Jeff -
It was a Langford course called The Orchard. I heard recently from Ron Forse that the course is the source for O'Hare's call letters - ORD. Amazing if true.
Bob
Twin Orchard Country Club was organized in 1924, and the Langford and Moreau course opened later that year. It was build on two farms and two fruit orchards, hence the name, adjacent to the unincorporated town of Orchard Place.
In 1942, Douglas Aircraft bought adjacent land and built a manufacturing plant and Douglas Field, which was eventually named Orchard Place Airport. The ORD designation comes from that name.
Twin Orchard had 27 holes. The extra nine was for ladies and children, and that nine remained when Orchard Place Airport began expanding after Chicago took it over. By 1951, the main 18 closed and the membership took over Skycrest and renamed it Twin Orchard. The remaining nine was leased by the Walsh brothers and run as a public course through 1959, when the three original O'Hare International terminals were built on the site of the nine holes.
Larry Packard was working for the Chicago Park District as a landscape engineer when word came a comprehensive airport plan was needed. He drew up a design for a circular field with the terminals in the middle. So did someone else, but his plan was accepted. He turned down the job of landscape engineer there, he said in his biography, "Double Doglegs and Other Hazards," because there wasn't much to plant and, "After a couple of years, I'd be out of a job again."