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Show map of the United StatesLocationCoordinates:Built1912ArchitectArchitectural styleColonial RevivalNRHP reference #Significant datesAdded to NRHPDecember 21, 1989Designated NHLDApril 27, 1992Merion Golf Club is a private club located in, a township bordering to the northwest along the historic. The club has two courses: the East Course, and the West Course. The East Course has been consistently rated in the top 10, #5 in 2015, by in the annual 'America's 100 Greatest Golf Courses', and it has hosted five, most recently in. Looking down the first fairway towards the clubhouse from Ardmore Avenue.Claus Johnson, the eldest son of John Johnson and Christina Skute, was born sometime prior to 1712 and died about 1786. He married, 30 March 1734, Rebecca Bankson, the daughter of Andrew Bankson, Jr., and his wife Gertrude Boore. Claus and Rebecca were living in Neshaminy, Bensalem, Bucks County, PA.
In 1740 when he contributed 10 shillings to Gloria Dei, and also at the time of the church census on 20 November 1743. In 1744 they bought a farm in Haverford Township, now in Delaware County, from Amos Lewis. The East course of the Merion Golf Club now occupies that property and their former home is the clubhouse. Claus was a vestryman at Old St. Davids Church in Radnor from 1760 to 1770 and it is presumed that he is buried there.
The Merion Golf Club came to being in 1896, when members of the (founded in 1865) opened a golf course in.Two new courses In 1910, the membership decided to build a new course and chose 32-year-old club member, a graduate, and fine player, to design it. Merion East opened in September 1912, and the original course was closed. The West Course, also designed by Wilson, opened in May 1914. The Merion Golf Club did not officially separate from the Merion Cricket Club until 1941.Wilson's research pays off Hugh Wilson had never designed a golf course, so he went on a seven-month trip to and to study British courses.
Several features of Merion East are derived from famous British courses, not the least of which are Merion's distinctive Scottish-style bunkers, which are now known as the 'white faces of Merion' (named by top amateur player ). Wilson's layout covers only 126 acres (0.51 km 2) of land, a very small area for a golf course. It was ranked 5th in 's 'America's 100 Greatest Golf Courses' in 2015, and has said of Merion East, 'Acre for acre, it may be the best test of golf in the world.' Wilson's designs were the first courses designed to provide both significant penalties (in terms of hazards and boundaries) for deviation from lines of play, and multiple possible means for reaching the pin from the tee.
The West Course in particular is relatively little altered from Wilson's design, while the East Course has had alterations made to accommodate the widening of Ardmore Avenue. The club was designated a in 1992 for its contribution to these innovations in the sport.Merion has held 18 (USGA) championship tournaments, more than any other course. The first two, the 1904 and 1909, were held at the original Haverford course. The first USGA men's tournament held at the East Course was the 1916, won.
This was also the first time appeared in a national championship; he was 14 years old. Jones would win his first U.S. Amateur in 1924, also held at Merion.Bobby Jones completes Grand Slam In 1930, the U.S.
Amateur returned to Merion in late September. Earlier that year, Bobby Jones had won the, and, so anticipation was high to see if he could complete the sweep of all four of the time, the 'impregnable quadrilateral.' Jones won the medal in the stroke play qualifier and cruised through the first four rounds of match play, to the final 36-hole match against on Saturday.
A gallery of 9,000 was on hand for the start of the match; this swelled to 18,000 by the afternoon round, forcing the competitors to be escorted to the tees and greens. After the morning round, Jones was comfortably ahead by seven holes, and when both players parred the 11th hole Jones had an 8 & 7 victory (eight holes ahead with seven to play).
Searching for words to describe the unprecedented feat, Atlanta newsman O. Keeler used the term ', which has stuck ever since.
Seven weeks after the tournament, Bobby Jones retired from competitive golf at age 28.Hogan's comeback from accident Merion's was the site of comeback, 16 months after a head-on collision with a bus which shattered his pelvis and nearly killed him. On the 72nd hole (and 36th of the day), in extreme pain and facing an uphill shot of over 200 yards (180 m) into the wind, Hogan needed a par to force a playoff, as he had just bogeyed the long par-3 17th (and the par-4 15th). From the fairway, Hogan used a to hit a superb shot which stopped on the distant green and two-putted from 40 feet (12 m) for par. Hogan then defeated and in an 18-hole playoff on Sunday to win the tournament. 's photograph of Hogan's 1-iron shot, taken from behind during Hogan's follow-through, is among the most famous pictures in golf. Editor's note: this article states the consensus of golf experts and historians that Hogan used a 1-iron.
The statement is confirmed by many sources, including Hogan himself in later letters and interviews. There has been some controversy through the years, as some sources – including Hogan's own book, Five Lessons – state that he used a 2-iron for the shot. Lost for over three decades, the club resurfaced in the early 1980s, and now resides in the USGA Museum. The point on the 18th fairway where Hogan hit the famous shot is commemorated with a plaque.
Trevino defeats Nicklaus The U.S. Open in at Merion resulted in another playoff, this time between and, arguably the top two players in the world at the time. Both had missed putts on the 72nd hole to win on Sunday, Trevino for par and Nicklaus for birdie. In the Monday playoff, Nicklaus had trouble early in the bunkers and was behind the rest of the round. Trevino, the champion, won by three strokes for his second U.S. It was the second of four times that Nicklaus was a runner-up to Trevino at a major championship.Strengthened course tests new generation. The 18th green and clubhouse.
