s eligibility criteria for the National Register of Historic Places as evidenced under the criteria and integrity sections of this report. For all the reasons set forth in this report, it is the recommendation of the Study Committee that the Rackham Golf Course Historic District be created preserving this treasure for future generations and the continued enjoyment of the public without exclusion. It is our further recommendation that a National Register nomination be pursued. 100 ENDNOTES 1 Afro-American Sports Fall of Fame, Third Annual Induction Dinner booklet. 2 Ben Davis, Oral History as told to Hank Berry and Bonnie Cook, October 2006. 3 Abdul “Duke” Fakir, Oral History as told to Hank Berry, August 2006. 4 The Detroit Times, May 20, 1925. 5 Pete McDaniel, Uneven Lies; The Heroic Story of African-Americans in Golf, The American Golfer, Inc. 2000, p. 59. 6 The Detroit Times, April 12, 1925. 7 Bob Murphy, 1940 Amateur Public Links Championship booklet. 8 The Detroit Times, April 12, 1925. 9 The Detroit News, May 20, 1925. 10 The Detroit Times, May 20, 1925. 11 The Detroit News, May 17, 1925. 12 The Detroit Times, April 12, 1925. 13 Paul Dunn and B.J. Dunn, Great Donald Ross Courses You Can Play (Derrydale Press 2001), p.130. 14 Marjorie Cahn Brazer, Biography of An Endowment; The Horace H. Rackham and Mary A. Rackham Fund at The University of Michigan (Rackham Board of Governors 1985), p. 7-8. 15 Dunn, Great Donald Ross Courses You Can Play, p. x. 16 Bradley S. Klein, www. donaldrosssociety.org. 17 Bradley S. Klein, Discovering Donald Ross (Clock Tower Press 2001), p. 113. 18 1940 Amateur Public Links Championship booklet. 19 City of Detroit telephone directory, 1917. 20 History of Detroit, MI, www.wikipedia.org 21 Calvin H. Sinnette, Forbidden Fairways; African-Americans and the Game of Golf (Sleeping Bear Press 1998), p. 125. 22 Pete McDaniel, Uneven Lies; The Heroic Story of African-Americans in Golf, p. 59 (emphasis added). 23 Id., p. 161. 24 John H. Kennedy, A Course of Their Own; A History of African-American Golfers (University of Nebraska Press 2000), p. 143. 25 Id., p. 142. 26 Sinnette, Forbidden Fairways, p. 84-85. 27 Kennedy, A Course of Their Own, p. 51. 101 28 Sinnette, Forbidden Fairways, p. 99. 29 Id., p. 104. 30 Charlie Sifford, Just Let Me Play (British American Publishing 1992), p. 175. 31 Id., p. 175. 32 McDaniel, Uneven Lies, p. 8. 33 Id. 34 Ben Davis, Oral History as told to Hank Berry and Bonnie Cook, October 2006 35 Afro-American Sports Fall of Fame, Third Annual Induction Dinner booklet. 36 Betty Baron, Oral History as told to Hank Berry and Bonnie Cook, October 2006 37 Ben Davis, Oral History as told to Hank Berry and Bonnie Cook, October 2006 38 Id. 39 Id. 40 Joe Ballor, Michigan Golfer, February/March 1995, p. 30. 41 Id. 42 Id. 43 Kennedy, A Course of Their Own, p. 67. 44 Dunn, Great Donald Ross Courses, p. 128. 45 Sinnette, Forbidden Fairways, p. 178. 46 Steven Goodwin, “The Fighter,” www.Golfonline.com, June 12, 2006. 47 Kennedy, A Course of Their Own, p. 67. 48 Joe Louis, Joe Louis: My Life (The Ecco Press 1978), p. 221. 49 Kennedy, A Course of Their Own, p. 71. 50 Kennedy, A Course of Their Own, p. 65. 51 Kennedy, A Course of Their Own, p. 77 52 J.D. Salsinger, 19th Annual Public Links Championship booklet, 1940. 53 The Daily Tribune, May 31, 1992. 54 Abdul “Duke” Fakir, Oral History as told to Hank Berry, August 2006. 55 Historic District Study Committee Public Hearing Minutes, September 27, 2006. 56 Jack Berry, Michigan Golf News, June 2004, Vol 4, No. 23 57 Don Vanderveen, www.michigangolfmagazine.com, 2005. 58 The Daily Tribune, June 1, 1988. 59 Id., May 31, 1992. 60 Karen Peek, Oral History as told to Hank Berry, November 2006. 61 Id. 102 62 The Daily Tribune, February 9, 1994. 63 Id. 64 Travel & Leisure, July-August 2002, p. 48. 65 Wendy Kaplan, “The Art that is Life”: The Arts and Crafts Movement in America, 1875-1920, 1987, Museum of Fine Arts 66 “The Art that is Life”: The Arts and Crafts Movement in America, 1875-1920, Exhibition brochure, The Detroit Institute of Arts, 1988. 67 68 www.PewabicPottery.com, July 5, 2006. 1940 Amateur Public Links Championship booklet. 103 Appendix A Arial Photographs (Access Oakland) Current Arial 104 Rackham Arial with surrounding communities (Semcog) Golf course with surrounding neighborhood 105 (Google Earth) Site location map with boundaries (Semcog) Rackham’s proximity to Woodward Avenue and I-696 Appendix B 106 Deed to Horace H. Rackham from Baker Land Co. and Deed from Horace H. Rackham to the City of Detroit 107 108 109 110 Appendix C Letters of Support 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 DEFENSE OF PLACE A Project of the Resource renewal Institute 129 Fort Mason Center San Francisco, CA 94123 415.928.3774 http://defenseofplace.org 23837 West Lebost Novi, Michigan 48375 June 20, 2006 Mayor Ronald F. Gillham City Manager Alex R. Allie City Commissioners City of Huntington Woods 26815 Scotia Road Huntington Woods, MI 48070 Dear Mayor Gillham, Mr. Allie and City Commissioners, As Michigan residents throughout the state observe the situation regarding the future of Rackham Golf Course, they will certainly applaud the efforts of the community and City of Huntington Woods. Honoring the deed restriction and the public trust to preserve the Rackham Golf Course as a public park and open space for future generations is indeed a worthy endeavor. Parks are set aside for future generations, as Rackham Golf Course was so clearly set aside. This valuable recreation resource is for the City of Detroit to keep for generations of Detroiters. Your community’s willingness to take on the stewardship of this park, should the city of Detroit decide to sell it to developers, is truly remarkable. Many Michigan cities are turning toward their open space and parklands as lines of credit and squandering these valuable public assets. The City of Huntington Woods provides an example of a community’s environmental ethic and good public policy for all Michigan communities to follow. Selling such a valuable public asset as the historic Rackham Golf Course sets a