Golf and houses, golf and houses,
Go together like legs and trousers,
This I tell you brother
You cant have one without the other
Golf and houses, house with garage,(ahem)
Its an equation you cant disparage
Ask the local gentry
And they will say its elementary
Try, try, try to separate them
Its an illusion
Try, try, try, and you will only come
To this conclusion
Golf and houses, golf and houses,
Go together like legs and trousers,
Dad was told by mother
You cant have one without the other
(No need to apologise to Sammy Cahn he was quick to adapt his lyrics when the occasion demanded it.)
Reading David’s impressive IMO piece on Merion, one of the things that I picked up on was how the course came about because it was looked at as part of an overall deal to improve land prices. It seems to be one of the main accepted truism's on GCA that Golf & Housing = Bad. But it wasn’t always so.
We have discussed the role of the railways on here several times (e.g. (links fixed)
http://golfclubatlas.com/forum/index.php/topic,20030.msg356429.html#msg356429and
http://www.golfclubatlas.com/forums2/index.php?board=1;action=display;threadid=30239 )
and obviously the Railways made a whole lot more land available for Housing by reducing the time it took to get to work in the city. It is also true to say it’s hardly a surprise that people want to live in beautiful surroundings with amenities like golf courses close by. Sometimes the railways allowed people to access land which would provide better golf (particularly in winter) hence courses like Pine Valley, Portrush, RCD and Sandwich to name a few. The railways also allowed the creation of hotels as a golf destination e.g. Turnberry, Gleneagles, Pinehurst (?).
We often discuss the individuls who gave a Club it's character or course, more rarely do we discuss the motives of the founders. Hence one gets the impression that the ideal club is founded by a group of like minded individuals who are only interested in golf. However it seems to me that a number of what we call important Clubs were developed as part of the overall picture built on property deals. IN the UK important examples include:
Walton Heath. The area around the Heath was targeted by a group of rich men who bought land in the area and then influenced a new railway line and an act of parliament to get permission to build the course. Similar to the Merion case they figured that a great golf course would enhance the land values thereabouts.
Sunningdale. According to the history when the land was leased houses were part of the plan.
Huntercombe. This was intended to be a housing development but failed partly because it was too far from the nearest railways station.
(Of the 4 most important early Heathland courses only Woking did not include housing as an element and its existence was only possible because of the Railway)
St Georges Hill (1913) is generally believed to be the first successful Golf/Residential community but I think if you look at the wider perspective others preceded it.
IN the Hawtree book on Colt, the author says that Colt was adept at suggesting to Cubs if they sold off a small parcel of land by the road for housing, then they would be able to afford the holes he’d like to build for them. Many clubs improved and developed their couses in this way. e.g. Alwoodley. Many courses have been lost to housing with a replacement built further out of town often on inferior land but with a much nicer clubhouse.
I would like to know of other examples where the course owed its existence to housing. I’m particularly interested in the early days but I’d also like to know when the development of golf residential communities turned into a flood. My kknowledge of US courses is particularly weak.
Golf and houses seem to be synonymous at least since the late Victorian explosion in new inland golf courses.