Echo Lake Country Club

Echo Lake Country Club
Club information
Location Westfield, New Jersey, U.S.
Established 1899
Type Private
Total holes 18
Website http://www.echolakecc.org
Designed by Donald Ross
Par 72
Length 7,090 yards
Course rating 73.9 (Black Tees)
71.8 (Blue Tees)
70.1 (Member Tees)
68.1 (White Tees)
71.7 (Green Tees)
Slope rating 136 (Black Tees)
133 (Blue Tees)
130 (Member Tees)
128 (White Tees)
127 (Green Tees)
Course record 64

Echo Lake Country Club is a private, member-owned country club located in Westfield, New Jersey. The club was founded in 1899 and the golf course was designed by Donald Ross in 1913.

History

The club was originally founded as the Cranford Golf Club in 1899 and a 9-hole golf course was designed by Willie Dunn on Lincoln Avenue in Cranford, New Jersey. Cranford businessmen and trading-stamp magnates Thomas Sperry and William Miller Sperry were executives of the Cranford Golf Club on Lincoln Avenue, formerly known as Westfield Avenue and part of the Old York Road.[1] The club's 19th-century grounds off Lincoln Avenue were a former estate said to have supplied lumber to build the US Constitution ("Old Ironsides") in the 1700s.[2] The grounds also included the largest sour gum ever recorded in the Northeastern states, known as the Cranford Pepperidge Tree or "Old Peppy."

Young men from the Cranford club went on to fame --- Max R. Marston of Central Avenue in Cranford, New Jersey won the National Amateur Golf Association Championship, and Dean Mathey won the National Clay Court Tennis Doubles Championship twice.[3]

In 1912, the Cranford Golf Club purchased the Harper Farm in Westfield, New Jersey, and engaged Donald Ross to design the current course which was completed in 1913. The clubhouse was built on a high bluff overlooking Echo Lake.[4]

In 1921, the Cranford Golf Club and the Westfield Golf Club merged, choosing the name Echo Lake Country Club to reflect both the site and the broad country club activities offered.[5]

Tournaments

National Championships

The club has hosted two national championships conducted by the United States Golf Association:

YearChampionshipWinnerScoreRunner-upSemi-FinalistsNotes
1994U.S. Junior AmateurSouth Korea Terry Noe2 up United States Andy BarnesUnited States Charles Howell III
Puerto Rico Mauricio Muniz
[6][7]
2002U.S. Girls' JuniorSouth Korea Inbee Park4 & 3United States Jenny TangtiphaiboontanaUnited States Allison Martin
United States Hannah Jun
[8]

PGA Tour Events

YearEventWinnerScoreRunners-upNotes
1934Metropolitan OpenUnited States Paul Runyan−1United States Walter Hagen
United States Wiffy Cox
[9]

References

  1. Burditt Newspaper Index, Cranford Golf Club Entries. http://cranfordhistory.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/2012_06_12_15_16_27.pdf; Burditt Newspaper Index, Sperry Family Entries. http://cranfordhistory.org/explore-cranford-history/burditt-index-main-page/
  2. Historic Tree Booklet by the Cranford Historic Grove & Arboretum 1033 Springfield Ave, Cranford, NJ 07016. http://cranfordhistory.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/HistoricTreeBooklet2011.pdf
  3. http://cranfordhistory.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/2012_06_11_11_07_50; Dean Mathey by Robert C. Hall (the fascinating story of an extraordinary man and onetime Cranford resident, including Mathey’s diary for all of 1918 during his military service in World War I).; http://pacf.org/dean-mathey/ (Dean Mathey was born in 1891 and raised in Cranford, N.J. and was a noted trustee of Princeton University); ;http://matheycollege.princeton.edu/about-us/history (Mathey was the namesake of Mathey College at Princeton University)
  4. Hale, Lee M. (1988). Echo Lake Country Club, Ninety Years in the Forefront of New Jersey Golf. Danbury, Connecticut: Rutledge Books, Inc. ISBN 9780874690651.
  5. http://www.nj.com/news/local/index.ssf/2011/06/glimpse_of_history_several_nam.html
  6. "U.S. Junior Amateur Golf Championships: Fullerton's Noe Advances to Semifinal". Los Angeles Times. July 30, 1994.
  7. United States Junior Amateur Championship, Past champions, accessed February 6, 2015
  8. 2002 United States Girls' Junior Championship, Results, accessed February 6, 2015
  9. New York Historical Museum & Library, Dictionary of New York Sports, accessed February 6, 2015

External links

Coordinates: 40°40′22″N 74°20′23″W / 40.67276°N 74.33959°W / 40.67276; -74.33959

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