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here are clubhouses and there are museums, but the
clubhouse at storied Inverness Club is both. Club members don’t
simply talk about golf lore and golf history. They live, eat,
shower, and dress in the midst of it. Few clubs anywhere are
prouder of their past, or are more willing to share it than
is Inverness Club whose past includes eight major national
championships.
The
clubhouse itself is a central piece of Inverness history. The
current structure, of course, is not the original, nor even the
second. The first clubhouse was built in 1903 at a cost of $5,400.
It burned in 1911. The second clubhouse, quite opulent for its time with a circular wing,
was built in 1912, at a cost of $23,600. November 24,
1918, this too burned.
The exact locations of the first two clubhouses are
unknown. Some Club historians report that the current clubhouse
was built “over the ashes” of its predecessors, but that may be
more metaphorical than historical.
Board minutes of a meeting after the 1918 fire that destroyed the second structure
indicate that members were asked to vote on a location for the new
clubhouse. Some 285 votes were received with 220 voting for “the
Grove site,” 50 for the “present location,” and 15 expressing no
preference.
Information about the second clubhouse is one of
the few gaps in the Club’s otherwise well-documented history, perhaps
because the building existed for such a short time. Few pictures
of the structure survive, and little was ever written of the
structure that was the Club’s home for less than seven full years
beginning in 1912. Pictures show a luxurious structure with a
dramatic, curved wing with continuous tall windows that was, most
likely, the dining room, ballroom, or both. The front of the
clubhouse was a modest, farmhouse-like section with a large porch,
but the rear wing, which faced the golf course, was a substantial
three-story facility. The sprawling building appears in pictures
to have shingle-type wooden siding, an architectural style still
evident in many clubhouses along the eastern seaboard that date from
the same era.
The current building was built in 1919-1920 at a
cost of $160,000. It is reminiscent of English manor architecture.
The clubhouse is an archive of mementoes from four United States
Open tournaments, one U.S. Senior Open, two PGA Championships, and
one U.S. Amateur, and from such legends as club professional Byron
Nelson, course designer Donald Ross, and Club member Frank
Stranahan, the world's premier amateur golfer in the mid-20th
Century. 
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