Club information | |
---|---|
Location | 4028 Timuquana Road Jacksonville, Florida |
Established | 1923 |
Type | Private, member-owned |
Operated by | Timuquana Board of Governors |
Tournaments hosted | 2002 USGA Senior Amateur Championship |
Website | timuquana.net |
Timuquana Golf Course | |
Designed by |
Donald Ross (1923) Robert Trent Jones (1948) George Cobb (1957,1963) David W. Gordon (1968) Bobby Weed (1996) |
Par | 72 |
Length | 6,859 |
Course rating | 73.0 |
Slope rating | 130 |
Course record | 62 (May 6, 2005) |
Timuquana Country Club is a private golf and country club in Jacksonville, Florida. Located in Jacksonville's Ortega neighborhood, it was founded in 1923. Its golf course was originally designed by legend Donald Ross, and members have included PGA Tour professionals Steve Melnyk and David Duval. It has hosted various golf tournaments since its opening, including the 2002 United States Senior Men's Amateur Golf Championship.
On May 25, 1921, a group of 50 prominent gentlemen met at the Seminole Social Club in downtown Jacksonville to consider the organization of a new club to provide a superior golf facility. They adopted the name "Timuquana," a variation of the name of the Timucua, a Native American people who once lived along the St. Johns River. Their charter was approved on February 12, 1923 and within three months, membership had grown to 185. Timuquana Country Club's first president was John L. Roe.Donald Ross, the most noted golf course architect in the United States, was engaged to design and build the course in 1923. After playing the new course, two club members suggested that additional sand traps on the fairways would enliven play, and donated them. Vic Foreman was the club's golf pro for 43 years, from 1925-1968.
Several professional tournaments were played at Timuquana soon after the course was built, attracting the best golfers of the era, and exhibition matches featured Johnny Farrell, Walter Hagen, Gene Sarazen and Horton Smith. The course hosted the Southern Amateur championship several times, and the 1928 Florida State Amateur Tournament was won by club president Al Ulmer at Timuquana.