Myopia Hunt Club is the only course in the United States to have been listed by
Golf Magazine as having two of the United States's top 100 signature holes: the fourth and ninth. The
U.S. Open was held at the Club in 1898, 1901, 1905, and 1908. The 72-hole winning score in 1901 by
Willie Anderson, one of only four four-time champions, was 331, a record high that still stands today. He defeated
Alex Smith in an 18-hole playoff, 85 to 86, his highest 18-hole score of the tournament. The first nine was completed in 1896, but the second nine was not finished until October 1898, so the June 1898 U.S. Open was actually played over eight rounds of nine holes.
Myopia Hunt Club scorecard From 1995–2005, the course underwent a series of major improvements under the leadership of Club president Michael Greene. Greene, along with Captain of Golf Steve Warhover (and with the consent of the voting members of the Club), lengthened the course with several new tees. These were installed on the 2nd, 4th, 7th, 10th, 11th, 15th, and 18th holes. In addition, many trees throughout the course were removed and replaced with traditional mounds, better fitting the historic design of Herbert Corey Leeds. Myopia Hunt Club was the home course of the late novelist and golf writer
John Updike. The holes on the course are all named on the scorecard, with most of the names pertaining to a geographic signifier on a particular hole: • First • Lookout • Brae • Miles River • Lone Tree • Brook • Myopia • Prairie • Pond • Alps • Road • Valley • Hill • Ridge • Long • Paddock • West • Home ==See also==