dangerous precedent that eventually threatens all public parks. With each sale, our heritage is diminished and with it, our pact with future generations. Defense of Place is the organization in the United States devoted solely to assuring that parks, open space, and wildlife refuges stay protected forever. Please don’t hesitate to call on us if we can be of further assistance as you continue your efforts to preserve this historic park. Sincerely yours, /s/ LuAnne Kozma 130 131 132 133 134 135 Appendix D Appendix D 136 Donald Ross Course List 137 Courses Designed by Donald J. Ross as provided by the Donald Ross Society Note: This list is undergoing revision and verification Course City State Holes Year New On Remodel Plan Course Site Country Club Of Alabama - East Birmingham Course AL 18 holes 1927 X Country Club Of Alabama - West Birmingham Course AL 18 Holes 1929 X Country Club Of Mobile Mobile AL 18 Holes 1928 X Mountain Brook Country Club Birmingham AL 18 holes 1929 X Peninsula Golf & Country Club San Mateo CA 9 holes, 9 holes remodel 1923 Algonquin New Brunswick Canada 27 Holes 1927 X Banff Banff Springs Canada 18 holes 1917 X Brightwood Dartmouth, NS Canada 18 holes 1934 X Elmhurst Winnapeg, Manitoba Canada Remodeled 9 Holes 1923 Elmhurst Winnapeg, Manitoba Canada Added 9 Holes 1923 X Essex LaSalle, Ontario Canada 18 Holes 1929 X X Canada 18 Holes 1929 X X Liverpool (White Hunts Point, Point) NS Pine Ridge Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada Remodeled 18 Holes Riverside New Brunswick Canada 18 Holes Rosedale Toronto Canada Rosedale Windsor, Ontario Canada 27 Holes Rosedale Windsor, Ontario Canada St. Charles Winnapeg, Manitoba Canada 9 Holes Remodeled 18 Holes Remodeled 9 Holes 1937 X X X - Now Closed X added X X X X X X 1924 X X X X 1920 X X X X CO 18 holes 1918 Lakewood Golf Club Lakewood CO Remodeled 18 holes 1916 Wellshire Golf Club Denver CO 18 holes 1926 X X Country Club of Waterbury Waterbury CT 18 holes 1926 X X Greenwich Country Club Greenwich CT Remodeled 18 holes 1946 X Hartford Country West Hartford Club CT Remodeled 14 holes 1914 X Hartford Country West Hartford Club CT Remodeled 14 holes 1946 X Hartford Country West Hartford Club CT 4 holes 1946 X Shennecossett CT 18 holes 1916 X 138 - remodeled X Broadmoor Golf Colorado Club Springs Groton X X X 1919 1921 X X 1919 Note: X X added X Golf Club Shennecossett Golf Club Groton CT Remodeled 3 holes 1919 Wampanoag Country Club West Hartford CT 18 Holes 1924 X Havana Biltmore Havana Cuba 18 Holes 1927 X Havana Country Havana Club Cuba 18 Holes 1911 X Belleair Country Bellair Club -East Course FL 18 holes 1925 X Belleair Country Club -West Bellair Course FL 18 holes, 9 remodeled 1915 Belleair Country Club -West Bellair Course FL 9 added 1915 X Belleview Mido Country Club Bellair FL 18 holes 1925 X Biltmore Country Club Coral Gables FL 18 holes 1924 X Bobby Jones Golf Course Sarasota FL 18 holes 1927 X Boca Raton (Cloisters) Boca Raton FL 18 Holes 1925 X X X Bradenton Country Club Bradenton FL 18 holes 1924 X X X Brentwood Golf Club Jacksonville FL 18 holes 1924 X X X Country Club of Orlando Orlando FL 18 holes 1918 X Daytona Beach Golf & Country Club - North Daytona Beach FL 18 holes 1946 X Daytona Beach Golf & Country Club - South Daytona Beach FL 18 holes 1922 X Delray Beach Golf Course Delray Beach FL 18 holes 1923 X X Dunedin Country Club Dunedin FL 18 holes 1926 X X Florida Country Club Jacksonville FL 18 holes 1922 X Fort George Jacksonville FL 18 holes 1927 X Fort Meyers Golf Fort Meyers & Country Club FL 18 holes 1928 X Gulf Stream Golf Club Delray Beach FL 18 holes 1923 X Handley Park Golf Club New Smyrna Beach FL 9 holes 1922 X Hyde Park Golf Club Jacksonville FL 18 holes 1925 X Keystone Golf & Keystone Country Club Heights FL 9 holes 1928 X Lake Wales Country Club Lake Wales FL 18 Holes 1925 X X Melbourne Golf Club Melbourne FL 18 Holes 1926 X X Miami Country Club Miami FL 9 Holes, (remodel 9) 1919 139 X X X - Now Closed X X added X - Now Closed X - remodeled X X X X -British Course - Now Closed X X X X - Now Closed X X - Now Closed New Smyrna New Smyrna Beach Municipal Beach Golf Course FL 18 Holes 1922 X Palatka Municipal Golf Course Palatka FL 18 Holes 1925 X Palm Beach Country Club Palm Beach FL 18 Holes 1917 X Palma Ceia Golf Tampa Club FL Remodeled 18 Holes 1923 Palma Sola Golf Bradenton Club FL 18 Holes 1924 X Panama Country Club Lynn Haven FL 18 Holes 1927 X Pinecrest on Lotela Avon FL 18 Holes 1926 X Ponce de Leon Resort & Country Club St. Augustine FL 18 Holes 1916 X Puntra Gorda Country Club Puntra Gorda FL 18 Holes 1927 X X X - was formerly St. Augustines X - was S. course of Biltmore Hotel Riviera Country Club (Miami Biltmore) Riviera FL 18 Holes 1924 San Jose Country Club Jacksonville FL 18 holes 1925 Sara Bay Country Club Sarasota FL 18 holes 1925 Seminole Country Club North Palm Beach FL 18 Holes 1929 X X X St. Augustine Links - South Course St. Augustine FL 18 Holes 1916 X X X Timuquana Country Club Jacksonville FL 18 holes 1923 X X X University of Florida Golf Club Gainesville FL 18 Holes 1921 Athens Country Club Athens GA 18 holes 1926 X Atlanta Athletic Club Atlanta GA 18 holes 1923 X Augusta Country Club Augusta GA Remodeled 18 Holes 1927 Bacon Park Golf Savannah Course GA 18 Holes 1926 Bon-AirVanderbilt Atlanta GA 18 holes 1927 Brunswick Country Club Brunswick GA 9 Holes 1938 X Country Club of Columbus Columbus GA 18 Holes remodeled twice 1925,1938 ? East Lake Country Club Atlanta GA Remodeled 18 Holes East Lake Country Club Atlanta GA Forest Hills Golf Augusta Club Gainesville Municipal Golf Course Gainesville X X X X? - was Whitfield CC X - was Gainesville CC X? X X - Now Closed X X X X X ? X 1914 X X X Remodeled 18 Holes 1925 X GA 18 Holes 1926 X X X GA 9 Holes - has closed 1920 X 140 - Now Closed - Now Closed Highland Country Club La Grange GA 9 Holes 1922 X Roosevelt Memorial Golf Course Warm Springs GA 18 holes-9 Holes abandone 1926 X Savannah Golf Club Savannah GA 9 Holes-9 remodeled 1927 X Savannah Golf Club M2 Savannah GA 18 Holes 1927 Design? Savannah Golf Club M3 Savannah GA 18 Holes 1927 Design? >? Savannah