Oak Hill Country Club

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Template:Short description Template:About Template:Use American English Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox golf facility

Oak Hill Country Club is a country club in the northeastern United States, located in the Town of Pittsford, New York, a suburb southeast of Rochester. Founded in 1901, and best known for its East golf course, the club has hosted multiple major championships. The club facilities are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

History

The club has a rich history of golf, starting out in 1901 as only 9 holes on Template:Convert on the banks of the Genesee River in Rochester. The clubhouse was no more than a converted farm house. At the time, golf was a relatively new sport in America, and as popularity of the sport grew, so did the country club.

By 1921, Oak Hill had doubled in size and had a new clubhouse, so when the University of Rochester proposed a land swap in 1921, it was a tough decision for members. However, the country club decided to take the university up on their offer, and moved the club to a Template:Convert plot in nearby Pittsford.

This decision ended up benefiting Oak Hill, the University of Rochester, and the City of Rochester. Now with triple the land of the old country club, Oak Hill had room for two 18-hole courses. Designed by Donald Ross, they became the East Course and the West Course. Local physician and civic personality John Ralston Williams cultivated and planted tens of thousands of oak trees among the fairways and roughs on what once was a farmed-out field.<ref name="Williams_D&C">Template:Cite news</ref>

East Course

The East Course — which hosts the major tournaments — is built around the east branch of Allen Creek, which acts as a lateral hazard on 9 of its 18 holes. It has had several changes made over the years - first by Robert Trent Jones Sr. in the early 1960s, later (and more recently for the 1989 Open and 2003 PGA) by Tom Fazio and his design group and finally by Andrew Green who completed a restoration project in 2019.

In 1941, the Rochester Times-Union, a local paper at the time, posted a $5,000 purse which attracted the greatest golfers in the world, including names such as Sam Snead, Walter Hagen, and Ben Hogan. This tournament, won by Snead, put Oak Hill on the national golf map. Several prestigious tournaments were held at Oak Hill over the next 78 years, including seven men's major championships – including three U.S. Opens and four PGA Championships, as well as the Ryder Cup.

In 2019, the East Course was ranked 22nd in Golf Digest's list of America's 100 Greatest Golf Courses.

Scorecards

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Major tournaments hosted

All played on the East Course.

Year Tournament Winner Winning
score
Margin
of victory
Runner(s)-up
1949 U.S. Amateur Template:Flagicon Charles Coe 11 & 10 Template:Flagicon Rufus King
1956 U.S. Open Template:Flagicon Cary Middlecoff 281 (+1) 1 stroke Template:Flagicon Ben Hogan
Template:Flagicon Julius Boros
1968 U.S. Open Template:Small Template:Flagicon Lee Trevino 275 (–5) 4 strokes Template:Flagicon Jack Nicklaus
1980 PGA Championship Template:Flagicon Jack Nicklaus 274 (–6) 7 strokes Template:Flagicon Andy Bean
1984 U.S. Senior Open Template:Flagicon Miller Barber 286 (+6) 2 strokes Template:Flagicon Arnold Palmer
1989 U.S. Open (3) Template:Flagicon Curtis Strange 278 (–2) 1 stroke Template:Flagicon Chip Beck
Template:Flagicon Mark McCumber
Template:Flagicon Ian Woosnam
1995 Ryder Cup Template:Flagicon Europe 14½ to 13½ Template:Flagicon United States
1998 U.S. Amateur Template:Small Template:Flagicon Hank Kuehne 2 & 1 Template:Flagicon Tom McKnight
2003 PGA Championship (2) Template:Flagicon Shaun Micheel 276 (–4) 2 strokes Template:Flagicon Chad Campbell
2008 Senior PGA Championship Template:Flagicon Jay Haas 287 (+7) 1 stroke Template:Flagicon Bernhard Langer
2013 PGA Championship (3) Template:Flagicon Jason Dufner 270 (–10) 2 strokes Template:Flagicon Jim Furyk
2019 Senior PGA Championship Template:Small Template:Flagicon Ken Tanigawa 277 (–3) 1 stroke Template:Flagicon Scott McCarron
2023 PGA Championship (4) Template:Flagicon Brooks Koepka 271 (–9) 2 strokes Template:Flagicon Scottie Scheffler
Template:Flagicon Viktor Hovland

Note: bolded years indicate modern era major championships.

The course record of 63 was set by Jason Dufner in the second round of the 2013 PGA Championship.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Future events

Year Tournament
2027 U.S. Amateur (3)
2035 PGA Championship (5)
2037 U.S. Women's Open

References

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