The golf sisters of south Western Avenue have gone through good times and bad. Four of the five are still with us, for which hurrah.
Calumet was sold, and tomorrow, the Homewood village board is expected to approve a settlement that will lead to the building of an industrial park on the property. The mayor said he didn't want it but the village also can't stop it without spending itself into the red in legal fees. Calumet had a great 100 years on that site.
Ravisloe went public after a nifty renovation proved not to attract new members and is doing well enough, based on its continuing operation.
Flossmoor CC was on its last legs after a stylish renovation also failed to bring in new blood, but was bought before last season and now is Flossmoor GC, bought by a trio of brothers including former Olympia members. So far, even with the pandemic, so good.
Idlewild is in the middle of a $1.3 million irrigation and drainage project that will include some new tees, continuing tree removal, and expects faster, firmer conditions come spring. Membership is up and voted overwhelmingly for a modest assessment to cover the cost.
Olympia Fields has the money for the $4 million renovation of South, a course I love and saw little need to change, aside from the third hole, which stuck out like a leisure suit in a sea of tuxedos. Some members apparently didn't like the Bendelow-style chocolate drops around the greens, and other things. Possible changes to the North will come later. And the board is confident enough, based on membership growth, to have recently upped the drop.
As to R. Kelly, he had a big house adjacent to club property by the tee of 14 South. It was pointed out to me the first time I played. I wondered why he had a swing set in the backyard. Soon after, news broke of his arrest and the next time I was on South, Kelly had placed a wooden fence against Olympia's chain-link fence. I don't know if the swing set was still there. The home has since been sold.
Question for Peter Flory: When was 3 South a Dell hole? The earliest aerial dates to the late 1930s and shows the blah par-3 that was replaced by the one on the hill. In each case, it was the only way to get to the fourth tee.