Golf Club M4 Savannah GA 18 Holes 1927 Design? >? Sheraton Savannah Resort & Country Club Savannah GA 18 Holes 1929 X Walthour Golf Club Savannah GA 18 Holes 1928 X Washington Wilkes Country Club Washington GA 9 Holes 1925 X Beverly Country Chicago Club IL 18 Holes 1907 X Bob O’Link Golf Club Highland Park IL 18 Holes 1916 X Calumet Country Club Homewood IL 18 Holes 1917 1922 X Evanston Golf Club Skokie IL 18 Holes 1917 X Exmoor Country Highland Park Club IL Remodeled 18 Holes 1914 X Hinsdale Golf Club Clarendon Hills IL Remodeled 9, added 9 1913 ? Indian Hill Club Winnetka IL 18 Holes 1914, 1922 X La Grange Country Club La Grange IL Remodeled 18 Holes remodeled 1921 X Northmoor Country Club Highland Park IL 18 Holes 1918 X Oak Park Country Club Oak Park IL 18 Holes 1916 X Ravisloe Country Club Homewood IL 18 Holes 1915 X X Skokie Country Club Glencoe IL 18 Holes 1915 X X Broadmoor Country Club Indianapolis IN 18 holes 1921 X Fairview Golf Club Fort Wayne IN 9 Holes 1927 X French Lick Springs Resort French Lick IN 18 Holes 1922- Hill Course X Cedar Rapids Country Club Cedar Rapids IO 18 Holes 1915 X Shawnee Country Club Topeka KS remodeled 9, added 9 1924 X Idle Hour Country Club Lexington KY 18 Holes 1924 X Bass River Golf Course South Yarmouth MA Remodeled added 9 Holes ( 2) 1914 X Belmont Country Club Belmont MA 18 Holes 1918 X 141 X X X -was General Oglethorpe Hotel - Now Closed X X X X X -remodeled X X Remodeled X remodeled X - remodel 1924 X X added X - was Ashland CC X added X Brae Bunr Country Club West Newton MA 18 Holes 1912 Brae Bunr Country Club West Newton MA 18 Holes 1947 Charles River Country Club Newton Centre MA 18 Holes 1921 X Cohasse Country Club Southbridge MA 9 Holes 1916 X Cohasse Country Club Southbridge MA 4Holes 1927 X Cohasse Country Club Southbridge MA 4 Holes 1930 X Cohasset Golf Club Cohasset MA 9 Holes 1922 X Commonwealth Golf Course (Newton) Newton MA 18 Holes 1921 X Concord Country Club Concord MA 9 Holes, added 9 in 1928 1915 & 1928 X X Ellinwood Country Club Athol MA 9 Holes 1920 X X Essex Country Club ManchesterBy-Sea MA 18 Holes 1909 X George Wright Golf Course Hyde Park MA 18 holes 1938 X X Greenock Country Club Lee MA 9 Holes 1927 X X Hyannisport Club Hyannis Port MA Remodeled & added 5 holes (9) 1936 X Hyannisport Club Hyannis Port MA 9 holes 1936 design? Island Country Club Martha’s Vineyard MA 18 Holes 1913 X Kernwood Country Club Salem MA 18 Holes 1914 X X X Longmeadow Country Club Longmeadow MA 18 Holes 1921 X X X Ludlow Country Club Ludlow MA 18 Holes 1920 X Merrimack Methuen Valley Golf Club MA 18 Holes 1906 X Nantucket Golf Links Nantucket MA 9 Holes 1917 X New Bedford, Country Club of North Dartmouth MA added 9 Holes 1924 X New Bedford, Country Club of North Dartmouth MA Remodeled 9 holes 1924 North Andover Counrty Club North Andover MA 9 Holes 1920 Oak Hill Counrty Fitchburg Club MA 18 Holes 1921 Oakley Counrty Club Watertown MA remodeled 9 Holes & add 9 1900 X Orchards Golf Club South Hadley MA 9 Holes 1922 X Orchards Golf Club South Hadley MA added 9 1931 X Oyster Harbors Golf Club Osterville MA 18 Holes 1927 X 142 X X X X X X X X - Remodel 1917 X - Now Closed X - Now Closed added X X X X X X X X X X Remodeled Petersham Country Club Petersham MA 9 Holes 1922 X Pittsfield, Country Club of Pittsfield MA 18 Holes 1921 X Plymouth Country Club Plymouth Center MA remodeled 9 Holes, add 9, 1921, 1929 +9 Plymouth Country Club Plymouth Center MA add 3 1934 X Pocasset Golf Club Pocasset MA 18 Holes 1916 X Ponkapoag Golf Canton Club-1 MA 18 Holes 1931 X Ponkapoag Golf Canton Club-2 MA 18 Holes 1939 Salem Country Club Peabody MA 18 Holes 1925 X Sandy Burr Country Club Walyand MA 18 Holes 1925 X Springfield Country Club West Springfield MA 18 Holes 1924 X Tatnuck Country Worcester Club MA 18 Holes 1930 X Tedesco Country Club Marblehead MA added 1 hole 1937 X Tekoa Country Club Westfield MA 9 Holes 1923 X X ToyTown Tavern Club Glub Winchendon MA 18 Holes 1924 X X Vesper Counrty Club Tyngsboro MA Remodeled 9 holes 1919 Vesper Counrty Club Tyngsboro MA added 9 holes 1919 Vesper Counrty Club Tyngsboro MA 9 holes 1947 Wachusett Counrty Club West Boylston MA 9 Holes 1911 X Waltham Counrty Club West Boylston MA 9 Holes 1921 X Wellesley Country Club Wellesley MA 9 Holes 1911 X Weston Golf Club Weston MA 9 Holes 1916 X Weston Golf Club Weston MA added 9 holes 1923 X Whaling City Golf Club New Bedford MA 9 Holes 1920 X Whitinsville Golf Whitinsville Club MA 9 Holes 1925 X Wianno Golf Club Osterville MA Remodeled 9 1913, 1920 holes Wianno Golf Club Osterville MA added 9 1920 X William J. Devine Golf Course Dorchester MA remodeled 9 holes, added 9 1922 X Winchester Country Club Winchester MA 18 Holes 1903 X Winchester Country Club Winchester MA 18 Holes 1928 143 ? X Remodeled X X X X X X - Now Closed X X added design X - Now Closed X added X X added X X - remodeled Woodland Golf Club Auburndale MA 18 Holes 1928 Worcester Country Club Worcester MA 18 Holes 1913 X X Wyckoff Park Golf Course Holyoke MA 18 Holes 1923 X X Bannockburn Glen Echo MD 18 Holes 1924 X Chevy Chase Club Chevy Chase MD 18 Holes 1910 X Congressional Country Club Bethesda MD 18 Holes 1930 X Fountain Head Country Club Hagerstown MD 18 Holes 1926 X Island Spring Golf Club Silver Spring MD 18 Holes 1922 X Price Georges Country Club Landover MD 18 Holes 1921 X - Now Closed Silver Springs Country Club Silver Springs MD 18 holes 1921 X - Now Closed Augusta Country Club Manchester ME 9 Holes 1916 X Biddeford-Saco Club Saco ME 9 Holes 1927 X Cape Neddick Country Club Cape Neddick ME 9 holes 1919 X Cape Neddick Country Club Cape Neddick ME Remodeled 9 holes 1920 Kebo Valley Club Bar Harbor ME 18 Holes 1926 X Lake Kezar Country Club Lovell ME 9 Holes 1924 X Lucerne Hills Golf Club Lucerne ME 9 Holes 1926 X Northeast Harbor Golf Club Northeast Harbor ME added 9 Holes 1922 X Penobscot Valley Country Club Orono ME 18 Holes 1924 X Poland Springs Poland Springs ME Remodeled 9 holes 1913 Poland Springs Poland Springs ME added 9 Holes 1913 X Portland Country Club Falmouth ME 18 Holes 1923 X York Golf & Tennis Club York ME 18 Holes 1923 X York Golf & Tennis