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The Glasgow Open was a European Tour golf tournament which was played annually at Haggs Castle Golf Club in Glasgow from 1983 to 1985. The most distinguished of the three winners was future World Number 1 Bernhard Langer of Germany. In 1985 the prize fund was £90,348, which was slightly below average for a European Tour event at that time.
The event returned to the European Tour calendar in 1986 when, under a new sponsorship deal with Bell's, the Glasgow Open, which had been held at Haggs Castle Golf Club from 1983 to 1985, was rebranded as the Scottish Open.
Haggs Castle (1843) by Alexander Duff Robertson, in ink and watercolour. Haggs Castle is an altered L-plan tower, of 4 storeys. The main block measures around 17 m by 7.2 m. The ground floor contained two chambers and a kitchen with a large firepla
This category contains articles about golf clubs and courses in Virginia. Pages in category "Golf clubs and courses in Virginia" The following 9 pages are in this category, out of 9 total.
Castle Pines Golf Club (Castle Rock, Colorado) – 1981; The Club at Morningside (Rancho Mirage, California) – 1981; The Hills of Lakeway (Austin, Texas), Country Club course – 1981; Sailfish Point Golf Club (Stuart, Florida) – 1981; Turtle Point Golf Club (Kiawah Island, South Carolina) – 1981; Bear Creek Golf Club (Murrieta ...
The golf course was an 18-hole course. It was during Swannanoa's time as a country club that Calvin Coolidge had Thanksgiving dinner (1928) at the mansion. The sumptuous accommodations and isolation from the Capitol's hubbub seemed to affect Mrs. Coolidge deeply, giving her "the giddiness of a mare in the spring" according to the waitstaff.
Eric Chalmers Brown (15 February 1925 – 6 March 1986) [1] was a Scottish professional golfer [2] [3] and bar owner. [4]Eric Brown was born in Edinburgh. Aged fifteen months he moved to Bathgate, when his father George got a job as a technical-subjects teacher.
Birdwood is a historic home located on the grounds of the University of Virginia's Birdwood Golf Course near Charlottesville, Albemarle County, Virginia.The documented history of what would come to be known as Birdwood began in the early 18th century, when David Lewis acquired the property in a 3,000 acre land grant from the Crown.