History
- (Borrowed from the Williams College site)
Taconic was built on what, in the past, was cattle grazing farmland,
and before that, woodlands. Williamstown was, in prehistoric times,
a lakebed carved by glaciers, creating a nearly impervious layer
of clay upon which was deposited a thick layer of loam, This natural
state contributes to Taconic's lush fairways, greens and rough.
John English, a 1932 Williams College graduate, former USGA official
and past Secretary of the Alumni Society of Williams College, put
together a very interesting history of the course. Some of the
highlights of Mr. English's recordings include the fact that "three
men with three tomato cans" gave birth to the Taconic Golf
Club in 1896. That year the late William Howard Doughty, James
M. Ide, and Edward C. Gale received permission form Williams College
to install three tomato cans on Weston Athletic Field, which adjoins
the present 18th fairway of Taconic. That summer Henry N. Sabin
and James Bullock joined the group. Mr. Gale paid Mr. Sabin $55
on Sept. 5, 1896 to start the Taconic Golf Club. A few weeks later
in the same year the first real course was laid out. It was a seven
hole course. One of those holes, the present 17th, is the oldest
at Taconic and perhaps as old as any in the country. Dues in those
days were $20.00 per annum. In 1897, a longer nine hole course
was laid out on property owned by William Howard Doughty. The same
year the Whitney Sampson house on South Street was made into a
clubhouse. It served as the Taconic clubhouse until 1955.
In 1927 George Alfred Cluett, Class of 1896 at Williams, was
determined to provide a first class course for Williams College
students. Mr. Cluett secured a gift of land for Williams College
from the wife of William Howard Doughty, of approximately 47 acres
to be used by the Club. This parcel excluded a strip of land containing
the 18th green and clubhouse. Mr. Cluett then secured a gift to
the College from John H. Dennison of his 45 acre farm in the section
where the present clubhouse is locate. Williams College Trustees
then purchased the Dillon lot of 17 acres in the southeastern section
of the present course to complete the course.
Wayne Stiles of Stiles& Van Kleek, a Boston firm, was commissioned
to design and construct an 18 hole course in 1927.
In 1924, Mr. Richard Baxter, had been hired as the Club Professional
and greenskeeper. Mr. Baxter supervised the construction of the 18 hole
course that started in August of 1927 and was completed by Labor Day
in 1928. It was a par 73 layout. Probably no single person has had a
greater impact on the creation and maintenance of the course's excellence
as the late Mr. Baxter. Since the land involved was essentially open
farmland with very few trees, the magnificent tree lined fairways of
today were mostly the expert handiwork of Dick Baxter. The course was
revised in 1955 to its present 6,640 yard (gold tees) par 71 layout.
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