Although the loss of good courses by the likes of AWT and others is sad, don't feel
too sorry for the members of Fresh Meadow. They ended up purchasing the failing Lakeville GC and saving a Charles Alison gem, which was considered to be “one of the most beautiful and exclusive clubs in America”, and “the peer of American inland courses.”
Portions of "Lakeville" are seen in this photo:
Below is the original routing (thanks to Joe Bausch) and then the aerial photo of the original course that AWT built for the club. It held a PGA Championship in 1930 and a U.S. Open 1932, but in February '46 the land was sold to New York Life Insurance Co. and it became the Fresh Meadows Housing Development.
The club's website has this account of the course:
“News of the Tillinghast Course" in Flushing, New York, had started to spread throughout the golfing world. When the course was officially opened large numbers of golf celebrities and experts came from far and near to test its rigors. What they found was a course in exquisite condition, as though it had been groomed for a decade, and of scenic delight. It contained holes of fascinating variety, some fairways finding their way through groves of towering trees, others with water obstacles on the way to the greens; doglegs with treacherous sand traps as they curved around corners to the left and to the right; out-of-bounds galore to plague the ‘hooker’ and ‘slicer’ alike; the famous Tillinghast pear-shaped greens fiercely trapped. All these features created one of the finest tests of golf anywhere.”Use the slide bar to see all the holes