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Pastorius Park

Chestnut Hill, PhiladelphiaMunicipal parks in Philadelphia
Pastorius Park
Pastorius Park

Pastorius Park is a sixteen-acre (6.5-ha) park that is located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. It is maintained by the Fairmount Park Commission.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Pastorius Park (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Pastorius Park
West Hartwell Lane, Philadelphia

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 40.071111111111 ° E -75.205 °
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Address

Pastorious Park Comfort Station

West Hartwell Lane 201
19118 Philadelphia
Pennsylvania, United States
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Pastorius Park
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1910 U.S. Open (golf)

The 1910 U.S. Open was the sixteenth U.S. Open, held June 17–20 at Philadelphia Cricket Club in Chestnut Hill, Pennsylvania, a neighborhood of northwest Philadelphia. Alex Smith, the champion four years earlier, prevailed in an 18-hole playoff over his younger brother Macdonald Smith and 18-year-old John McDermott to win his second U.S. Open.On Friday, Alex Smith opened with a pair of 73's to take the 36-hole lead by two shots ahead of McDermott, Gilbert Nicholls, Fred McLeod, and Tom Anderson.Smith carded a 79 in the third round on Saturday morning that left him two behind McDermott, who shot a 75 for 223. In the final round that afternoon, McDermott was the first to finish and posted another 75 and a 298 total. Macdonald Smith shot 71 that also placed him at 298. McLeod had a chance to also post 298 after driving the final hole, but his putt for a two stayed out and he finished a shot back. Alex Smith also drove the green at the last needing only a two-putt to win, but he missed from 18 inches (45 cm) and tied with McDermott and his brother. Alex was not fazed by the near-miss; in the Monday playoff, his 71 beat McDermott by four and Macdonald by six. McDermott won the next two U.S. Opens; he was the first American-born winner and remains the youngest champion (19) through 2016. Four-time champion Willie Anderson played in his final U.S. Open and finished eleventh; he died four months later of epilepsy at age 31. The course also hosted in 1907 and is the present-day St. Martin's course, now nine holes.