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CLUB HISTORY

SANTA ANITA GOLF CLUB   Est. 1938 

SCGA 

Since 2010 

SANTA ANITA GOLF COURSE HISTORY 

The Santa Anita Golf Course is operated since September 2016 by Strato Partners for the Los Angeles County Department of Parks and Recreation. 

The 185 acres upon which the course was built has always been devoted to recreation in some form or another. Originally part of the "Lucky" Baldwin Ranch, its history dates back to the days when its broad oaks sheltered places where Indians camped and across its broad acres traveled Mission Fathers from San Gabriel on their way up Little Santa Anita Canyon for lumber with which to build the Mission. 

At the turn of the century, horse racing was an activity here on Baldwin's famed track. The clubhouse turn was right where No. 16 is now and when you're on the hill on the back side of No. 14, that's the turn where the bang-tails headed for home. 

During World War 1, Ross Field mushroomed up to house a balloon school. A sand green golf course suddenly appeared and when the Army moved away, Arcadia citizens took it over and operated it as a highly successful club. Then Anita Baldwin donated it to the County of Los Angeles for park purposes. The Government moved in under the Public Works Act and in 1933 started work on what you see now. It was opened October 12, 1938. Nine holes were opened in April, the complete 18 on October 12, 1938. 1938 also saw the birth of the Santa Anita Open - held each year until 1955, in the middle of October, to celebrate the opening of the course and to start the official Winter Golf Tournament season in Southern California. Prize money that first year was $1,000. Frank Moninger personally underwrote the first two tournaments. The Santa Anita Golf Club with the help of a few individual golfers underwrote the next few events. The County donated the course for the Santa Anita Open. The course record established in the days of "The Open" is 62 - held by Ellsworth Vines. Lloyd Mangrum won the first and second Santa Anita Open with a score of 274 and 278. 

Originally every hole at was named in the old Scottish golf tradition. These names are printed on the scorecard. Since they are part of the history of our course let's preserve them even though some of the names are no longer applicable. 

1. THOMAS 

2. DUNE 

3. POWER 

4. MAIDEN 

5. RAILROAD 

6. HOGBACK 

7. NARROWS 

8. DAM 

9. MASTER 

10. CAMEL'S HUMP

11. WIND 

12. REDAN 

13. PASS 

14. CROW'S NEST 

15. THORN 

16. DARSIE 

17. DESERT

18. CLIMAX 

 

The "Thomas" is named for the late George C. Thomas, a fine golf course architect. The "Power" hole gets its name from the length and "power" needed to get your par. The hole measured 580 yards, usually dead into the wind, calls for two "power" woods to get close. The "Railroad" is named for the railroad which once formed the out of bounds on the left; the "Dam" from the vista of Monrovia's Sawpit Dam- plainly visible over the flag. The "Redan" is named on account of the precarious elevation of the high level of the topside of this green, perched on a plece of Lucky Baldwin's old race track. The "Darsie" is named for a popular golf writer, whose parents liked him so much they named him twice - Darsie L. Darsie. The "Climax" is appropriately named since it is the climax of your round. 

The idea of naming the holes to capture as much "auld country" golf tradition as possible at the course and the research which went into designing the holes as well as naming them, is the work of James Harrison Smith, County Surveyors Department of Los Angeles County, who designed the course. 

GOLF COURSE AWARDS 

LA County Golf Course of the Year 1995, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2007, 2008 and 2009 

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