place

Kinloch Golf Club

Golf club and course stubsGolf clubs and courses in Virginia

Kinloch Golf Club is a golf club in Manakin-Sabot, Virginia. The club was selected as Golf Digest's "Best New Course" the year it opened and has been on numerous "best of" lists in its 15 years of existence.Kinloch is a private golf club with a business model that differs from most private clubs. Resident, non-resident, and national memberships are available on a single-member basis (meaning members of a family must all have individual memberships).The golf course was designed by golf course architect Lester George and U.S. Amateur Champion, Marvin "Vinny" Giles.The practice facility at Kinloch has been used as an example of the golf industry's changing approach to teaching and practice.Kinloch Golf Club hosted the 2011 U.S. Senior Amateur and will host the 2024 U.S. Mid-Amateur.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Kinloch Golf Club (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Kinloch Golf Club
Kinloch Lane,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Kinloch Golf ClubContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 37.635833333333 ° E -77.6875 °
placeShow on map

Address

Kinloch Lane 100
23103
Virginia, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

Share experience

Nearby Places

1949 PGA Championship

The 1949 PGA Championship was the 31st PGA Championship, held May 25–31 in Virginia at Belmont Golf Course (formerly known as Hermitage Country Club), north of Richmond. Native Virginian Sam Snead won the match play championship, 3 & 2 over Johnny Palmer in the Tuesday final; the winner's share was $3,500 and the runner-up's was $1,500.It was the second of Snead's three wins in the PGA Championship, and the fourth of his seven major titles. At age 37, Snead was the oldest to win the PGA Championship; he won again two years later in 1951. The medalist in the stroke play qualifier was unsung Ray Wade Hill of Louisiana, who advanced to the quarterfinals. Snead won the Masters in April; this was the first time the Masters champion had won the PGA Championship in the same calendar year. This has only been accomplished four times, most recently 49 years ago: Snead was followed by Jack Burke Jr. in 1956 and Jack Nicklaus in 1963 and 1975. Snead's double was in the spring, Burke and Nicklaus completed theirs in the summer. Defending champion Ben Hogan did not play in any of the majors during the 1949 season, following a near-fatal automobile accident in west Texas in early February. In 1948, he won two majors, led the tour in money and wins (ten), and was player of the year; he had won two events in January 1949 (Pebble Beach, Long Beach), with a playoff runner-up in a third (Phoenix). Although Hogan returned to the tour in 1950 on a limited basis and won six more majors (nine total), he did not enter the PGA Championship again until age 48 in 1960, its third year as a stroke play event.