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Nineteen
twenty-one marked the inaugural year for the Northwest
Amateur Golf Tournament at the
Spencer Golf and Country
Club. That year also marked the beginning
of Iowa's second ever golf tournament, the first being the
Iowa Amateur. Today, there are well over 100
tournaments held annually in Iowa, but in 1921, 60 people
converged on Spencer's new course to inaugurate what was to
be the first in 80 years of prominence.
When the
country club first conceived of the idea of holding a
tournament, it appointed a tournament committee headed by
Walter H. Thomas. Working with Thomas were Carl Fee, W.W.
Cornwall, E. Taggert, J.P. Gable and W.C. Barton.
Through the committee, a match-play tournament sprung.
Topping the group of 60 in the inaugural event was Warren
Dickinson of Des Moines, a former state champion. Lee Herron
of Des Moines, who went on to win the next three
tournaments, took the runner-up spot the first year.
The early
efforts of committee chair Walter Thomas lead to the surge
of the Northwest Am's popularity. According to his
son, Tom Thomas, Walter used his newspaper contacts through
the Des Moines Register to give the tournament state-wide
prominence. "In those days, we got more publicity than
any other tournament in the state," Tom Thomas said. "Give
credit to Dad. He made sure we got more publicity than
anyone else." Walter Thomas continued as tournament
chairman until 1939 when Jack Kirk took over. Kirk served
for four years, Thomas served another two, and then Emory
Snyder took the helm through 1963. Other tournament
chairmen were Ozzy Osborn, Bob Woods, and then present-day
Bob Rose. Thomas also
donated the first trophy to the tournament. The
traveling trophy was appropriately named after Thomas.
Thomas was also a three-time champion. "You can't
compare him to today's golfers," said Tom Thomas. "He was an
irons man. He hit them where they paid off."
Blaine Asher
was another prominent Spencer competitor in the Northwest Am
in the early years. He was a finalist five years in a row
and won in 1926 and 1927. According to an article in
the July, 1964 edition of The Iowa Golfer, Asher also holds
the distinction of being the first in the tournament to have
his caddie lug around a stool for him to sit on while
waiting on other players. It's said that he pulled out
a magazine each time he sat down. Medal play was
introduced to the tournament in 1931. Walter Thomas
and Dick Tang of Fort Dodge battled it out in the finals
that year, ending in a 287 tie. They were still tied
after 17 holes, but Tang won on the 18th play-off hole after
Thomas missed a four-foot putt.
Throughout
history, the Northwest Am has earned respect as Iowa's only
72-hole tournament. It's also a regular stop for
amateurs hoping to earn points towards a state amateur
championship. The tournament's best score of 270 was
reached three times, the first time by Denison's Bob Leashy
in 1958, and then two years later by John Liechty of
Marshalltown. Ryan Vermeer matched the mark the third
time in 1999.
Throughout its
over 80 years, the Northwest Amateur Golf Tournament has
survived the moving of the country club. It has seen
many faces come and go, while others seem to come back year
after year. But no matter what period in the
tournament's history you look at, it has always attracted a
lot of attention with its mix of superb golfers and casual
week night warriors. "I can remember when we moved to
town in the '50s, watching (the tournament) was the thing to
do in town when it was happening," said Bob Rose. "It was
great to watch top-notch golfers at that time." |