Canoe Brook Country Club

Canoe Brook Country Club is a private, member-owned 36-hole country club located in both Summit, Union County, New Jersey and Short Hills, Essex County, New Jersey that was founded in 1901. Both of Canoe Brook's courses have been extensively renovated by Rees Jones whom the club credits as its designer.

Canoe Brook Country Club
Club information
LocationSummit, New Jersey, U.S.
Short Hills, New Jersey, U.S.
Established1901
TypePrivate
Total holes36
Websitehttp://www.canoebrook.org
North Course
Designed byRees Jones
Par72
Length7,163 yards (6,550 m)
Course rating74.3 (Blue Tees)
72.3 (White Tees)
70.8 (Gold Tees)
73.8 (Red Tees)
Slope rating136 (Blue Tees)
132 (White Tees)
131 (Gold Tees)
134 (Red Tees)
Course record66
South Course
Designed byRees Jones
Par72
Length6,707 yards (6,133 m)
Course rating72.7 (Blue Tees)
71.3 (White Tees)
69.3 (Gold Tees)
73.2 (Red Tees)
Slope rating131 (Blue Tees)
128 (White Tees)
122 (Gold Tees)
128 (Red Tees)

History

Canoe Brook's original course was designed by Jack Vickery and his assistant Alex Smith. The first nine holes opened for play in 1902 and the second nine followed in 1905. In 1916, Canoe Brook hired Walter Travis to completely overhaul and extend the original course under the supervision of Isaac Mackie whom the club appointed Head Professional to replace former French champion, Louis Tellier, the proceeding January.[1] The Travis design lengthened what would become known as Canoe Brook's North Course to 6,611 yards from the Championship tees. In 1920, Harry Colt, Charles Hugh Alison and Alister MacKenzie were hired to design an additional 18-hole course South of Morris Turnpike. This property became the Canoe Brook South Course.

In the early 1950s, Prudential Insurance approached Canoe Brook with plans to "swap" land to make room for a shopping center that is now known as The Mall at Short Hills. Therefore, the North Course was extensively redesigned by Robert Trent Jones. In the 1960s, the construction and expansion of New Jersey Route 24 created the need for further design changes to both Canoe Brook courses. These changes, along with others in the period of 1990-2010, were designed by Rees Jones.[2]

Tournaments

Canoe Brook has played host to a number of USGA and MGA events over the years. It has been a U.S. Open Sectional Qualifying site on several occasions and hosted the 2013 New Jersey State Amateur in June. The club will be host to the 2015 Metropolitan Golf Association Ike Championship and will again be a U.S. Open qualifying site from 2016-18.

gollark: Thanks! You're right.
gollark: I'm sure this won't* cause horrible lifetime horrors.
gollark: Oh, plus environment, yes.
gollark: You could just make the function contain... its argument names and content, surely?
gollark: (number)

References

  1. "Isaac Mackie's New Job" (PDF). The New York Times. January 30, 1916.
  2. Quirin, William L. (2001). Canoe Brook Country Club, 1901-2001. Franklin, Virginia: Q Pub. ISBN 1931169004.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.