Note the basket on top of the pin.Following 's win at the U.S. Open at Merion in, it was felt by many that the relatively short course of about 6,500 yards (5,940 m), small course area of 111 acres (45 ha) (which limits gallery size), and lack of grounds to hold corporate tents and other infrastructure would preclude Merion from holding a major again. However, following some land acquisition nearby and lengthening of the East Course to nearly 7,000 yards (6,400 m), many of these concerns appeared to be addressed.
After successfully hosting the U.S. Amateur in 2005, the USGA awarded a fifth U.S.
Open to Merion, held in, 32 years after its last hosting of the national championship.captured his first major by posting a score of one-over-par 281 for 72 holes, good for a two-stroke victory over. Most of the players who competed in the 2013 Open had very high praise for the course, which featured long, difficult rough following a wet spring. The lowest 18-hole score for the tournament was three-under-par 67, posted by several players, including Mickelson.
The course held up very well as a premium test of golf, in spite of pre-tournament worries from some golf media people that many low scores would be posted by the modern generation of players. Wicker baskets On the East Course, all pins are topped with baskets instead of the usual flags. As one story goes, when Hugh Wilson was in England studying their golf courses, he happened upon local sheep herders and their flocks.
These shepherds held staffs that they used for herding, and the staffs all had wicker baskets at the top. In those baskets, they kept their lunch for the day so that no animals could get into it. Wilson decided to use the idea at Merion, though the exact origin has never been fully verified. One effect is that the baskets are visible even if the wind is not blowing – but they do not give the golfer any indication of wind direction at the green. They have been used since at least 1916, and are featured in the club's logo.Up until around 1980, the wicker baskets were made on site by a member of the grounds crew staff. Since then, a woman, whose name and location in South Carolina are purposely kept anonymous, creates the current baskets.
Anyone who wins a USGA event at Merion receives a wicker basket top. Wickers are destroyed if the wicker baskets are broken. The golf course assistant superintendents collect the wickers every night, so they will not be stolen.
Tournaments at Merion Major championships YearTournamentWinnerWinner'sshare 1,000U.S. Open1,440,000^ 18 hole playoffs: 1950, 1971Amateur championships YearTournamentWinner19041909U.S. Women's Amateur19161924U.S. Women's AmateurHelen Stetson1930U.S. Women's Amateur1966U.S. Amateur1998Leigh Anne Hardin2005U.S.
Amateur. East Course opened in 1912, first used in 1916 U.S.
AmateurInternational team competitions YearTournamentWinner19542022Curtis CupScorecard East123456789Out15161718InTotalUSOpen606996Back73.5 / 331326579MiddleM:71.6 / 144 W:77.6 / 728836159ForwardM:69.9 / 140 W:75.8 / ParMen's3470ParWomen's3674West123456789Out15161718InTotalBack69.2 / 030865989MiddleM:68.1 / 121 W:73.4 / 729525733FrontM:66.7 / 118 W:72.2 / 027855461Men's4166188ParMen's3570ParWomen's3774Women's6164188Merion Golf Club in popular culture Merion Golf Club plays a prominent part in the novel 'Back Spin'. The novel features a U.S.
Open championship taking place at Merion Golf Club, during which the son of Jack Coldren, the golfer leading the pack, is kidnapped.It is also the inspiration for the name of the Marion Club in for the.References. United States Golf Association. Retrieved January 25, 2013. United States Golf Association. Retrieved January 25, 2013.
January 23, 2007. National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. Archived from on 2009-08-30. Retrieved 2008-07-02. Retrieved 2017-04-19.
National Park Service. Retrieved 2017-04-11.
Alvarez, Robert (May 22, 2013). United States Golf Association. Retrieved May 29, 2013. Hack, Damon (May 15, 2008).
Retrieved May 13, 2013. Gould, Alan (September 28, 1930). Reading Eagle.
Associated Press. P. 13.
^ Trostel, Michael (May 28, 2013). United States Golf Association.
Archived from on June 15, 2013. Retrieved May 29, 2013. Talbot, Gayle (June 11, 1950). Milwaukee Sentinel. Associated Press. P. 1-B. Hack, Damon (October 20, 2008).
Retrieved May 13, 2013. Retrieved May 13, 2013. Shefter, David (April 29, 2010). United States Golf Association. Retrieved May 13, 2013.
Sens, Josh (June 2013). Retrieved June 13, 2013. Ferguson, Doug (June 12, 2013). PGA of America.
Associated Press. Retrieved June 13, 2013.
Archived from on December 13, 2013. Retrieved June 13, 2013. ^ Shefter, David (April 30, 2013). United States Golf Association. Retrieved May 13, 2013. Evans, Farrell (June 16, 2013). Retrieved June 26, 2013.
^ Fitzpatrick, Frank (May 6, 2013). Retrieved May 13, 2013. Sheppard, Bob (May 17, 2012). Archived from on June 18, 2013. Retrieved May 13, 2013. ^ Miceli, Alex (2005). Retrieved May 13, 2013.External links.
– U.S. Opens at Merion.
Based on Governor Wolf’s mandate that all schools in the state of Pennsylvania be closed, the Diocese of Harrisburg has highly recommended that parishes close their religious education and youth programs from March 14 through March 29. As a result, rehearsals for the junior group (Wednesday) and senior group (Sunday) will be suspended until the week of March 30. Please use this time to spend together as a family.
Perhaps God has given us an unexpected opportunity to stop in our tracks, reset and remember what is most important. May you have a blessed Lent and stay safe and healthy.