Club information | |
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Coordinates | 40°47′43″N73°33′24″W / 40.795184°N 73.556582°W |
Location | Jericho, New York, United States |
Established | 1894 |
Type | Private |
Total holes | 18 |
Website | www |
Designed by | Dick Wilson |
Par | 72 |
Length | 7,405 yards (6,771 m) |
Course rating | 75.3 |
Slope rating | 143 |
The Meadow Brook Club is a private golf club in Jericho, New York, Long Island, New York, United States. From 1894 to 1954 it was part of a hunting club, which soon evolved into a major polo club. After the original grounds were expropriated for urban development, it moved to its present location and became primarily a golf club. The Meadowbrook Polo Club is now a separate entity.
The club originated as the Meadow Brook Hunt Club, established in 1881 in Westbury, New York and home of the Meadow Brook Hounds. [1] The hunt club had its headquarters in Westbury, but convened in different rural parts of Nassau County where the hounds and horses could run free. Future President Theodore Roosevelt was a member of the hunt club, which met at his home in Oyster Bay in 1886. The members sometimes hunted foxes, but often drag hunted, where the hounds followed a trail of anise scent. [2]
The Hunt Club gave birth to the Meadowbrook Polo Club, whose founders included the polo player and millionaire Thomas Hitchcock, Sr. (1862-1941). [3] Hitchcock was one of the founders of the Meadow Brook steeplechase races in 1883, and in 1889 became master of the Meadow Brook Hunt. [4] The club in Westbury had eight polo fields, and was the leading polo center in the United States. [5] During the first half of the 20th century the polo club was often the site for national or international polo championships. [3]
A nine-hole golf course was built for the Meadow Brook Club in 1894. [1] It was located in Hempstead, New York. [6] In 1895 the first national women's golf tournament was held at Meadow Brook. [3] The winner was Lucy Barnes, wife of Charles S. Brown, with 132 strokes for the eighteen-hole match. [7] The club became an early member of the United States Golf Association. [1] On 31 March 1897 the Metropolitan Golf Association was formed at Delmonico's in New York City, at first called the Metropolitan League of Golf Clubs. Oliver W. Bird of Meadow Brook Golf Club was a member of the five-person formation committee. [8]
In 1936 Sam Snead won two matches at the Meadow Brook Club, earning a $10,000 fee. This gave him the money he needed to start playing professionally full time. [9]
The original polo ground and golf course was requisitioned by New York City Park Commissioner Robert Moses for a parkway extension. [10] The Meadowbrook State Parkway extension of 1954 cut through the club property from north to south. [11] The polo club moved to Post Road in Old Westbury, New York, in 1954. [3] A new entity was formed, now called the Meadowbrook Polo Club, which continued to arrange polo matches on Long Island. In the 1990s it hosted two U.S. Open Championships at Bethpage State Park. [11]
A new site for a golf course in Jericho, New York was selected in October 1953 by Dick Wilson, the architect of the course. [10] Wilson drew up plans for the course in just six weeks. Construction began in April 1954 by Troup Brothers of Miami, who undertook the heavy-duty earth movement. Irrigation and drainage pipes and tile beds were installed in the summer, and grass sown in the fall. Seaside bent was used for the greens and a mix of Astoria bent and Chewings fescue for the fairways. [10] With the move to Jericho the Meadow Brook Club changed into a golf club. [12] The course was officially opened for play on 4 June 1955. [10]
The course has championship tees up to 7,405 yards (6,771 m) in length. It has been host to regional tournaments such as the Metropolitan PGA Championships, the Metropolitan Open and the Lightpath Long Island Classic. [1] Recently Tripp Davis renovated the course, placing more emphasis on interest than on challenge. [13]
Old Westbury is a village in the towns of North Hempstead and Oyster Bay in Nassau County, on the North Shore of Long Island, in New York, United States. The population was 4,671 at the 2010 census.
