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Lost Treasure

The author makes a plea for the return of a special book that was misplaced 20 years ago at another milestone celebration

Twenty years ago, at the moment of LINKS Magazine’s birth, I was with another publication, knee-deep in another celebration, an enormously successful one that was enjoyed by all but ended, in my case, with some bitterness. I figure this is as good a time as any to vent. 

The year 1988 marked the 100th anniversary of the Apple Tree Gang, the group of pilgrims from Scotland who are generally agreed to have
introduced organized golf to the U.S. with the establishment of St. Andrew’s Golf Club in Yonkers, New York. In the summer of 1987, seeing this event looming on the horizon, Golf decided to throw a party—a very big party—to commemorate the centennial of golf in America.

The U.S. Golf Association, PGA of America, and the PGA and LPGA tours jumped on the bandwagon, as did—blessedly—20 corporate sponsors. At the same time, my colleagues and I collaborated with publisher Harry N. Abrams to produce Golf in America, a lavish 400-page celebration of the first century. It would go into several printings and sell more than 100,000 copies—if I do say so myself, it was quite a book. 

Meanwhile, we invited the magazine’s readers to submit nominations for “100 Heroes of the First 100 Years,” and formed a blue-ribbon panel to name the final 100, along with 20 male and female players of the decades. The panel also named a player of the century, from a ballot that included Bobby Jones, Ben Hogan, Arnold Palmer and Jack Nicklaus. The vote was taken 10 months before the results were announced because the award was a full-size bronze statue by Leicester Thomas, a London sculptor to both the Royal Family and Madame Tussauds. For 10 months, only three of us knew the winner, and somehow managed to keep it a secret.

The pinnacle of all this came on the Monday following the 1988 U.S. Open. The celebration began with a “Hero-Am,” wherein many of the living 100 Heroes gathered for a day of competition at St. Andrew’s Golf Club, relocated to Hastings-on-Hudson, New York, and culminated that evening in the ballroom of the Waldorf-Astoria in New York City with a black-tie charity auction and dinner for a packed house of 1,000 guests.

Jack Whitaker rushed back from the U.S. Open playoff at The Country Club in Brookline, Massachusetts, to emcee the festivities, and the three-tiered, 60-person dais that evening included more Hall of Famers than have ever been assembled before or since, including Ben Hogan, who made his first public appearance outside Texas in over a decade. He was joined by Byron Nelson, Sam Snead, Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, Ken Venturi, and Tom Watson. On the women’s side, there were Louise Suggs, Patty Berg, JoAnne Carner, Betsy Rawls and Nancy Lopez, along with more than a score of other players and contributors—everyone from  Chi Chi Rodriguez to Mark McCormack.

This was also the official publication day for Golf in America. We had hoped to place a book on each seat, but didn’t quite make the deadline. Only one copy had come off the press, and I had it with me.




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