Cedar Crest Park
Cedar Crest Park, formerly Cedar Crest Country Club, is a public golf course in Dallas, Texas. South of downtown, the course was designed by A. W. Tillinghast and was the site of the tenth PGA Championship in 1927, won by Walter Hagen, his fourth consecutive PGA title and fifth overall, the ninth of his eleven major championships. It also hosted the Dallas Open in 1926, won by Macdonald Smith. A new $2 million clubhouse was built in 2001 and the course was renovated in 2004 by D. A. Weibring.
Cedar Crest Park
Cedar Crest Park, formerly Cedar Crest Country Club, is a public golf course in Dallas, Texas. South of downtown, the course was designed by A. W. Tillinghast and was the site of the tenth PGA Championship in 1927, won by Walter Hagen, his fourth consecutive PGA title and fifth overall, the ninth of his eleven major championships. It also hosted the Dallas Open in 1926, won by Macdonald Smith. A new $2 million clubhouse was built in 2001 and the course was renovated in 2004 by D. A. Weibring.
has abstract
Cedar Crest Park, formerly Ced ...... 1.7 and a slope rating of 133.
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Link from a Wikipage to an external page
Wikipage page ID
Wikipage revision ID
743,417,617
establishment
19,191,946
golf facility name
Cedar Crest Golf Course
location
Dallas, Texas, U.S.
owner
City of Dallas
rating
tournaments
Website
subject
hypernym
point
32.722 -96.797
comment
Cedar Crest Park, formerly Ced ...... ted in 2004 by D. A. Weibring.
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label
Cedar Crest Park
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lat
long
-9.6797e+1