COURSE
REVIEWS
Hyde Park
Golf Club:
Golf the Way
it Oughta Be
By Derek Duncan,
Senior Writer
JACKSONVILLE, FL -- Golf courses built during the Golden Age of golf design, the period of classic course construction between World War I and the onset of the Great Depression, sometimes are revered simply because they're old. True, some demand study and praise of the highest order, particularly if the name Ross, Tillinghast, MacDonald, or MacKenzie is attached to it, but far too many of these require exclusive connections to play. Just as many more have been bastardized over the years so that the true vintage and character of design is muddled beyond clarity.
What's left over are frequently worn out and run down golf free-for-alls urgently in need of face-lifts-which are then likely to fall victim to egregious self-serving alterations-or goat tracks of such low quality that few discerning players wish to visit them. Simply put, most classic era courses have lost their value to the majority of the playing public.
Rare is the Golden Age course that has maintained both its design integrity and it's popular playability, but when one is happened upon it can provide a strangely affectionate glimpse into the past, while in the process revealing all that is pure and simple about the game of golf. Hyde Park Golf Club in central Jacksonville is the kind of a course that inspires golfers for just these reasons. This 1925 Donald Ross design has anchored the city's golfing identity though several eras without bowing too steeply to changes in technology or modern thinking.
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Far from treating Hyde Park as a relic, Blocker and Maxwell embrace the grass roots culture of their course and welcome all players. This is golf for the people in the sporty and unceremonial way it was meant to be played, taken on over holes sketched out by the old Scotsman himself. Yes, it's a museum of sorts but one that is welcoming to everyone willing to see it.
On any given
day, the golfer
will witness
at Hyde Park
a range of player
and class as
great as at
any course in
the land. Young
and old, advanced
and novice,
tee it up together
and trod (or
ride) around
the parkland
layout just
as they have
for ¾
of a century.
Though the course
hosted a PGA
Tour event in
the 1940's and
'50's, its greater
boast is how
for generations
it's helped
everyone from
duffers to such
luminaries as
PGA Tour professional
and architect
Mark McCumber
learn the game.
Blocker and Maxwell came to know the course during their own professional playing days when the Tour swung through northern Florida. "Billy and I were both tour players and we always played in the Jacksonville Open here in the '60's and early '70's," Blocker remembers. "We met this fellow, Kayo Bowman, who was interested in buying Hyde Park for a few years and he finally talked the old boy who owned it into selling. So Billy and I wound down our playing days on the Tour to come in and take over Hyde Park after we bought it. Billy and I kind of set up here and have been running Hyde Park since the early '70's."
The course has been lovingly owned and operated ever since, with Blocker handling most of the course maintenance and Maxwell running the golf shop before he retired.
"I think we both wanted to stay in golf," Blocker explains. "Back then we weren't playing for that much money and we both had families and when this opportunity came along we thought we might want to look for something a little more stable instead of grinding it out (on the Tour) for minimum wage."
"It's just
the kind of
course that
the first time
we came down
and played it
we found some
very interesting
holes and every
hole seemed
to have its
own character.
Being a Donald
Ross design,
we hopped on
it. The guy
who owned it
had really let
it run down
and deteriorate,
but we thought
this was the
kind of course
we'd really
love to be a
part of."
Hyde Park is an enjoyable core golf course with definite Ross characteristics, though it's doubtful the architect ever visited the site. A fair portion of his design work was done from his office using topographical maps to lay out the holes before sending the plans off to the construction crew, and it seems Hyde Park fall into this category. Nevertheless, the routing, as one would expect, is tight and economical, coiling smoothly over 75% of the flat site for 13 holes before attacking the ravine-cut southwest corner for the thrilling five-hole finish.
Ross's penchant for using the highest points of a property for tees and greens is evidenced here. The third, fifth, fourteenth, fifteenth, and sixteenth greens are all perched on benches above water hazards and call for tricky approaches often from uneven lies. The 17th and 18th holes also travel from high tees down to sunken fairways before ascending toward the greens.Other expected Ross design features include holes with wide fairways so the player can maneuver freely and aggressively from the tee before playing into small, often canted greens that roll off on one or more sides away from bunkers.
As far as alterations go, Blocker says, "We've basically left it alone since we've been here. When we regrassed (the greens) 20 years ago we put in (some) different little contours out of the bunkers, but other than that the original design hasn't changed." Blocker estimates the course is about 80% similar to the 1925 version, with the most significant change being the removal of most fairway bunkers due to speed of play issues, believed to have been done in the 1950's.
What is still
intact is the
sense of tradition
and age. From
the slightly
dilapidated
clubhouse and
locker rooms
to the oval
putting green
next to the
first tee inconvenienced
by a large transformer
tower anchor
bulging from
it, Hyde Park
brims with rich
history and
common appearance.
"When we go down to the Legends (Liberty Mutual Legends of Golf held in St. Augustine) half the field remembers playing here," Blocker says. "They'll get to reminiscing about what they did back in '47 or when Hogan made that 11 on number six."
What? Oh yes, no Hyde Park recollection would be complete without a mention of Ben Hogan's famed 11 on the short 151-yard 6th over 50 years ago during a Jacksonville Open.
A high, fearsome
flashed up bunker
guards the entire
right side here
forcing shots
to aim uncomfortably
toward a small
pond to the
green's left.
Anything missed
to this side
of the green
invites the
tortuous possibility
of the ball
dribbling down
a slope and
into the hazard,
leaving an equally
quirky chip
back up. Hogan
found this out
the hard way.
"He's got a Hogan's Alley everywhere he played, but that's our Hogan's Alley," Blocker quips.
Rare indeed is the course that can boast a hole where Hogan was once eight over par, an author in Donald Ross, and owners who see supreme value in its humble connection to the community, playability geared toward all-comers, and the preservation of a classic era design.
"Twenty
years ago it
was one of the
top courses
in the area
but [so many
of] the new
ones with bigger
pockets that
can build them
a little prettier
(are) a little
bit more appealing
to the new players,"
says Blocker.
"But if
I hear it once,
I hear it nearly
everyday, someone
will come in
and say 'I haven't
been here in
years and I
remember when
we used to pay
50 cents to
play!' Everybody
just loves old
Hyde Park."
"If we ever tire of it it's going to take a very special person or group to take over because it's a part of Jacksonville."
Hyde Park
Golf Club
6439 Hyde Grove
Rd.
Jacksonville,
FL 32210
Phone: (904)786-2446
www.hydeparkgolf.com
Vitals
Opened: 1925
Architect: Donald
Ross
Yards: 6,468;
6,153; 5,558
yards
Par: 36-36-72
Location
Hyde Park is located in central Jacksonville west of the St. John's River. From 1-295 exit Wilson Blvd. east to Lane Ave. Go north on Lane approximately one mile to Hyde Grove and turn right. The course is on the left.
Rates
Monday through Friday rates are $25, with Senior and Military discounts to $22. Weekend rates are $35 until 11am, $29 from 11 until 2pm, and $25 after 2pm.
Walkability
Naturally this is a supremely walkable course, with tees and greens set nicely near each other. Hyde Park's walking policy is more lenient than most in this part of the state so take advantage of this rare treat.
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