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"IF YOU LIKE GOLF"
weekly online golf column
by
Chris Dortch

August 28, 2001
For all you serious golfers and students of the game,
especially as it relates to Tennessee, allow me to recommend one
of your Christmas presents.
Gene Pearce, a good friend and perhaps the most dogged reporter
I know, has spent the better part of two years writing the
definitive History of Tennessee Golf. Having served as one
of the book’s editors, I can attest to the thoroughness of Gene’s
book. He left no stone unturned as he tracked the histories of
every course, every good player—pro or amateur—and significant
others, such as Tennessee Golf Association executive director Dick
Horton and David Stone, the respected greens superintendent at The
Honors Course. Gene conducted hundreds of interviews and spent
countless hours in libraries across the state, scanning miles of
microfilm to uncover tidbits that no one else could have.
Chattanooga golf and its many great players are well documented
in the book, which will be published in November and available
through the TGA. The book is huge (definitely in the coffee table
category) and won’t be cheap. But if you love Tennessee golf,
you need to have a copy in your collection.
I recently talked with Gene and asked him to offer some of his
fondest memories in researching the book. Here’s his list:
1. "Finding a letter of recommendation written for Jimmie
Dickson, the second golf pro at Cherokee, signed by Tom Morris.
Tom Morris was a noted club maker, along with being an
accomplished player. In the first ten Opens (British Open
championships), beginning in 1860, Old Tom Morris won four
championships and finished second four other times."
2. "Listening to Mason Rudolph tell about his relationship
with Buck White. Mason, I think, is the most popular golf
personality in Tennessee history. He's my kind of guy. He's a
great interview. He goes out of his way to talk about others and
how they helped him. There were many. Buck White and Curtis Person
Sr. are at the top of the list."
3. "Learning that four Memphians (Jack Wenzler, Chasteen
Harris, Nelson Giddens, and Frank Dyer) played in the semifinals
of the 1924 Southern Amateur in Louisville. Wenzler, the winner,
and Harris and Giddens were members at Colonial."
4. "Reading that in the 1930 Southern Amateur at Belle
Meade, Chasteen Harris made eagle 3 at the 14th hole and a
hole-in-one at the par 4 15th to give him a score of five-under on
two holes. It bettered the mark of four-under on two holes
accomplished by Jock Hutchinson in 1921 in the British Open. He
was given a plaque commemorating this feat. Hopefully his
daughter, Judy Pulliam of Columbia, will allow Golf House to
display the plaque permanently."
5. "Having the son of Emmett Spicer, who won five State
Amateurs, find me. Stuart Spicer and his two sisters do not play
golf, but they saw the movie, The Legend of Bagger Vance.
The Spicer children knew their father, like fictional hero
Rannalph Junah, had competed against Bobby Jones. They wanted to
know more about their father's golf career. Stuart found me
through the Internet and the Tennessee Golf Association. Had [we
not met] we would not have had a picture of him to use in the
book."
6. "Learning how the Tennessee Golf Association was formed
in 1914 and finding the names of all of its presidents. The TGA's
minutes only go back to 1940."
7. " Finding the history of the formation of the Women's
Tennessee Golf Association in 1916 and all of its
presidents."
8. "Also finding a photograph made on the front porch of
Nashville Golf and Country Club of all of the participants in the
1912 Women's Southern Amateur."
9. "Discovering that the first Southern Golf Association
president was A. W. Grimes of Chattanooga and the first president
of the Women's Southern Golf Association was Mrs. George
Harrington of Atlanta, the former Kathleen Brown of
Nashville."
10. "How did golf get to Tennessee? It probably started in
the early 1890s in Memphis. Cotton buyers from Scotland and
England brought it there. The first crude golf course was built in
the area called the "commons" on Peabody Avenue near
present day Crump Stadium. Several clubs were formed in Memphis
before Memphis Country Club in 1905.
"The first golf club organized that is still in existence
is the Country Club of Bristol. It started in 1894, but it was not
chartered until 1900. Chattanooga Golf and Country Club was
organized in 1896 and its members are still playing on the same
site.
"Nashville Golf and Country Club was organized in 1901. It
relocated to its present location in 1915 and changed its name to
Belle Meade Country Club in 1920. Cherokee Country Club in
Knoxville was organized in 1907 and Jackson Country Club in 1914.
There was a Jackson Golf Club in 1900, but it is not known if this
was the same club that was chartered in 1914.
"However, Tennessee's oldest country club, considering its
original roots, is Old Natchez Country Club in Franklin. The
Standard Club was an "association of gentlemen" as the
charter of March 19, 1883, read, for the 'purpose of serving as a
social club and to include a gymnasium and gymnastics.'"
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