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Kansas City Country Club

 
Wikipedia: Kansas City Country Club
Kansas City Country Club
Kansas City Country Club
Club information
Location Mission Hills, Kansas
Coordinates 39°01′17″N 94°37′13″W / 39.021518°N 94.620223°W / 39.021518; -94.620223
Established 1896
Type Private
Owned by Kansas City Golf Club
Operated by Kansas City Golf Club
Total holes 18
Designed by A. W. Tillinghast/Robert Trent Jones

The Kansas City Country Club, founded in 1896, is a country club in Mission Hills, Kansas, USA, an affluent suburb of Kansas City, Missouri. It is the club for which the Country Club District and the Country Club Plaza of Kansas City are named. The club claims to be the third oldest country club west of the Mississippi River.[1]

History

The club has its roots in an informal golf course in the Hyde Park neighborhood of Kansas City, Missouri. In 1896, Hugh C. Ward, Chas F. Morse, Jefferson Brumback, H. L. Harmon, A. W. Childs, C. J. Hubbard, J. E. Logan, Gardiner Lathrop, St. Clair Street, Ford Harvey, E. H. Chapman, E. S. Washburn, and W. B. Clarke incorporated the Kansas City Country Club[2] and leased a pasture at what today is Loose Park in the Sunset Hill neighborhood of Kansas City, Missouri. The tract of land belonged to Ward's father Seth E. Ward, a pioneer who made his fortune outfitting settlers on the Oregon Trail.

In 1907, J.C. Nichols began buying land surrounding the course to develop the Country Club District, and later to develop the Country Club Plaza. In 1925, the club moved its course a mile west to the banks of Brush Creek in Mission Hills. The club's former grounds then became Loose Park.

The course was designed by A.W. Tillinghast and later redesigned by Robert Trent Jones.[3]

Members

The club's most famous player is Tom Watson, whose father, Ray Watson, still holds the amateur record of 64 for the course. Tom Watson holds the professional record of 60. The course par is 70. [4]

In 1991, Watson resigned after the club declined the application of H&R Block founder Henry Bloch, allegedly because Bloch was Jewish. Watson's then-wife was Jewish.[5] The club subsequently did not change its policy to permit Jews to become members, and Watson rejoined.

References


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