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The history of
golf in Spencer dates back to just after the turn of the
century. It was 1906, to be exact. That was the year
that a few Spencer men needy of a course decided to mark one
off in an area near where the Clay County Fair now stands.
The course
acted as sort of a rough draft of things to come. Played in
a sheep pasture, the original sight of Spencer golf was a
rugged reminder that there had to be something better.
So in 1919, a
group of community leaders proposed the building of a golf
and country club as a site for recreation and community
social functions. As stated in the 1957
Northwest Amateur
Golf Tournament program, the club "was started when a group
of Spencerites got tired of sharing their course with the
sheep."
The Spencer
Golf and Country Club was incorporated in June of 1919.
The site of the new course and country club was on the
southeast edge of Spencer where the present-day St.
Luke
Lutheran Home and Del's Garden Center is located. To
get things started, 150 people bought $100 shares of stock,
and club officials took an option on 320 acres of land.
The land was sold to Roy Pullen and Jim Burrington for $278
per acre with an agreement to buy back
45 acres of
rough land to the north for $100 per acre. To make a
long story short, Spencer had itself a golf course.
The membership totaled around 150 people to begin with, but
that rose to 200 members in a relatively short time.
On the original board in 1919 was Walter H. Thomas, who was
one of the original founders of the Northwest Amateur
Tournament. John Cory, Jr., headed the grounds and
greens committee, and is generally credited in laying out
the course. With the course underway, the next step
was the build a clubhouse. Construction began in 1920.
The original
clubhouse stood for 21 years before being destroyed by a
fire in 1961. "That flame was about 100 or 200 feet
high," said Tom Thomas, Walt Thomas' son. Although
temporary facilities were erected to accommodate the club's
members, the fire essentially represented the end of the old
course. With the fire and lack of a decent water
supply, the country club board decided it was time to sell
the course and look for a new location. Tom Thomas was on
that board. "The first thought was to expand the
course and try to buy new ground, but the water supply was
so bad, anyway," he said. "It was a big argument to move
that deal. The old-timers didnšt want to move. Even dad
(Walt Thomas) was against it. "
Having confronted so much resistance for their decision to
move, Tom Thomas and the rest of the board resigned their
positions. "They thought they should have other people
calling the shots," Thomas said. But in the end, the
move finally took place.
In 1963, the
old golf course was sold to Lutheran Churches of Northwest
Iowa. The land was handed over in the fall of 1964, at which
time the club moved to its current location. According
to Thomas, it was designed by a man from Chicago. It
was built by the Van Buskirk Construction Company out of
Sioux City. The new site included 169 acres of land,
not very far from where the original site from 58 years
before lay. "We have a wonderful water supply out
there," Thomas said. "It worked out real well. Once we got
moved, everybody was very happy." |