After I finished making pictures I noticed this clock by the clubhouse and decided to walk over.
There was a marker with information about the early history of the golf course. As I stood in the hot sun reading and photographing the marker I saw a small building sitting to the side. I probably wouldn't have paid it much attention except that it had several plaques embedded in the wall and that means it might be a building with a story.
It is a building with a story, it was part of the New Deal. It was one of several projects done on the golf course by the National Youth Administration and is referenced in the Park's nomination to the National Register of Historic Places (see below). This simple marker is the only clue to the building's past.
View of the back of the clubhouse, seen from the course |
The nomination form for the National Register of Historic Places summarizes the history of the golf course so well that I have to quote it here:
Noted golf
course architect A.W. Tillinghast of Philadelphia designed the eighteen‐hole
Brackenridge Golf Course, which was completed in 1916. The wooded site, filled
with native trees, spanned both sides of the river and the water works channel
that ran directly through the course. Footbridges spanned the river and
channel. The course has been extensively remodeled since its completion, most
notably in the late 1960s when US Highway 281 cut through the park’s western
edge. The Tillinghast layout was left intact with the exception of the twelfth
and thirteenth holes. The course was redesigned to fit the reconfigured site by
course manager Murray Brooks and consultant George A. Hoffman. A major course
renovation in 2008 restored Tillinghast’s design, to the extent possible.
Three stone
bridges, built to span both the old water works channel and river, still stand
at various points on the golf course. Originally there were five of these
structures, all likely built by NYA workers; NYA construction of the bridge
over the water works channel on hole number three is documented in newspaper
accounts. NYA workers also completed a starter house (standing), caddy house,
tee boxes and drinking fountains.
The Tudor
style clubhouse of rubble stone, concrete, and wood was designed by local
architect Ralph Cameron and completed in 1923. The main entrance to the
building is on the north through an arched doorway topped with a fanlight. The
west elevation features a tall chimney and rounded tower with conical roof. The
tower is topped with an original weather vane depicting a golfer. An open porch
and doorway on the east elevation has been closed in. A gable‐roofed room
projects from the east elevation, connecting to a second story gabled dormer
with tall chimney. Walls are of rubble
stone and the east elevation features half timber finishes on the upper level.
Chimneys are of brick and
stone. Windows and doors have a combination of curved and flat brick lintels
and arches and brick and concrete sills. Windows are a combination of wood
casement and steel frame. The original shingled roof has been replaced with
asphalt shingles. The building was remodeled in 1968 by Johnson and Dempsey
architects.
The Tudor style of the clubhouse is obvious from both front and back. |
I have been unable to confirm that this is one of the three remaining bridges, but suspect that it probably is
|
Some interesting facts: 1) The golf course, and much of this area, has been the subject of numerous archeological studies and surveys that turned up valuable information about earlier cultures.
2) In February 1922 the course was host to the first Texas Open tournament. Other tournaments followed and eventually led to the creation of the PGA Tour. Mike Souchak set a PGA Tour record for lowest 72-hole score in the 1955 Texas Open played on this course; that record stood for 46 years.
3)"Old Brack" had the honor of being the first course listed in the National Registry of Historic Courses.
Today the course is managed by the Alamo City Golf Trail, a non-profit management group that oversees seven courses.
The view of the course from the Borglum House looks at the 17th hole |