All photos from different ages of the course looking to West or Northwest

With a couple of native sycamores framing your shot across east to west across the course to the clubhouse and another early photo from 1925 looking in the same direction let you feel how the course has changed. When Parker sets his tripod and wide format camera down around this spot, the course spreads above him across the present day neigborhood to the east.
The designers through the ages used the central drainage which now borders the east edge of the course form top to nearly bottom. This used to be a natural sandy area in its first layout and players had to navigate back and forth on holes playing laterally or roughly west to east and east to west. Some were shorter, some longer par fours, all under the neighborhood to the east of the present layout.
The riverstone boulder drainage flume was installed in the 1920 redesign by O'Neill and used to fill the upcoming reservoir on your left as you pull your putter on #2 green. The native hazard area was not seeded and remained hazardous to low scoring...
Download the History Cake app to experience this story with automatic audio narration as you visit the location.