Location |
Milwaukee metro area, Wisconsin, U.S. |
---|---|
Established | 1955 |
Course(s) | North Hills Country Club (1960–1961) Tripoli Country Club (1956–1959) Blue Mound Country Club (1955) |
Par | 70 |
Length | 6,410 yards (5,861 m) |
Tour(s) | PGA Tour |
Format | Stroke play |
Prize fund | $30,000 |
Month played | July - August |
Final year | 1961 |
Aggregate | 264 Cary Middlecoff (1958) |
To par | –16 as above |
Bruce Crampton, 272 (–8) |
The Milwaukee Open Invitational was a professional golf tournament in Wisconsin on the PGA Tour. It was played seven times from 1955 through 1961 at different courses in the Milwaukee area.
During its final year, Arnold Palmer skipped the tournament to prepare for the British Open, which he won. The field at North Hills Country Club in Menomonee Falls did include 21-year-old Jack Nicklaus of Ohio State, already a veteran of eight majors and the reigning NCAA champion, he won his second U.S. Amateur a month later. The purse was $30,000 and Bruce Crampton won by a stroke; his winner's share was $4,300. Nicklaus was three strokes back at 275 (−5), tied for sixth.
Two won the event twice, both at different courses: Cary Middlecoff (1955, 1958) and Ken Venturi (1957, 1960).
The tournament was played at three courses in the Milwaukee area:
Blue Mound hosted the PGA Championship in 1933. The PGA Tour returned in 1968 with the Greater Milwaukee Open, which was played for 42 years, through 2009; it was played twice at Tripoli (1971, 1972).