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October 24 - 30, 2011

October 24 - 30, 2011
John Hamilton Gillespie Celebration Week


The week-long party
celebrating the Father of Sarasota…and golf was a big success! From O'Leary's Kick-off Party, Jeff LaHurd's New Book, Jacobites Bagpipers, Trolley Tours, Kiwanis Golf Tournament, and Hartman Gallery Photography Exhibition, to the Palm Avenue Street Party, The Macallan VIP Scotch Tasting, Lunch in Rosemary Cemetery, and Walking Tour of the Gillespie Park Neighborhood - every special event was a wonderful way to honor Sarasota's history.

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Lady Golfers and Colonel Gillespie

Photo credit: George I. "Pete" Esthus Collection
The fight for ladies' equal rights on the links had no stars or crusaders; stellar communal performance was the key.

In a July 15, 1920 article in the Sarasota Times newspaper, Colonel John Hamilton Gillespie revealed some of the societal hazards that lady golfers had to overcome in order to gain the privilege of encountering fairway hazards. "In the 1860s ladies were asked not to walk around the course with their husband, and their presence on the links was undesired save and except at the clubhouse at St. Andrews."

A leading magazine in April of 1867 stated that the "golfer's wife must not accompany him on the course, because they talk incessantly, they never stand still, and if they do, the wind won't allow their dresses to stand still."

The photo shows Louise Higel teeing off at Colonel Gillespie's nine-hole golf course on present-day (Charles) Ringling Boulevard in Sarasota, circa 1916.

Nowadays, hundreds of ladies can be found daily using any one of sixty golf courses in the Sarasota-Manatee-Charlotte counties area, supporting some untold thousands of employees, including some female club managers and teaching pros. Live is good.
—By Pete Esthus, 20008, Sarasota History Alive Blog

Sunday, May 15, 2011

"Mon, y're missin' half ye life"

J.H. Gillespie, Florida's golfing pioneer, in 1905
Colonel John Hamilton Gillespie brought the game of golf to Sarasota and Florida in May 1886. Gillespie came to Sarasota as a representative of the Florida Mortgage and Investment Company, which owned the majority of land in the area. He found time to lay out the first practice course in Florida, of two greens and one long fairway on what is now Main Street behind his home on Palm Avenue. Gillespie practiced his game there for years, as the locals watched in wonder. Alex Browning wrote that when he came upon Gillespie playing golf, Gillespie asked if Browning had ever played. When told that he had not, Gillespie remarked, “Mon, y’re missin’ half ye life.”

Gillespie was a true golfing pioneer in the state of Florida. He sold Henry Plant of Tampa on the value of golf as a Florida tourist attraction. Plant, who was investing in the tourism business in Florida, hired Gillespie to lay out courses for the Plant Investment Company. Gillespie designed courses at Winter Park, Tampa, Bellaire (Clearwater) and Havana, Cuba. Although the idea was spreading in Florida, there were not many golfers coming to Sarasota. Gillespie continued to promote the game and in 1905 he built a nine-hole course and a clubhouse on a 110-acre tract of land east of his old practice course. If you wanted to play this layout today, you would tee off near the corner of Golf and Links Streets; play through the Sarasota County Terrace Building down past the Ringling Shopping Center to about School Avenue; then turn and play down Fruitville Road, past Sarasota Bowling Lanes, through the Sarasota County Courthouse and finish near the corner of Golf and Main Street. Gillespie maintained the course at his own expense for five years. In 1910 Gillespie sold his course to Owen Burns. This would be Sarasota's only course until the 1920s.

On June 7, 1924, the Gillespie Golf Course, owned by the Sarasota Golf Holding Company, was sold to Charles Ringling. Ringling had plans to build the Sarasota Terrace Hotel on the site. This left Sarasota without a golf course. At the time, the Florida Land Boom was on and the population of Sarasota was growing dramatically. To help build a golf course fast, Calvin Payne agreed to sell 14 acres of land to help pay for a municipal golf course. The sale brought about $150,000 and it was used as a down payment on 290 acres about 2 ½ miles northeast of the courthouse. This tract of land was purchased from Honore and Potter Palmer and the East Land Company. To finish paying for the land, and to build the course, the City of Sarasota approved a $150,000 bond issue on July 9, 1925.

The City of Sarasota enlisted noted golf course designer Donald Ross to design a signature course. Ross had designed the Whitfield Estates County Club (presently the Sara Bay Country Club), an 18-hole course that opened in December 1925. The city's new municipal course opened in Sarasota, June 5, 1927. The course was dedicated by the great golfer Bobby Jones on February 13, 1927. Afterwards, the city decided to name the course after Bobby Jones to give it "prestige." Colonel Gillespie never saw the Whitfield Estates Country Club or Bobby Jones course. He died of a heart attack on his nine hole course on September 7, 1923. In 1977, the City of Sarasota named the nine-hole course at Bobby Jones Complex after John Hamilton Gillespie.

— From "A Look Back" by Mark D. Smith, archivist, 1996

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