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'''Englewood Golf Club''' is a ] located in ], just outside ], which hosted the ] in ]. | '''Englewood Golf Club''' is a ] located in ], just outside ], which hosted the ] in ]. | ||
It met it's demise when in the 1960's the approach ramp to the George Washington Bridge cut right through the middle of the property.<ref name=NJ>http://www.nj.com/golf/index.ssf/2009/06/englewood_golf_club_once_a_pie.html</ref> | It met it's demise when in the 1960's the approach ramp to the George Washington Bridge cut right through the middle of the property.<ref name=NJ></ref> | ||
Additional information can be found by reading: "The Missing Links: America's Greatest Lost Golf Courses & Holes" by Daniel Wexler.<ref name=NJ /> | Additional information can be found by reading: "The Missing Links: America's Greatest Lost Golf Courses & Holes" by Daniel Wexler.<ref name=NJ /> |
Revision as of 19:22, 22 August 2010
Englewood Golf Club is a golf course located in Englewood, New Jersey, just outside New York City, which hosted the U.S. Open in 1909.
It met it's demise when in the 1960's the approach ramp to the George Washington Bridge cut right through the middle of the property.
Additional information can be found by reading: "The Missing Links: America's Greatest Lost Golf Courses & Holes" by Daniel Wexler.
It also held the wedding reception of New York Post Editor Joseph Cookman and his bride Mary Bass, editor of the Ladies Home Journal, in 1926.
References
- ^ Englewood Golf Club, once a piece of golf history, now a piece of the Turnpike
- Mary Gibson Bass Oral History Project Columbia University 1976 Volume 1, page 30