Club York ME added 9 Holes 1930 X Barton Hills Country Club Ann Arbor MI 18 Holes 1920 X Bloomfield Hills Country Club Bloomfield Hills MI 18 Holes 1936 Dearborn Country Club Dearborn MI 18 Holes 1925 X X Detroit Golf Club Detroit - North MI 18 Holes 1916 X X X Detroit Golf Club Detroit - South MI 18 Holes 1916 X X X 144 X - Now Closed - remodeled Blue Course X - Now Closed X - remodeled X added X X X X X added X added X X also remodeled 1936 Detroit Golf Club Detroit - South MI 18 Holes 1934 Elk Rapids Golf Club Elk Rapids MI 9 Holes 1923 X X Franklin Hills Country Club Franklin MI 18 Holes 1926 X X Fred Wardell Country Club Detroit MI 9 holes 1920 X Grosse Ile Golf & Country Club Grosse Ile MI 18 Holes 1920 X Grosse Ile Golf & Country Club Grosse Ile MI 9 Holes 1920 Hawthorne Valley Golf Club Dearborn (Brightmoor) MI 27 Holes 1925 X Highland Park Golf Club Grand Rapids MI Remodeled 9 holes 1922 X Highlands Country Club Grand Rapids MI added 9 holes 1927 X added Kent Country Club Grand Rapids MI Remodeled 9 holes 1921 X X Kent Country Club Grand Rapids MI added 9 holes 1921 X added Monroe Golf & Country Club Monroe MI 18 Holes 1919 X X Muskegon Country Club Muskegon MI 18 Holes 1911 X X Oakland Hills Country Club North Bloomfield Hills MI 18 Holes 1923 X Oakland Hills Country Club South Bloomfield Hills MI 18 Holes 1917 X Rackham Golf Course Huntington Woods MI 18 Holes 1925 X Rogell Golf Course Detroit MI 18 Holes 1921 X Shadow RIdge Golf Club Ionia MI 9 Holes 1916 X St. Claire River St. Claire MI 18 Holes 1923 X Warren Valley Wayne Golf Club - East MI 18 Holes 1927 X Warren Valley Wayne Golf Club - West MI 18 Holes 1927 X Western Golf & Country Club Redford MI 18 Holes 1926 X Interlachen Country Club Edina MN 18 Holes 1921 ) X Minikahda Club Minneapolis MN 18 Holes 1917 X Northland Country Club Duluth MN 18 Holes 1927 X White Bear Yacht Club White Bear Lake MN 9 Holes 1912 X White Bear Yacht Club White Bear Lake MN 9 holes 1915 X Woodhill Country Club Wayzata MN 18 Holes 1917 X Woodhill Country Club Wayzata MN 18 Holes 1934 X MO 18 Holes 1917 X Hillcrest Country Kansas City 145 X X - Now Closed Design - Now Closed - Now Closed X X X X X X X X added X X Club Midland Valley Country Club Overland MO 18 Holes 1919 X Alamance Country Club Burlington NC 18 Holes 1947 X Asheville, Country Club of Asheville NC 18 Holes 1928 X Benvenue Country Club Rocky Mount NC 18 Holes 1922 X Benvenue Country Club Rocky Mount NC 18 Holes 1946 Biltmore Forest Country Club Asheville NC 18 Holes 1925 Blowing Rock Country Club Blowing Rock NC remodel 9 1922 Blowing Rock Country Club Blowing Rock NC add 9 1922 X Buncombe Country Golf Course Asheville NC 18 Holes 1927 X Cape Fear Country Club Wilington NC Remodel & add 7 1926 X Cape Fear Country Club Wilington NC 18 Holes 1946 X Carolina Golf & Country Club Charlotte NC 18 Holes 1928 X Carolina Pines Golf Club Raleigh NC 18 Holes 1932 X Catawba Country Club Newton NC 18 Holes 1946 X Charlotte Country Club Newton NC Remodeled 18 Holes 1925 X Charlotte Country Club Newton NC Remodeled 18 Holes 1942 & 1947 X Forsyth Country WinstonClub (#2Course) Salem NC 18 Holes 1929 X Forsyth Country WinstonClub (Twin City) Salem NC 18 Holes 1911 X ?? Greensboro Country Club Greensboro NC 18 Holes 1911 X X Grove Park Inn & Country Club Asheville NC Remodel 18 Holes 1926 Hedersonville Country Club Hedersonville NC 18 Holes 1927 X ?? Highland Country Club Fayetteville NC 18 Holes 1945 X X Highlands Country Club Highlands NC 18 Holes 1928 X X X Hope Valley Country Club Durham NC 18 Holes 1927 X X X Lenoir Golf Club Lenoir NC 9 Holes 1928 X X Linville Golf Club Linville NC 18 Holes 1928 X Mid-Pines Golf Club Southern Pines NC 18 Holes 1921 X X Mimosa Hills Golf Club Morganton NC 18 Holes 1928 X X Monroe Country Monroe Club NC 9 Holes 1927 X Mooresville Golf Mooresville Club NC 9 Holes 1948 146 - Now Closed X X X X X X X added X X X X - remodeled - Now Closed X X X design ? X - Irving Park Course X X Design X - remodeled (Moore Park) Myers Park Country Club Charlotte NC 18 Holes 1945 & 1947 X Myers Park Country Club Charlotte NC Remodeled 9 Holes & add 9 1930 X? Overhills Golf Club Overhills NC 9 Holes 1910 X Overhills Golf Club Overhills NC added 9 Holes 1918 X Penrose Park Country Club Reidsville NC 9 Holes 1928 X Pine Needles Country Club Southern Pines NC 18 Holes 1927 X Pinehurst #1 Pinehurst NC 5 Holes 1913 X Pinehurst #1 Pinehurst NC 13 Holes 1900 X X Pinehurst #1 Pinehurst NC 18 Holes 1922 X X Pinehurst #1 Pinehurst NC 18 Holes 1937 X X Pinehurst #1 Pinehurst NC 18 Holes 1940 X X Pinehurst #1 Pinehurst NC 18 Holes 1946 X X Pinehurst #2 Pinehurst NC 9 Holes 1901 Pinehurst #2 Pinehurst NC 9 Holes 1903 Pinehurst #2 Pinehurst NC 9 Holes 1906 Pinehurst #2 Pinehurst NC 18 Holes Pinehurst #2 Pinehurst NC Pinehurst #2 Pinehurst Pinehurst #2 X - remodeled X added X X X X X X added X 1922 X X 2 Holes 1923 X X NC 18 Holes 1933 X X Pinehurst NC 3 Holes 1934 X X Pinehurst #2 Pinehurst NC 18 Holes 1935 X X Pinehurst #2 Pinehurst NC 1 Holes 1946 X X Pinehurst #3 Pinehurst NC 18 Holes 1936 X X Pinehurst #3 Pinehurst NC 9 Holes 1907 X Pinehurst #3 Pinehurst NC 9 Holes 1910 X Pinehurst #3 Pinehurst NC 2 Holes 1946 Pinehurst #4 Pinehurst NC 6 holes 1912 X Pinehurst #4 Pinehurst NC 3 Holes 1914 X Pinehurst #4 Pinehurst NC 9 Holes 1919 X Pinehurst #4 Pinehurst NC 9 Holes 1936 X added X abandoned Pinehurst #4 Pinehurst NC 9 Holes 1937 X added X abandoned Pinehurst #5 Pinehurst NC 9 Holes 1928 X X Pinehurst #5 Pinehurst NC 9 Holes 1929 X X Raleigh Raleigh NC 18 Holes 1947 X NC 9Holes 1926 X Richmond Pines Rockingham Country Club 147 X X added X X X X added X X X X abandoned Roaring Gap Club Roaring Gap NC 18 Holes 1926 X Ryder Golf Club Fort Bragg NC 9 Holes 1922 X Salisbury, Country Club of NC Remodeled 18 Holes 1927 X Sedgefield Greensboro Country Club #1 NC 18 Holes 1926 X Sedgefield Greensboro Country Club #2 NC 18 Holes 1929 X Southern Pines Country Club Southern Pines NC 18 Holes 1928 X Southern Pines Country Club Southern Pines NC 18 Holes 1923 X Stryker Fayetteville NC 18Holes 1946 X Tryon Country Club Tryon NC 9 Holes 1916 X Waynesville