Devereux Emmet

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Born(1861-12-11)December 11, 1861
DiedDecember 30, 1934(1934-12-30) (aged 73)
OccupationArchitect
Devereux Emmet
Emmet, c.1915
Born(1861-12-11)December 11, 1861
DiedDecember 30, 1934(1934-12-30) (aged 73)
Alma materColumbia University
OccupationArchitect
SpouseElla B. Smith
Children2
Parent(s)William Jenkins Emmet and
Julia Colt Pierson
ProjectsBethpage State Park, 1923
DesignCongressional Country Club (Blue), 1924

Devereux Emmet (December 11, 1861 – December 30, 1934) was a pioneering American golf course architect who designed more than 150 courses worldwide.[1]

Devereux Emmet was born in Pelham, New York,[2] on December 11, 1861, one of eight children of William Jenkins Emmet and Julia Colt Pierson.[3] He was the great-grandson of Thomas Addis Emmet.

College and marriage

Coat of Arms of Devereux Emmet

Emmet graduated from Columbia University in 1883;[4] in 1889 he married Ella B. Smith in an elaborate wedding at her home in New York City.[5] Miss Smith, born in 1858, was the daughter of Judge J. Lawrence Smith and a niece of Alexander Turney Stewart. Ella's sister Elizabeth "Bessie" Springs Smith was the wife of architect Stanford White.[6] The couple had two children, Richard Smith Emmet (born October 1889) and Devereux Emmet, Jr. (born January 1897).[7]

Golf course design career

On a vacation in England he spent time with his friend, Charles B. Macdonald, who was measuring British golf courses in preparation for the design of the National Golf Links of America. Emmet's first design was Island Golf Links, a predecessor of Garden City Golf Club.[6] A friend of his remarked:

Emmet could not possibly conceive of any other use to which any given piece of real estate could be put except to lay out golf links on it.[2]

In 1924 he hired Alfred H. Tull as a design associate, and in 1929 made him a partner in the firm of Emmet, Emmet and Tull. The Tull-Emmet partnership continued until Emmet's death in 1934.[8]

Amateur golf

Emmet was a talented amateur golfer. He made the quarter-finals of the 1904 British Amateur and won the Bahamas Amateur at the age of 66.[6] In 1916, after he won the father-son tournament at Sleepy Hollow Country Club with Devereux Emmet, Jr., the United States Golf Association instituted the so-called architects rule that barred golf course architects from competing as amateurs in tournaments.[9]

Death and legacy

Courses designed

References

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