George C. Thomas, Jr.
George Clifford Thomas, Jr. (October 3, 1873, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania - February 28, 1932, Beverly Hills, California) was an American golf course architect, botanist, and author. He designed the original course at Whitemarsh Valley Country Club, outside Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; and more than twenty courses in California, including Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades.
Biography
He grew up in Philadelphia, attended Episcopal Academy, and graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 1894. His father was a partner in the investment bank Drexel & Company, where the son worked until 1907. As a teenager, he began designing a golf course on his family's suburban estate, Bloomfield Farm.[1] He sold the course in 1908 to a group of golfers who converted it into Whitemarsh Valley Country Club. He designed a 9-hole course in Marion, Massachusetts, and a course in Spring Lake Heights, New Jersey.
In the 1910s, he was able to observe some of the pioneers of golf course design working near Philadelphia. He was a founding member of Sunnybrook Golf Club, and witnessed Donald Ross's 1914-15 construction of its original course in Flourtown, Pennsylvania.[2] He was friends with Hugh Wilson, who designed Merion Golf Club's original East Course in 1912, and its original West Course in 1914; with George Crump, who designed Pine Valley Golf Club's original course in 1915; and with A. W. Tillinghast, who later designed the Philadelphia Cricket Club's original course in Flourtown. Crump, Tillinghast, Wilson, William Flynn (who constructed Wilson's courses at Merion), and Thomas were masters of the "Philadelphia School" of golf course design, which encouraged high-risk/high-reward play.[3]
He served in the Army Air Service during World War I, attaining the rank of captain. "The Captain" remained his nickname for the rest of his life.
He moved to California in 1919, where he designed the course at La Cumbre Country Club in Santa Barbara (now demolished). William P. Bell collaborated and supervised its construction. He and Bell later collaborated on courses for Los Angeles Country Club, Ojai Country Club, Bel-Air Country Club, Fox Hills Golf Course, and others.
In 1926, he published a seminal book, Golf Course Architecture in America, in which he stated the goal behind his work: “When you play a course and remember each hole, it has individuality and change. If your mind cannot recall the exact sequence of the holes, that course lacks the great assets of originality and diversity.”[4]
He considered the course at Riviera Country Club to be his masterpiece. It is the only one of his courses that has never been altered.
Dogs and roses
He raised English setters, and was one of the founders of the English Setter Club of America.[5]
In 1912, he began breeding roses on Bloomfield Farm, trying to create a variety that would thrive in Philadelphia's Mid-Atlantic climate. His botanical work continued in California, where he cultivated some 1,200 varieties, including his own "Bloomfield" hybrids.[6] He wrote two books on roses.
Family
He married Edna H. Ridge in Philadelphia on July 6, 1901. They had two children: George Clifford III, born April 13, 1905; and Josephine Moorehead, born April 14, 1907.[7] Thomas died of a heart attack at their home in Beverly Hills in 1932.
Legacy
Geoff Shackelford, a golf course architect and author, wrote a 1995 history of Riviera Country Club and a 1996 biography of Thomas.[8]
In 2008, Thomas was posthumously inducted into the Southern California Golf Association's Hall of Fame.[9]
In 2010, Gil Hanse restored the North Course at Los Angeles Country Club to Thomas's 1921 design.[10] On Golf Digest's 2010 list of the 100 greatest golf courses in America, Riviera Country Club was ranked 31st, and the restored North Course at Los Angeles Country Club was ranked 47th.[11]
In June 2012, the first George C. Thomas Jr. Invitational Tournament was held on the North Course at Los Angeles Country Club.[12]
Golf courses
- Whitemarsh Valley Country Club, Erdenheim, Pennsylvania (1892?-1908).
- Marion Golf Club, Marion, Massachusetts (9 holes, 1900).
- Spring Lake Golf Club, Spring Lake Heights, New Jersey (1911).[13]
- La Cumbre Country Club, Santa Barbara, California (1920, with William P. Bell, demolished).
