I hope this course can keep it going somehow. It is a fine layout over a wonderful piece of property that sits mostly in a creek valley. I’ve always thought that the course could be a lot more playable and enjoyable with the removal of about 500-1000 trees (to start), which would bring some width back to the claustrophobic corridors as well a simple green expansion. I was hoping the tree company that took the place over would have begun to address the tree issues, but I’m guessing they haven’t. The 12
th hole is a wonderful uphill par three of about 160 to 180 yards and the green sits in a natural area between a ridge on the right and a hillside on the left. The only problem is that there are two trees short and right blocking about two-thirds of the green!
I’ve always known it to be a Ross course. It’s even listed as a Ross course on the Donald Ross Society page, but Sven’s research seems to prove otherwise. At least it seems to have had an indirect Ross pedigree.
The worst part of courses like these closing is “losing” the land they were built on. Hawthorne Valley, much like others that are NLE in the Cleveland area like Acacia, Aurora and Oakwood, were all built partially or mostly at the bottom of a creek valley and the natural land formations & ridges that surround the creek valleys seem to be a perfect scale for golf. Also, the creeks make for wonderful hazards that are challenging but very negotiable. Someone correct me if I’m wrong, but if someone found a piece of land like Hawthorne’s today, they would have a really challenging time building a golf course on it for environmental reasons. Once it’s gone I’m thinking that it’s not coming back……
Click
HERE to go to the GolfClevelandOhio.com page where there are a few photos of Hawthorne.