Country Club Waynesville NC 9 Holes 1924 X Wilmington Golf Wilmington Course NC 18 Holes 1926 X Bald Peak Colony Moultonboro NH 18 Holes 1922 X Balsams Grand Resort Hotel Dixville Notch NH 18 Holes 1915 X Bethlehem County Club Bethlehem NH Remodeled 9 Holes 1912 Bethlehem County Club Bethlehem NH added 9 Holes 1912 X Carter CC (Farnum Hill Golf & County Club ) Lebanon NH 9 Holes 1923 X Kingswood County Club Wolfeboro NH 18 Holes 1926 X Lake Sunapee Country Club New London NH 18 Holes 1928 X Lake Tarleton Club Pike NH 18 Holes 1916 X Manchester Country Club Bedford NH 18 Holes 1923 X Maplewood Country Club Bethlehem NH added 9 Holes 1914 X Maplewood Country Club Bethlehem NH Remodeled 9 Holes 1914 Mount Crotched Francestown CC (Torey Pines?) NH 9 Holes - has closed 1929 Mount Bretton Washington Golf Woods Club NH Remodeled 18 Holes 1915 Mount Bretton Washington Golf Woods Club NH added 9 Holes 1915 X Wentworth-bythe-Sea Golf Club Portsmouth NH 9 Holes 1910 X Crestmont Country Club West Orange NJ 18 Holes 1923 X Deal Golf & Country Club Deal NJ remodel and add 3 1915 X Salisbury 148 X X X X X X X Panorama X added X - Now Closed X added X X - Now Closed X added X Echo Lake Country Club Westfield NJ 18 Holes 1919 Englewood Country Club Englewood NJ 18 Holes 1916 Essex Fells Country Club Essex Fells NJ 18 Holes 1923 X X Homestead Country Club Spring Lake NJ 18 Holes 1920 X X Knickerbocker Country Club Tenafly NJ 18 Holes 1915 X Lone Pine Country Club New Brunswick NJ 18 Holes 1925 X Montclair Golf Club Montclair NJ 27 Holes 1919 X Mountain Ridge Country Club West Cauldwell NJ 18 Holes 1930 X X X Plainfield Country Golf Plainfield NJ 18 Holes 1921 X X X Plainfield Country Golf Plainfield NJ 15 Holes 1928 X Plainfield Country Golf Plainfield NJ 3 Holes 1928 X Ridgewood Country Golf Ridgewood NJ 18 Holes 1916 Riverton Country Golf Riverton NJ 18 Holes 1916 X X X Seaview Resort (Marriott) Absecon NJ 18 Holes 1918 X X X Apawamis Club Rye NY added 3 holes 1930 X Belleview Country Club Syracuse NY 18 Holes 1914 X Brook Lea Country Club Rochester NY 18 Holes 1926 X Buffalo, Country Williamsville Club of NY 18 Holes 1926 X Chappequa Country Club Mount Kisko NY 18 Holes 1929 X Chautauqua Golf Club Chautauqua NY Remodeled 9 Holes 1921 Chautauqua Golf Club Chautauqua NY added 9 Holes 1921 X Elmsford Country Club Elmsford NY 18 Holes 1919 X Fairview Country Club Elmsford NY 18 Holes 1912 X Fox Hills Country Club Staten Island NY 18 Holes 1928 Glenburnie Golf Course Lake George NY remodel add 3 1915 X Glens Falls Country Club Glens Falls NY 18 Holes 1923 X X Hudson River Country Club Yonkers NY 18 Holes 1916 X X Irondequoit Country Club Rochester NY 9 Holes 1916 X Irondequoit Country Club Rochester NY added 9 Holes 1916 X Mark Twain Golf Elmira Course NY 18 Holes 1940 X X Monroe County NY 18 Holes 1923 X X Pittsford 149 X X X - Now Closed X - Now Closed X X - Now Closed X added X - Now Closed - remodeled X X X X - Now Closed X added - Now Closed X X - Now Closed X - Now Closed - Now Closed X X added X - Now Closed Club North Fork County Club Cutchgue NY 9 holes + 9 holes Oak Hill County Club - East Rochester NY Oak Hill County Club - West Rochester Rochester, Country Club of 1912, 1922 X 18 Holes 1924 X X NY 18 Holes 1924 X ?? Rochester NY 18 Holes 1913 X Sagamore Resort & Golf Club Bolton Landing NY 18 Holes 1928 X Siwanoy Country Club Bronxville NY 18 Holes 1914 X Teugega Country Club Rome NY 18 Holes 1920 X Thendara Golf Club Thendara NY 9 Holes 1921 X Tupper Lake Country Club Tupper Lake NY 18 Holes 1915 X Whipporwill Country Club Armonk NY 18 Holes 1925 X Wykagyl Country Club New Rochelle NY 18 Holes 1920 X Arcadia Country Lyndhurst Club OH 18 Holes 1923 X Arlington Golf Club (Alladin CC) Columbus OH Remodeled 9 holes + add 9 1921 X Athens Country Club Athens OH 9 Holes 1921 X Brookside Country Club Canton OH 18 Holes 1922 X Columbus Country Club Columbus OH remodel 18 Holes Columbus Country Club Columbus OH Congress Lake Club Hartville Dayton Country Club? X X X X X X X X - Now Closed X 1920 & 1940 X Remodeled 9 holes + add 9 1914 X OH remodel 18 Holes 1926 X Dayton OH 18 Holes 1919 X Delaware Golf Club Delaware OH 9 Holes 1925 X Odevene Elks Country Club (Columbus?) Worthington OH 18 Holes 1923 X - Now Closed Elks Country Club (Portsmouth) McDermott OH 18 Holes 1920 X X Granville Golf Club Granville OH 18 Holes 1924 X X Hamilton Elks Country Club Hamilton OH 18 Holes 1925 X X Hawthorne Valley Country Club Solon OH 18 Holes 1926 X X Hyde Park Golf & Country Club Cincinnati OH 18 Holes 1926 X Inverness Club Toledo OH Remodeled 9 holes 1920 Inverness Club Toledo OH added 9 1920 150 X X X X X X added X X Holes Lancaster Country Club Lancaster OH Remodeled 9 Holes 1926 X Maketewah Country Club Cincinnati OH Remodeled 9 Holes 1919, remodel 1929 X Manakiki Country Club Willoughby OH 18 Holes 1928 X Mayfield Country Club Euclid OH 18 Holes 1935 X Miami Shores Golf Club Troy OH 18 Holes 1947 X Miami Valley Golf Club Dayton OH 18 Holes 1919 X Mill Creek Park Golf Club North Youngstown OH 18 Holes 1928 X Mill Creek Park Youngstown Golf Club South OH 18 Holes 1928 X Mohawk Golf Club Tiffin OH 9Holes 1917 X Oakwood Club Cleveland OH (9 holes) 18 Holes Piqua Country Club Piqua OH 9 Holes 1920 X X Scioto Country Club Columbus OH 18 Holes 1916 X X Shaker Heights Country Club Shaker Heights OH 18 Holes 1916 X X Springfield Country Club Springfield OH 18 Holes 1921 X X Westbrook Country Club Mansfield OH 18 Holes 1920 X Willowick Country Club Willoughby OH 18 Holes remodeled 1917 X Wyandot Golf Course Centerburg OH 18 Holes 1922 X Youngstown Country Club Youngstown OH 18 Holes remodeled 1924 Zaneville Zaneville OH 18 Holes 1932 Allegheny Country Club Sewickley PA Added 3 holes 1933 Aronomink Golf Club Newtown Square PA 18 Holes 1928 Aronomink Golf Club Newtown Square PA 9 Holes 1928 design Aronomink Golf Club Newtown Square PA 18 Holes remodeled 1930 X Bedford Springs Bedford Golf Club PA remodeled 9, added 9 1924 X Buck Hill Golf Club Buck Hill Falls PA 27 Holes 1922 Cedarbrook Country Club Blue Bell PA Remodeled 1921 1921 Chester Valley Country Club Malvern PA 18 Holes 1928 X Edgewood Country Club Pittsburgh PA 18 Holes 1921 PA 9 Holes 1925 Elkview Country Carbondale Club remodeled 1915 & 1920 151 X X X X X X X X X X X X X - Now Closed X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X - Now Closed Green Oaks Country Club (West) Verona PA 18 Holes 1921 X Gulph Mills Country Club King of Prussia PA 18 Holes 1919 X Kahkwa Club Erie PA 18 Holes 1918 X Kennett Square Golf & Country Club Kennett Square PA 9 Holes 1923 X Lewsitown Country Club Lewsitown PA 9 Holes 1945 X X Lu Lu Country Club North Hills PA 18 Holes 1912 X X Overbrook Country Club Overbrook PA 18 Holes Remodel 9, added 9 1922 X X Philadelphia Country Club (Florto???) Philadelphia PA Remodeled 18 Holes 1914 Pocono Manor Golf Club Pocono Manor PA 18 Holes, E. Course, Remodeled? 