- Red Hill Country Club, Alta Loma, California (1921, with William P. Bell).[14]
- North Course, Los Angeles Country Club, Los Angeles, California (1921 redesign, with Herbert Fowler; 1927-28 redesign, with William P. Bell). Now restored to Thomas's 1921 design.
- Saticoy Country Club, Ventura, California (9 holes, 1923).[15] Now Saticoy Regional Golf Course.
- Los Angeles Municipal Courses, Griffith Park, Los Angeles, California (36 holes, 1923). Renamed the Woodrow Wilson and Warren G. Harding Memorial Golf Courses.[16]
- Palos Verdes Golf Club, Palos Verdes Estates, California (1924, with William P. Bell).
- Ojai Country Club, Ojai, California (1925, with William P. Bell).[17] Now Ojai Valley Inn & Spa.
- Bel-Air Country Club, Bel Air, Los Angeles, California (1926, with William P. Bell).
- Riviera Country Club, Pacific Palisades, California (1927, with William P. Bell).[18]
- Fox Hills Golf Course, Culver City, California (1927, with William P. Bell, demolished). Now the site of Culver City Shopping Mall.
- Stanford University Golf Course, Stanford, California (1930, with William P. Bell).[19]
Hole 1, Riviera (U.S. Open) on YouTube | |
George C. Thomas Jr. on YouTube |
- Wilson and Harding Golf Courses (center, far left), Griffith Park, Los Angeles, California.
- 11th hole, Palos Verdes Golf Club, Palos Verdes Estates, California.
- 18th hole, Riviera Country Club, Pacific Palisades, California. Because of the half-bowl shape of the topography, this hole is nicknamed "The Amphitheater."
References
- Geoffrey S. Cornish, Ronald E. Whitten: The Architects of Golf. HarperCollins, New York 1993. ISBN 0062700820
- Geoff Shackelford: The Riviera Country Club; A Definitive History. Riviera Country Club 1995.
- Geoff Shackelford: The Captain: George C. Thomas Jr. and His Golf Architecture. Sleeping Bear Press, Chelsea 1996. ISBN 1886947287
- George C. Thomas, Jr.: The Practical Book of Outdoor Rose-growing for the Home Garden. J.B. Lippincott Co., Philadelphia 1914.
- George C. Thomas, Jr.: Golf Course Architecture in America: Its Strategy and Construction. John Wiley & Sons, New York 1926. Reprint: Clocktower Press, Ann Arbor 1997. ISBN 1886947147
- George C. Thomas, Jr.: Breeding Roses at Home. American Rose Society, 1929.
- ↑ "National Historic Landmarks & National Register of Historic Places in Pennsylvania" (Searchable database). CRGIS: Cultural Resources Geographic Information System. Note: This includes George E. Thomas (August 1978). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: Compton and Bloomfield" (PDF). Retrieved 2012-05-24.
- ↑ Sunnybrook Golf Club History
- ↑ William Flynn biographical sketch
- ↑ Golf Course Architecture in America (1926), p. 136.
- ↑ English Setter Club of America history
- ↑ Dan McMasters, Two Centuries of the Rose in California (American Rose Society, 1977), p. 27.
- ↑ "George Clifford Thomas," in Encyclopedia of Pennsylvania Biography, Volume 10 (New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Company, 1918).
- ↑ Geoff Shackelford blog
- ↑ SCGA Hall of Fame
- ↑ North Course, Los Angeles Country Club restoration
- ↑ 100 Greatest Golf Courses in America (2010) from Golf Digest.
- ↑ George C. Thomas Jr. Invitational
- ↑ Spring Lake Golf Club history
- ↑ Red Hill Country Club history
- ↑ Saticoy Country Club history
- ↑ Harding Memorial Golf Course
- ↑ Ojai Country Club history
- ↑ Riviera Country Club -- A hole-by-hole tour
- ↑ Stanford Golf Course
External links
- New York Times obituary, February 29, 1932
- George C. Thomas Jr. from Whitemarsh Valley Country Club.
- Riviera Country Club: A Historian's Dream Article
- Stanford University Golf Course