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Santa Anita Golf Course: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 34°08′08″N 118°01′56″W / 34.135689°N 118.032335°W / 34.135689; -118.032335
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'''The Santa Anita Golf Course''', located in the city of [[Arcadia, California]], is operated by Santa Anita Associates for the [[Los Angeles County]] Department of Parks and Recreation.
'''The Santa Anita Golf Course''', located in the city of [[Arcadia, California]], is operated by Santa Anita Associates for the [[Los Angeles County]] Department of Parks and Recreation.
This is a place.
==History==
The {{convert|185|acre|km2}} upon which the [[golf course]] was built has always been devoted to recreation in some form or another. The original architect was James Harrison Smith. Originally part of the [["Lucky" Baldwin]] Ranch, Santa Anita's history dates back to the days when its broad oaks sheltered places where Indians camped. Across its broad acres traveled Mission Fathers from San Gabriel on their way up Little Santa Anita Canyon for lumber needed to build the Mission.

From 1907 through 1909 horse racing was a feature on Lucky Baldwin's famed track. The clubhouse turn was right where No. 16 is now and when you're on the hill on the backside of No. 14, that's the turn where the horses turned for home.


==World War I Years==
==World War I Years==

Revision as of 09:57, 21 October 2014

34°08′08″N 118°01′56″W / 34.135689°N 118.032335°W / 34.135689; -118.032335

The Santa Anita Golf Course, located in the city of Arcadia, California, is operated by Santa Anita Associates for the Los Angeles County Department of Parks and Recreation. This is a place.

World War I Years

Hangars from the U.S. Army's Ross Field Balloon School, 1922.

During World War I, Ross Field, Named after Lt. Cleo J. Ross of the U.S. Army Air Service, housed a United States Army balloon school. Ross was an observer with the 8th Balloon Company and was killed in action in France on September 26, 1918, the only U.S. Army balloonist to die in combat. The balloon school closed in the spring on 1919.

Anita Baldwin sold the land to the County of Los Angeles for $92,000 in 1918. A sand green golf course appeared following the closure of the school and Arcadia citizens took it over and operated it as a highly successful club.

Depression Era

In 1935, through an act of Congress, the United States Department of War deeded 185 acres to Los Angeles County with the provision that it be used as a park and recreation center. The redevelopment of Ross Field was a Works Progress Administration project that included not just the golf course but a swimming pool, tennis courts, two baseball fields, a children’s playground, and a lawn bowling complex.

The Course Opens

The Santa Anita Golf course opened in two stages. Nine holes were opened in April 1938 and the complete 18 opened on October 12, 1938.

1938 also saw the birth of the Santa Anita Open—held each year until 1955, in the middle of October, to celebrate the opening of the Golf Course and to start the official Winter Golf Tournament season in Southern California. Prize money that first year was $1,000. Frank Moninger personally underwrote the first two tournaments. The Santa Anita Golf Club with the help of a few individual golfers underwrote the next few events. The County donated the Golf Course for the Santa Anita Open. The Course Record established in the days of "The Open" is 62 - held by Ellsworth Vines. Lloyd Mangrum won the first and second Opens with 274 and 278. Par at that time was 70.

The current record is held by Blake Moore of Monrovia, California who shot a 9 under par 62 on Sunday, July 20, 2003. Moore is attributed with the current record as several holes have been changed since "The Open" era and the course is now a par 71 rather than the original par 70.

Scorecard

Scorecard for Santa Anita Golf Course circa 2010

See also

References

External links