1919 X Rolling Rock Club Ligonier PA 9 Holes 1917 X Rolling Rock Club Ligonier PA Remodeled 9 Holes 1947 Schuylkill Country Club Orwegsburg PA Remodel 9, added 9 1945 X Silver Creek Country Club Hellertown PA 18 Holes 1947 X St. Davids Golf Club Wayne PA 18 Holes 1927 X Sunnybrook Country Club Flourtown PA 18 Holes 1921 X TorresdaleFrankford Country Club Philadelphia PA added 9 Holes 1930 X TorresdaleFrankford Country Club Philadelphia PA Remodeled 9 Holes 1930 Tumblebrook Golf Club Coopersburg PA 9 Holes 1931 X Wanango Golf Club Reno PA 9 Holes 1913 X Whitemarsh Valley Country Club Lafayette Hill PA Remodeled 18 Holes 1930 York, Country Club of York PA 18 Holes 1928 Agawam Hunt Club Rumford RI Remodeled 18 Holes 1931 Metacomet Country Club East Providence RI 18 Holes 1921 Misquamicut Country Club Westerly RI Remodeled 18 Holes 1923 X X Newport Country Club Newport RI Remodeled 18 Holes 1915 X X Point Judith Country Club Narragansett RI Added 9 Holes 1927 Point Judith Country Club Narragansett RI Remodeled 9 Holes 1927 152 X X X remodel bunkers 1927 - Now Closed X - remodeled X X X X X X added X X X X X X X X X X X X X added X X X X -now abandoned - Rhode Island Country Club West Barrington RI 18 Holes 1912 X Sakonnet Golf Club Little Compton RI 18 Holes 1921 X Triggs Memorial Providence Golf Club RI 18 Holes 1932 X X X Wannamoisett Country Club Rumford RI 18 Holes 1914 X X X Wannamoisett Country Club Rumford RI 18 Holes remodeled 1926 X Warwick Country Club Warwick RI 9 Holes 1924 X X X Winnapaug Country Club Westerly RI 18 Holes 1921, added 9 1928 Winnapaug Country Club Westerly RI Added 9 Holes 1928 Camden Country Club Camden SC 18 Holes Remodeled 1939 Cheraw Country Cheraw Club SC 9 Holes 1924 X Fort Mill Golf Club Fort Mill SC 9 Holes 1947 X Lancaster Golf Course Lancaster SC 9 Holes 1935 X Royal Dornoch Dornoch 1921 X? Belle Meade Country Club Nashville TN 18 Holes 1921 X Brainerd (municipal) Chattanooga TN 9 Holes 1925 X Chattanooga Golf and Country Club Chattanooga TN 18 Holes 1920 X X Scotland 18 Holes X X X X X X added X X X X ? X X Cherokee Country Club Knoxville TN 18 Holes 1910 remodel, 1925 3 new holes Holston Hills Country Club Memphis (Knoxville?) TN 18 Holes 1928 X Memphis Country Club Memphis TN 18 Holes 1910 X Richland Country Club Nashville TN 18 Holes 1920 X Ridgefields Country Club Kingsport TN 18 Holes 1947 X Tate Springs Golf Club Tate Springs TN 18 Holes 1924 X Galveston Municipal Golf Course Galveston TX 18 Holes 1921 X X River Oaks Country Club Houston TX 9 Holes 1924 X X River Oaks Country Club Houston TX Added 9 1927 1927 X Sunset GrovevCountry Club Orange TX 18 Holes 1923 X Army-Navy Country Club Arlington VA 18 Holes 1944 X Belmont Park Golf Course Richmond VA Remodeled 18 Holes 1940 153 remodeled X X X X X - Closed club moved to another X - Now Closed - Now Closed added X X -formerly HermitageCC Hampton Golf Association Hampton VA 18 Holes 1930 X X JeffersonLakeside Club Richmond VA 18 Holes 1921 X X Petersburg, Country Club of Petersburg VA 18 Holes 1922 X The Homestead Hot Springs Golf Club VA remodeled 6, add 12 Holes 1912 X Washington Golf Arlington & Country Club VA 18 Holes 1915 X Westwood Golf Club VA 18 Holes 1916 Woodberry Woodberry Forest Golf Club Forest VA 9 Holes 1910 X Burlington Country Club Burlington VT 18 Holes 1930 X Woodstock Country Club Woodstock VT 18 Holes 1938 Kenosha Country Club Kenosha WI 18 Holes 1922 X Oconomowoc Golf Club Oconomowoc WI 18 Holes 1915 X Richmond X X -was Hampton Roads GC - Now Closed X X X - Now Closed X X X X X Appendix E Public Hearing Comment, Letters and Minutes 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 Excerpt from the Planning Commission Minutes July 24, 2006 The meeting was called to order by Chairman Glenn Lapin at 7:34 p.m. PRESENT: Steve Behrmann, Trey Brice, Glenn Lapin, Lisa Momblanco*(arrived 8:10 p.m.), Commr. Bob Paul, Joe Rozell, Jan Turner, City Staff: Bonnie Cook, Hank Berry ABSENT: Joe Heaphy, Beth Radner Rackham Golf Course Historic District - Preliminary Report Robert Lebow, Chairman of the Historic District Study Committee, introduced himself to the Commission. He said that in January 2006, the City Commission appointed the HDSC to consider a historic district at the Detroit Zoo and Rackham Golf Course. The HDSC divided the project into two studies and began researching Rackham. They found that Rackham is historically significant, not only in southeast Michigan but throughout the State and the nation. It has a long history of equality, both racially and religiously, pre-dating the civil rights era by many years. Robert said he is presenting the preliminary report to the Commission for its review and recommendation in accordance with the State Law. Hank said all preliminary reports are a “work in progress” and they welcome any comments or suggestions over the next couple of months. He said this report has already been sent to the State. Robert said they will be adding recently discovered information about the architect who designed clubhouse. Glenn suggested including the ads for the subdivisions surrounding the golf course. He also suggested contacting Tom Horton, a golf pro who was an assistant to Ben Davis. Joe said it was an excellent compilation of history. He thought the deeds were particularly significant. Hank said the course is of national importance in the de-segregation process. Glenn said that is evident from the clippings in the newspaper, the Joe Louis "opens," and other events. Hank said Ben Davis' life chronicles the golf course. Glenn suggested contacting the Association for the Study of African American Life and History. Steve said his son is currently in a program called "First Tee of Michigan." He suggested getting input from them. Glenn suggested adding tabs to link up to the table of contents. Bonnie said she would like the Commission to review the report over the next month and make a recommendation at the next meeting. It was moved by Joe Rozell and supported by Trey Brice to receive and file the Rackham Golf Course Historic District Preliminary Report. The motion passed unanimously. 