Bethpage was created by the purchase of several tracts of open land where nothing was built on or near it. The only portion that was the exception to this was the present day Green course, the site of the original Lenox Hills Golf Club and which served as the only course at bethpage from 1932 to the spring of 1935. Up until then it was operated as the Bethpage Golf Club.
The Lenox Hills Golf Club was part of the Lenox Hills housing division, conceived of and built by Railroad tycoon Benjamin F. Yoakum. It was an upscale community with one of the perks given to anyone purchasing a house there a membership to the Lenox Hills Golf Club.
When Mr. Yoakum died at the end of November in 1929, his family decided to rid itself of the burden of the golf course and adjoining property by selling it to New York State. The sale took until Jan. 1 of 1934 to accomplish and so the state leased the property until then. It is for the specific reason that the state did not own the land that the contract with A.W. Tillinghast to design the 3 new golf courses HAD to list him as a "Consultant" to the Long Island State Parks Commission, rather than the architect of a multi-course golf project.
When the property was leased to the state, the community became outraged yet there was nothing that they could do as the SOLE owner property had been Mr. Yoakum. The memberships did not contain any ownership rights for the members.
The ONLY houses that could be seen from any of the golf courses were on streets that are adjacent to what is today the 8th & 9th holes of the Green course. In addition, the old Quaker Meeting House building and the property adjacent had views of the clubhouse from it, but this was mainly because of the massive tree removal project begun at the start of the building program. Today neither can see the other.
Houses along peripheral streets that can see s few holes on the yellow course (built in the 1950's) came later as well as the glimpses of the 5th & 6th holes of the Blue course from the Seaford-Oyster Bay Expressway came much later on.
The park and courses are still what they were when conceived and created, a paradise of play invisible to the outside world.
If the state of California allowed garbage barges to be anchored continuously off the Monteray Peninsula would this mean that Pebble & Cypress, etc... were built in bad settings? Of course not.
Just because there are now a few houses and a road or two doesn't lessen the setting of Bethpage.