The Meadowbrook State Parkway is a 12.52-mile (20.15 km) controlled-access parkway in Nassau County, New York, in the United States. Its southern terminus is at a full cloverleaf interchange with the Bay and Ocean parkways in Jones Beach State Park. The parkway heads north, crossing South Oyster Bay and intersecting Loop Parkway before crossing onto the mainland and connecting to the Southern State Parkway in North Merrick. It continues north to the hamlet of Carle Place, where the Meadowbrook Parkway ends at exit 31A of the Northern State Parkway. The Meadowbrook Parkway is designated New York State Route 908E (NY 908E), an unsigned reference route. Most of the road is limited to non-commercial traffic, like most parkways in the state of New York; however, the portion south of Merrick Road is open to commercial traffic.
Myopia Hunt Club is a foxhunting and private country club in South Hamilton, Massachusetts, northeast of Boston. The club hosted the U.S. Open golf tournament four times in its early days: 1898, 1901, 1905, and 1908.
Thomas Hitchcock was one of the leading American polo players during the latter part of the 19th century and a Hall of Fame horse trainer and owner known as the father of American steeplechase horse racing.
The Meadowbrook Polo Club, located in Old Westbury, New York, is the oldest continuously operating polo club in the United States, first established in 1881.
James Montaudevert "Monte" Waterbury Jr. was an American businessman and a 10-goal polo handicap player. Together with his brother Lawrence Waterbury, Harry Payne Whitney and Devereaux Milburn, known collectively as the "Big Four," he competed and won the 1909 International Polo Cup.
Devereux Milburn was an American champion polo player in the early to mid twentieth century. He was one of a group of Americans known as the Big Four in international polo, winning the Westchester Cup six times. He is "remembered as possibly the best polo player this country ever produced." His given name has been alternatively spelled as "Devereaux" in some publications.
Gerald Matthews Balding was a British champion polo player.
The Monty Waterbury Cup is awarded annually in polo at the Meadowbrook Polo Club in Westbury, Long Island. The first match was in 1922. It is named after James Montaudevert Waterbury, Jr. In 1956, Herbie Pennell was the winner.
The US Open Polo Championship is an annual polo championship in the United States. It is organized since 1904 by the United States Polo Association (USPA).
Captain Arthur Noel Edwards was an English polo player who participated in the 1911 and 1913 International Polo Cup as an alternate.
The Oxford University Polo Club is the Discretionary Full Blue sports club for competitive polo at Oxford University. Founded in 1874, it is one of the four oldest continuing polo clubs worldwide. Its annual Varsity Match against Cambridge University Polo Club, established in 1878, is the second oldest continuing polo fixture in the Western world. It is played at Guards Polo Club, England, usually at the beginning of June.
Herbert Charles Coningsby Tippet was a leading British amateur golfer, golf club administrator, and golf course architect in the years between the wars. A former reserve army officer, Tippet was for a time a close associate of millionaire American property developer Carl G. Fisher, the man who created the Miami Beach, Florida resort, for whom he designed a number of golf courses in Florida and Long Island. He was one of the most successful British amateur golfers of the 1920s and 1930s and later served as secretary at several prestigious UK golf clubs. He was the second husband of Edith Marguerite Harrington, grandmother of Queen Camilla.
John H. H. Phipps was an American heir, businessman, plantation owner, conservationist and polo player. He owned radio and television stations in Florida and Georgia.
Charles S. von Stade was an American polo champion.
Stephen Sanford, nicknamed "Laddie", was an American polo champion and owner of Thoroughbred racing horses.
Louis Sibbett "Dick" Wilson was an American golf course architect, who designed over sixty courses. Several of these still have a high reputation. He was known for his technique of elevating the greens when designing courses in relatively flat terrain, and for using ponds and bunkers to emphasize the aerial approach.
Meadow Brook Club may refer to:
Governors Island Golf Course was a military course on Governors Island in New York Harbor, New York City, approximately 800 yards (732 m) from the southern tip of Manhattan Island. The golf course offered one of the most unique golf experiences in New York City due to its views of the Brooklyn and Manhattan skylines, with the Statue of Liberty as a backdrop. It was considered the only golf course in Manhattan as Governors Island is technically part of the borough.
Meadowbrook Country Club is a country club in Northville Township, Wayne County, Michigan.
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