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Michael Dugger

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A Christmas Eve read about Sebonack GL and “Bayberry Land”
« on: December 24, 2006, 07:10:56 PM »
I just love a good historical summary such as Thomas Macwood’s George Arthur Crump: Portrait of a Legend found in the IN MY OPINION section of this website.   In leiu of being made aware of the new photos of Sebonack GL on Larry Lambrecht’s site I have become further dumbfounded over this majestic golf course!  What a beautiful set of images!!!  What texture!!!!  Fantastic work Larry.  Tom Doak, Jack Nicklaus and mother nature are a beautiful combination!  Show me more, give me more!

 


So, since I have not purchased the Klein book yet, I set about seeing what the internet had to offer.  From a quick google search I found the following article on Bloomberg.com.  The part(s) which stood out to me is the following:

By Michael Buteau
May 31 (Bloomberg) -- The newest golf course in the Hamptons may already be No. 1 in at least one category: price.

The new club sits between 95-year-old National Golf Links of America and four-time U.S. Open host Shinnecock Hills Golf Club at the eastern end of Long Island.
 
The 7,286-yard course, similar in length to a PGA Tour event, was carved into the dunes along the Great Peconic Bay. It once was ``Bayberry Land,'' the summer estate of Charles H. Sabin, a former president of Guaranty Trust Co. of New York.
 
Sabin's 28-room Georgian mansion was torn down to make room for Sebonack's second, third and 18th holes. What once was a reflecting pool is now the ``Coffin Bunker'' on No. 18, named for Sabin's landscape architect Marian Cruger Coffin.

Walkways From Wales
Slate from the roof of the home, imported from Wales, now is part of a walkway in the club's practice area.


Most of this I knew, the course is a collaboration between Nicklaus and Doak….blah blah blah. I had heard somewhere there was quite the compound where the golf course now rests.  I read somewhere Tom talking about the 11th green resting upon an old softball field. But I wanted more information on the history of this “Bayberry Land.”  I am just a sucker for these cool old stories so I sought more.  Well, I found more.  The following article should satisfy the most ardent of history buffs.  On this cold x-mas eve when we all find ourselves dreaming of playing golf at a course like Sebonack, happy reading on the history of “Bayberry Land”

http://www.hamptons.com/hamptons_article_magazine_568.htm

for more check the following pdf's

http://www.town.southampton.ny.us/specialgallery/bayberry/walk_thru.pdf

http://www.town.southampton.ny.us/specialgallery/bayberry/bayberrynobleed.pdf
« Last Edit: December 24, 2006, 07:24:57 PM by Michael Dugger »
What does it matter if the poor player can putt all the way from tee to green, provided that he has to zigzag so frequently that he takes six or seven putts to reach it?     --Alistair Mackenzie--

Mark Hissey

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re:A Christmas Eve read about Sebonack GL and “Bayberry Land”
« Reply #1 on: December 29, 2006, 08:24:06 AM »
I haven't seen those pictures in a while. It's hard to believe that it looked like that.

JWL

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re:A Christmas Eve read about Sebonack GL and “Bayberry Land”
« Reply #2 on: December 29, 2006, 11:22:55 AM »
Mark

That is kinda fun to look back on all those old images.  I can remember our first walk thru in the old mansion and the grounds.

That was all pretty nice, but I like what is out there now just a little better.   LOL

Hope to see you soon in 2007 and
Give my best to all for an Happy New Year.

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