203 Excerpt from the Planning Commission Minutes August 28, 2006 The meeting was called to order by Chairman Glenn Lapin at 7:33 p.m. PRESENT: Steve Behrmann, Trey Brice* (left 9:38 p.m.), Joe Heaphy, Glenn Lapin, Lisa Momblanco, Commr. Bob Paul, Joe Rozell, City Staff: Bonnie Cook 204 ABSENT: Beth Radner, Jan Turner Rackham Golf Course Historic District Bonnie reported that the public hearing to consider the creation of the Rackham Golf Course Historic District will be September 27 at 7:00 p.m. in the Recreation Center. She has the Commissioners’ comments and suggestions from the last meeting but wanted to know if there are any more. They plan to add the tabs and the summary recommended at the last meeting. Hank said his committee is continuing to do research and they have already made several additions that will become part of the final report. He recently received a number of comments back from the State. The study committee will be working on the final report for the next couple of months. Bonnie said they are continuing to gain information in the form of oral histories from former workers and golfers at Rackham, research at various libraries and universities, contacts with the people and organizations that have benefitted from the Rackham’s generosity, architects, golf course architects and more. Moved by Joe Rozell and supported by Joe Heaphy to recommend to approval of the Historic District Study Committee’s preliminary report to the City Commission. The motion passed unanimously. (Vote did not include Trey Brice) Appendix F 205 Resolutions of Support 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 Appendix G Bibliography Published Sources: Afro-American Sports Hall of Fame, Third Annual Induction Dinner booklet Austin, William, 1974, The First Fifty Years, 1974, The Detroit Zoological Society, Royal Oak, MI Bak, Richard, 1996, Joe Louis the Great Black Hope, DaCapo Press, Dallas TX Ballard, Ray, 1976, The History of Huntington Woods, Huntington Woods Study Club, Huntington Woods, MI Barkow, Al, 1986, Getting to the Dance Floor, Burford Books, Atheneum Press, Short Hills, NJ Berry, Jack, “Gift Course Turning 50,” The Detroit News, April 1, 1975 Berry, Jack, “Still up to Par at 62, Davis Wins Seniors,” The Detroit News, September 4, 1974 Berry, Jack, Michigan Golf News, June 2004, vol4, No.23 Ballor, Joe, “Ben Davis,” Michigan Golfer, vol. 13, No. 1 February/March 1995, p30 Brazer, Marjorie Cahn, 1985, Biography of Endowment – The Horace H. Rackham and Mary A. Rackham Fund at the University of Michigan, Rackham Board of Governors, Ann Arbor, MI Burton ,Clarence M. & Burton, M. Agnes; History of Wayne County and the City of Detroit, Michigan, Volume 3, 1930 The Burton Historical Collection, Detroit Public Library –Clipping file Detroit Free Press 6/23/33, 6/15/33, 6/14/33, 8/26/33 Detroit News 5/17/25, 5/20/25, 6/14/33, 8/29/33 Detroit Times 4/12/25, 5/20/25 Detroit Saturday Night 6/20/25 Section 2 p.5 The Daily Tribune, February 9, 1994, May 31,1992, June1,1988 City of Detroit, Phone Directory, 1917 The Detroit News Collection: Rackham Horace H., Capitalist & Philanthropist, Nos. 64932, 64932_2, Mrs. H. Rackham, Capitalist & Philanthropist, Nos. 64932, 64932_2, 215 Dunn Paul, and Dunn B.J., 2001, Great Donald Ross Golf Courses You Can Play, Derrydale Press, New York, NY Fay, Michael J., 2000, Golf, As It Was Meant To Be Played, Universe Publishing, New York, NY George, Harold M., “Rackhams Give Course to City,” newspaper article Golf Travel & Leisure, July-August 2002 Goodwin, Stephen, “The Fighter,” Golf Magazine Goss, Ralston, “Times to Stage Tourney for Public Links Golfers at Rackham Club,” The Detroit Times, April 12, 1925 Goss, Ralston, “Ten New Private Clubs Added to List in Detroit,” The Detroit Times, April 5, 1925 Goss, Ralston, “10 Scores in a Row will be Necessary for Golfers to Qualify Now,” The Detroit Times, June 7, 1925 Historic District Study Committee Public Hearing Minutes, September 27, 2006 Kaplan, Wendy, 1987, The Art that is Life: The Arts & Crafts Movement in America, 1875-1920, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA Kennedy, John H., 2005, A Course of Their Own, University of Nebraska Press, Kansas City, MO Klein, Bradley, 2001, Discovering Donald Ross – The Architect and His Golf Courses, Clock Tower Press, Ann Arbor, MI Louis, Joe, 1978, Joe Louis: My Life, The Ecco Press, Hopewell, NJ McDaniel,Pete, 2000, Uneven Lies, The American Golfer, Greenwich, CT Murphy, Bob, “Rackham Championship Golf Course,” 1940 Amateur Public Links Championship - U.S.G.A. Murray, Dave; “For 50 Years He’s Been on Course,” The Daily Tribune, September 30, 1986 The Royal Oak Tribune,May 19, 1925, Salsinger, J.D., 19th Annual Public Links Championship booklet,1940 Sifford, Charlie and Gullo, James, 1992, Just Let Me Play, British American Publishing, Latham, NY Sinnette, Calvin, 1998, Forbidden Fairways, Sleeping Bear Press, Chelsea, MI 216 Smead, Susan E. and Wagner, Marc C., Assessing Golf Courses as Cultural Resources Vartan Kupelian, Mike O’Hara, “Rackham’s Pro Says Woods is the Real Thing,” The Detroit News, September 1, 1996 Walter, John, “He Brought Them to Detroit,” newspaper article, June 23, 1933 1925 “Rackham Links in Use Today,” The Detroit Times, May 20, 1925 1925 “Club, Course Are in Shape,” The Detroit News, May 17, 1925 