Apawamis' transition from a social club to a golf club took off in 1899. The club had started out with a nine hole course on Boston Post Road in 1897. After two or so years of popular use of the course, the officers of the club were faced with a challenge – the cost of renewing their lease was deemed too high and demand to play the sport showed no signs of ebbing. As a result, in February 1899, members announced that they would purchase 120 acres of the former Charles Park estate (the Park family were Apawamis members) close to the Rye train station to create the venue that exists today. The new 18-hole "Golf Course "for Millionaires" created for members like American politician and journalist
Whitelaw Reid and Standard Oil industrialist
Henry Flagler was laid out by Tom Bendelow. At 6280 yards, Other players on his winning team included Frank H. Wiggin, Maturin Ballou, Victor Delano, S. W. Doubleday, R.F. Mathews and Roger Samson. The home matches that followed were played on May 20, 1899 against
Richmond County Country Club; on June 3, 1899 against Bedford Golf; and on June 10, 1899 against Wee Burn Golf Club. The clubhouse itself opened on October 7, 1899 with 700 members and guests in attendance. The "cosey" structure was two stories tall with a large piazza. Bendelow, who has been called the "Dean of American Golf", had recently designed New York City's public course at
Van Cortlandt Park and had been hired as the superintendent of the site. The natural contours of the well-tended pasture land spoke to Bendelow's aesthetic philosophy and also helped expedite installation of the greens and holes. Bendelow took advantage of two existing brooks and a pond on the Park Estate to create water hazards.
Maturin Ballou In November 1899, working with the club's newly hired golf professional Willie Davis, Maturin Ballou, an Apawamis Club member and player on the golf team, oversaw the installation of a new drainage system. Ballou had the opportunity to show off his handiwork the following year to Harry Vardon on November 6, 1900, in a best ball exhibition match with Davis. After playing, Vardon announced that Apawamis was one of the three best courses he had seen in the country after Newport and Atlantic City. Ballou eventually became USGA secretary from 1902-1903 as well as the president of Apawamis. In 1910, he was given a rare honorary membership at Apawamis in recognition that he was "instrumental in bringing the club links up to their ... excellent condition." Some refinements of Bendelow's course are also said to have taken place at the suggestion of
Willie Dunn Jr. in collaboration with Ballou..
William "Willie" Davis William "Willie" Davis was one of Apawamis' earliest resident pros and also left his design imprint on the course. Davis received an offer to join the club in the fall of 1899. When he started in November 1899, he brought with him proven experience in golf course design, having laid out the first 12-hole short course at
Shinnecock Hills, Long Island in June 1891 over a period of approximately one month. Davis had also planned the links at
Newport Country Club in 1894 and 1899 where he was previously a resident professional. Names of the holes included Fairview, Waterloo and Consolation. Davis made news on July 21, 1900 when he broke his own record on the course. However the MGA Executive Committee disagreed and Davis and the pros were turned down in April of the same year. Davis' dream did not come to pass until 1906. When Davis died in Rye at the untimely age of 39, he was credited as being the oldest resident golf professional in the United States and the first to have come to America to make a living as a golfer. He succumbed to pneumonia in 1902.
Thomas Chisolm Chisolm, a British golfer from a course near old Rye, England was hired in April 1902 by Apawamis to take Davis' role for one season before being replaced by Willie Anderson.
Willie Anderson Apawamis was the home course for golfing great
Willie Anderson for three seasons from 1903 through 1905. His 1901 US Open victory made Anderson much sought after by clubs including
Baltusrol Golf Club where he applied. Weighing his choices, on March 23, 1903, he ultimately signed a contract with Apawamis. Anderson remains the only golfer to win three consecutive US Opens. In November 1905, Anderson signed with the
Onwentsia Club in Chicago to be their pro for the 1906 season but only stayed one season. Moving from club to club, he died suddenly in 1910 of hardening of the arteries; he was only 31.
Herbert Strong was hired as the head professional to take his place at Apawamis.
Herbert Strong Herbert Strong, an English golfer, made changes to the Apawamis golf course, which included adding bunkers, between 1906 and 1911 in preparation for the 1911 U.S. Amateur. When the cornerstone for the new clubhouse was laid, among the items included in a sealed box was a card recording Strong's professional record score of 71 in July 1907 on the course. Extensive capital changes were made to the fairways, driving range and bunkers; a practice putting green, short game practice area, and indoor Golf Performance Center were added. ==Golf Facts==