Hi Joe,
GREAT FIND!!!
Glad this article was of use for you Brad. I must admit that I know very little about Tedesco.
Thanks...I think this may go into our newletter, and may be the beginning of a long overdue history section on our website (I have many other references/articles to post).
Brief summary of our golf course history, we are located in Marblehead/Swampscott, MA about 16 miles north of Boston, a half mile from the ocean...the course is named for a ship that wrecked in Swampscott in 1857.
1902-1903: 6 holes were built by members adjacent to the beach in Swampscott...this was an early summer home area for wealthy Bostonians.
Roughly 1906: Farmland was purchased between Tedesco and Salem streets, and 9 holes were planned, presumably by members. The CSM article details these holes, and we did not have details for them, even though our current 1-5, 8-10, 18 are basically the same as the original 9 with a few length, green location, and playing angle changes.
1912: Additional land is purchased across Salem St. into a wooded area, 9 more holes open. We are not sure who is responsible for designing this. We have record of a construction company, but not an architect. Our supposed architect of record has long been Skip Wogan, who was Ross's assistant pro at Essex CC from 1910-1913 before becoming head pro when Ross went to NC full time. It would make sense that the designer was some combination of Ross/Wogan (as Wogan was in his early 20s and had no courses to his name yet), but no proof as to how this worked out. About half of these holes exist today.
1927: An additional 9 holes is built across Tedesco St. in a marshy area, called the "Gun Club 9." Not sure who designed this, but very likely to be Wayne Stiles.
1927-1930: Wayne Stiles refurbishes the current 18 with new bunkering (we once had 200+ bunkers, today there are about 65), and adds a fourth nine holes beyond the back nine. The members immediately incorporate the new holes into a "Championship 18," leaving many of the original holes as the "Short 9." Local papers tout Tedesco as one of (if not the) first full-service 36 hole country clubs in New England.
1931-1932: Gun Club 9 is sold to locals to be operated as the public Sunbeam Golf Course, eventually closing for development in 1953.
1935: The 4th nine is abandoned, the routing returns to the 1912-1930 configuration with a few elements of the 4th nine included.
1937: Donald Ross consults, and makes many recommendations...the only substantial one the club does is to move the current 12th green from a low area to a shelf-like green on a steep hillside. Ross's pamphlet comically/sarcastically lists "Tedesco, one hole, 1937."
1938-1980s: The dark ages...bunkers disappear, too many trees are planted, a few holes are re-routed, we arrive at something similar to the original 1912 configuration with about 6 holes replaced/changed. By the club's 50th anniversary in 1953 (but probably earlier), members are playing today's course.
1990s: Stephen Kay consults, bunkers are refurbished. Phil Wogan is also involved somehow, as we build a large driving range in the middle of the back nine (through area that contained some of the abandoned 1930s holes) in the mid-90s.
2014: Long range plan with Ron Forse completed...historically-sensitive "resto-vation" dreams are discussed! Lot of trees removed!