2006 “Historic Ohio Course Turns 60,” USA Today, October 6, 2006 Non Published Sources: Brown, Jeffrey D., National Register of Historic Places Nomination - Clearview Golf Club, Stark County Ohio, 2000 Ligibel, Ted, National Register of Historic Places Nomination – The Inverness Club, Toledo, OH, 1993 The 19th Amateur Public Links program booklet, USGA July 1940 The 65th Anniversary of Rackham Golf Course program booklet, Friends of PARTNERS Detroit Recreation Department, July 21, 1990 “The Art that is Life”: The Arts & Crafts Movement in America, 1875-1920, The Detroit Institute of Arts program brochure, December 1987 Oral Interviews; E. Ben Davis, former Golf Professional at Rackham Golf Course, interviewed by Hank Berry, July and August 2006 Oral Interview; E. Ben Davis, former Golf Professional at Rackham Golf Course, interviewed by Hank Berry and Bonnie Cook, October 2006 Oral Interview; Betty Baron, former employee of Ben Davis at Rackham Golf Course, interviewed by Hank Berry, August 2006 Oral Interview; Betty Baron, former employee of Ben Davis at Rackham Golf Course, interviewed by Hank Berry and Bonnie Cook, October 2006 Oral Interview; Abdul “Duke” Fakir, Motown recording artist and founding member of The Four Tops, interviewed by Hank Berry, August 2006 Oral Interview; Jerry Matthews, Natural Course Designs President, interviewed by Hank Berry, September 2006 217 Oral Interview; Sherie Bolick EMU Secretary Rackham Education Building, interviewed by Bonnie Cook, September 2006 Oral Interview; Jill Mc Donough University of Michigan Rackham School of Graduate Studies University of Michigan, interviewed by Bonnie Cook, September 2006 Oral Interview; Karen Peek, former General manager Rackham Golf Course and LPGA Professional, interviewed by Hank Berry, November 2006 Oral Interview; Michael Fay, Executive Director Donald Ross Society, interviewed by Hank Berry, July 2006 Web Sources www.golfonline.com - Golf Magazine www.tuftsarchives.org - Tufts Archives www.wikipedia.com - History of Detroit www.rackham.umich.edu/history - The University of Michigan, Rackham Graduate School www.modelt.org - “The American Automobile Centennial 1896-1996,” June 10, 2006 www.donaldrosssociety.org - The Donald Ross Society www.pewabicpottery.com – Pewabic Pottery www.michigangolfmagazine.com - Vanderveen, Don, 2005 218 Appendix H Ruskin Forms 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 Appendix I Ordinance 230 CITY OF HUNTINGTON WOODS OAKLAND COUNTY, MICHIGAN ORDINANCE NO. AN ORDINANCE TO AMEND CHAPTER 87, HISTORIC PRESERVATION, OF TITLE VIII, BUILDING REGULATIONS, OF THE CODE OF ORDINANCES OF THE CITY OF HUNTINGTON WOODS BY ADDING A NEW SECTION 8.342 TO ARTICLE III, HISTORIC DISTRICTS. THE CITY OF HUNTINGTON WOODS ORDAINS: SECTION 1. Article III, Historic Districts, of Chapter 87, Historic Preservation, of Title VIII, Building Regulations, of Article III, Historic Districts, of the Code of Ordinances of the City of Huntington Woods, is hereby amended by the addition of a new section to Article III, Historic District, which shall read as follows: Sec. 8.342 Rackham Historic District The Rackham Historic District is hereby established and is bounded and described as follows: Land in the City of Huntington Woods, County of Oakland, State of Michigan, more particularly described as follows: Commencing at the south quarter corner of Section 20, T.1N.,R.11E.; thence N 02°33’21”W. along the north-south quarter section line, 221.65 feet to a pont on the northerly right of way line of Interstate 696, (Walter P. Reuther Freeway); thence S.89°07’21”E. along said line, 43.08 feet to a point on the easterly line of Scotia Road, as widened to 86 feet by the Village of Huntington Woods in 1928, adopted by the City of Detroit and recorded on September 25, 1928 in J.C.C. Pages 2577-2578, said point being the point of beginning of the above described parcel; thence N.02°33’21”W. along the easterly line of Scotia Rd., 1932.36 feet to a line which is 50.0 feet south of the north line of Ludlow Ave., thence N. 87°39’07”E. along said line, 2661.39 feet; thence S.01°47’44”E. along the easterly line of Section 20, 2126.68 feet; thence along the northerly right of way line of Interstate 696 for the remaining six courses, beginning with a curve, concave to the north, having an arc length of 285.02 feet, a radius of 1882.96 feet and a long chord of 284.75 feet which bears N.84°19’15”W., to a point of tangency; thence N.79°59’04”W.,198.86 feet to a point of curvature; thence 835.05 feet along the arc of a curve, concave to the south having a radius of 3941.72 feet and a long chord of 833.49 feet which bears N.86°03’12”W. to a point of tangency; thence S87°52’39”W., 888.65 feet to a point of curvature; thence 298.59 feet along the arc of a curve, concave to the north, having a radius of 5702.58 feet and a long chord of 298.55 feet which bears S.89°22’39”W. to a point of tangency; thence N.89°07’21”W., 142.36 feet to the point of beginning, containing 120.7092 acres more or less. 231 SECTION 2. Severability No other portion, paragraph or phrase of the Code of the City of Huntington Woods, Michigan shall be affected by this Ordinance except as to the above sections, and in the event any portion, section or subsection of this Ordinance shall be held invalid for any reason, such invalidation shall not be construed to affect the validity of any other part or portion of this ordinance or of the Code of the City of Huntington Woods, Michigan. SECTION 3. Effective Date This Ordinance shall be effective twenty (20) days from the date of adoption and shall be published as required by the Charter of the City of Huntington Woods. MADE, PASSED AND ADOPTED by the Commission of the City of Huntington Woods on this day of , 2006. ____________________________________ RONALD F. GILLHAM, Mayor I, RUTH FRANZONI, duly authorized Clerk of the City of Huntington Woods, Michigan, do hereby certify that the foregoing ordinance was adopted by the Commission of the City of Huntington Woods at its regular meeting held on , 2006. ______________________________ RUTH FRANZONI, City Clerk 232