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Deepdale Golf Club

Coordinates: 40°46′19″N 73°41′43″W / 40.7719°N 73.695195°W / 40.7719; -73.695195
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Deepdale Golf Club
Club information
Deepdale Golf Club is located in New York City
Deepdale Golf Club
Coordinates40°46′19″N 73°41′43″W / 40.7719°N 73.695195°W / 40.7719; -73.695195
LocationManhasset, New York, United States
TypePrivate
Total holes18
Websitewww.deepdalegolfclub.com

Deepdale Golf Club is a private golf club in Manhasset, New York, just east of New York City on Long Island.

Early years

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The club was founded by William K. Vanderbilt II in 1924, using part of his Deepdale summer estate at Lake Success. Charles B. Macdonald designed the course, assisted by Seth Raynor. The Deepdale Golf Club was incorporated on 26 October 1924 as a private club with a strictly limited membership.[1] Noted members in the past included the Duke of Windsor and President Dwight D. Eisenhower.[2]

In the 1950s suburbs began to be built in the region, and in 1954 the Long Island Expressway was built, cutting through the north end of the course. The club bought the nearby Joseph Peter Grace, Sr. estate and had a new course designed by Dick Wilson. The Grace mansion was used as the clubhouse.[1]

1955 Calcutta scandal

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The prestigious club was the location of the 1955 Deepdale Calcutta handicapping scandal.[3] A Calcutta auction, named after the Royal Calcutta Turf Club, is a form of betting in which the competitors in tournament are auctioned off to bidders in a pool. The "owners" of the winning team split their portion of the pool with the players. Calcuttas were often rigged, with golfers faking their handicaps or accepting bribes to lose.[4] In 1955 two three-handicap golfers entered an amateur tournament at Deepdale. They gave their handicaps as 17 and 18, scored a net 58-57 and won by five strokes. They and the syndicate that backed them each won $16,000 from a $45,000 pool. The scandal emerged after one of the players admitted what he had done in a letter to the President of the club, and the story reached the newspapers.[5] As a result of the scandal, the United States Golf Association formally outlawed Calcuttas.[6]

Course today

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The course today is 6,623 yards (6,056 m) from its longest tees. Walking is allowed. It has a par value of 70, a rating of 72.6 and a slope of 135. Some celebrity players have included Bob Hope, Tom Brokaw and Sean Connery.[7] More recent members include Sidney Poitier, Tiki Barber and Michael Bloomberg. As of 2006 the course was rated 36 in the list of America's "100 Most Prestigious Golf Clubs" published by Golf Connoisseur magazine.[2]

In March 2006 it was reported that the village of North Hills, an extremely wealthy community, was looking into using eminent domain laws to condemn the club and convert it to a semi-public course for use by local residents. Given the wealth of the village residents and the wealth of the club members, The New York Times described the contest as "a battle of Goliath against Goliath."[2]

References

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Citations

Sources

  • Anderson, Dave (1 March 2001). "'Everybody cheats. I needed a few dollars': Almost 50 years later, a key figure speaks out on the Deepdale scandal". Golf Digest. Archived from the original on 2 November 2013.
  • "Deepdale Golf Club". LongIsland.com. Retrieved 2013-10-29.
  • "History of the Golf Club". Deepdale Golf Club. Archived from the original on 2013-09-02. Retrieved 2013-10-29.
  • LeCompte, Tom (August–September 2005). "The 18-Hole Hustle". American Heritage. 56 (4). Archived from the original on 2006-05-07. Retrieved 2013-11-01.
  • Rothman, Evan (23 June 2009). "Bethpage smethpage — I'll take a tee time at an elite private club every time". Golf.com. Retrieved 2013-10-29.
  • The Golf Doctor (5 February 2009). "Unacceptable forms of gambling? You bet!" (PDF). The Charlotte Post. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-11-02. Retrieved 2013-11-01.
  • Toy, Vivian S. (12 March 2006). "A Property Battle Pitting Two Giants". The New York Times. Retrieved 2013-10-29.