Old Warson Country Club

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Old_Warson_Country_Club an entity of type: SpatialThing

Old Warson Country Club is a country club located in St. Louis, Missouri. Founded in 1953, it hosted the 1971 Ryder Cup and the 2009 U.S. Women's Amateur Golf Championship. The golf course was designed by Robert Trent Jones. Hale Irwin, the winner of three U.S. Opens, joined the club in 1974 as a junior member; since 1977 he has been an active member. The initiation fee was $45,000 ($77,750 today) in 1996 and $80,000 ($107,534 today) in 2006. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Old Warson Country Club
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rdf:langString USA Missouri#USA
rdf:langString Location of the Old Warson Country Club in Missouri##Location in the United States
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rdf:langString Private
xsd:string 38.617 -90.383
xsd:integer 1971
xsd:date 1954-04-15
xsd:integer 71
rdf:langString Old Warson Country Club is a country club located in St. Louis, Missouri. Founded in 1953, it hosted the 1971 Ryder Cup and the 2009 U.S. Women's Amateur Golf Championship. The golf course was designed by Robert Trent Jones. Hale Irwin, the winner of three U.S. Opens, joined the club in 1974 as a junior member; since 1977 he has been an active member. Until 1991, Old Warson Country Club banned Black and Jewish people from joining. That year, it cancelled plans to host a PGA Senior Tour event rather than change its discriminatory rules. Several months later, the club admitted its first Black member: Frederick S. Wood, a retired executive vice president at General Dynamics. The initiation fee was $45,000 ($77,750 today) in 1996 and $80,000 ($107,534 today) in 2006.
rdf:langString Old Warson Country Club
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