Since Its Founding, Scarsdale Golf Club Has Been Considered One of the Top Golf Courses in the Westchester County Area

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Since Its Founding, Scarsdale Golf Club Has Been Considered One of the Top Golf Courses in the Westchester County Area Since its founding, Scarsdale Golf Club has been considered one of the top golf courses in the Westchester County area. With it’s newly renovated (2008) A.W. Tillinghast designed 18 hole golf course, 20 player practice facility, driving range and 8,000 square foot practice putting green, Scarsdale Golf Club offers a truly unmatched golfing experience in Westchester. Scarsdale’s original nine holes were designed by Willie Dunn of Musselburgh, Scotland, who was the professional at Shinnecock Hills and winner of the unofficial US Open in 1894. He was also the architect of Shinnecock’s expansion to eighteen holes. In the early 1920’s, renowned golf course architect A.W. Tillinghast created Scarsdale’s back nine and redesigned the remainder of the course. This was at the same time that Tillinghast was designing such local, fabled courses as Winged Foot and Baltusrol. Adjacent to the first tee and golf pro shop is the new practice area and state-of- the-art driving range, which is rated one of the best in Westchester County. Scarsdale, known for its tight driving areas, fast greens and hilly terrain, is a quintessential shot maker’s course. By virtually all accounts, the golf course is one of the best conditioned courses in the New York area. In its early days, Scarsdale hosted exhibitions by some of the greatest names of golf lore: Harry Vardon, Ted Ray, Walter Hagen and Bobby Jones. More recently, Scarsdale has been a qualifying site for the US Open and Senior US Open and annually hosts numerous Metropolitan Golf Association events. The Epiphany School 24th Annual Golf and Tennis Outing Scarsdale Golf Club Monday May 14, 2018 Schedule of Events: Bag Drop/Registration: 10am Brunch: 10am – 11:45am Shotgun Start: 12pm Tennis Clinic: 12pm – 2pm Cocktail Reception: 4:30pm - 5:30pm Dinner Reception: 5:30pm - 7:30pm Golf Fee: $400 per golfer Includes Green Fees, Two Carts and Fore Caddy per foursome, Locker Room Services, Tournament Coordination, Driving Range, Brunch prior to Golf, on Course Snacks and Refreshments, Three Hour Open Bar, Cocktail Reception, Dinner. See Menus Attached. Dress Code: Collared shirts, Golf slacks, Bermuda shorts, culottes and golf skirts. No tee shirts or tennis attire, short shorts, tank tops, denim or jeans of any kind are permitted on any of the golf facilities. Tennis Fee: Half Day $225 / Full Day $275 per player Half Day 10am – 2pm Includes Use of Designated Har-Tru Court/s, Two Hour Clinic (1:4 Player/Instructor Ratio), Locker Room Services, Brunch prior to Clinic, on Court Snacks and Refreshments. See Menus Attached. Full Day 10am – 7:30pm Includes Use of Designated Har-Tru Court/s, Two Hour Clinic (1:4 Player/Instructor Ratio), Locker Room Services, Brunch prior to Clinic, on Court Snacks and Refreshments, Three Hour Open Bar, Cocktail Reception, Dinner. After the tennis clinic, players may use the driving range until the cocktail hour. See Menus Attached. Dress Code: Regulation tennis shoes appropriate for soft courts are required for all players. Tennis shirts with collars are appropriate, as are shirts without collars that are designed and marketed specifically for tennis. Proper attire also includes tennis shorts and tennis skirts. MENUS Brunch Selection of Juices Assortment of House made Breakfast Pastries Bagels, Cream Cheese, Butter and Preserves House Smoked Salmon with all the accompaniments Seasonal Fresh Fruit and Berries Omelet Station Prepared to Order with Farm Fresh Eggs and Egg Whites Sautéed Mushrooms, Onions, Spinach, grated Cheddar, Ham, Tomato and Broccoli Breakfast Potatoes Apple Wood Smoked Bacon and Country Sausage Challah French Toast or Blueberry Pancakes, Warm Maple Syrup Carving Station Free Range Roasted Turkey Breast Petite Rolls, Cranberry Chutney, Dijon Sauce Arugula and Heirloom Tomatoes with shaved Pecorino, Lemon Vinaigrette Baby Spinach, Strawberries and Goat Cheese, Balsamic and Olive Oil Coffee, Decaffeinated Coffee, Teas and Sodas On Course/Court Refreshments Available and replenished throughout the day Imported and Domestic Beer, Water, Gatorade and Sodas Assorted Dry Snacks, Chips and Pretzels, Whole Fruit Cocktail Reception Three Hour Open Bar serving Premium Brands, House Wines, Imported and Domestic Beers, Juices and Sodas Displayed and Passed Hors D’oeuvres Dinner Selection of Salads From The Grills Steak Herb Marinated Chicken Breast Banana leaf wrapped Catch of the day Grilled corn on the cob Sautéed mushrooms and onions Olive oil rubbed Yukon gold baked potatoes Sour cream, butter, chives, bacon, cheddar Dessert Ice Cream Sundae Bar with two flavors of Ice Cream, Hot Fudge and Caramel Sauces, mini Marshmallows, Sprinkles, Oreo crumbles, mini Chocolate Chips, M&Ms, Whipped Cream Fruit Cobbler Coffee, Decaffeinated Coffee and Teas Directions Train from Grand Central Station 1. Take Harlem line to Hartsdale. 2. Cross over railroad tracks. You want to be on the side with the train station waiting room. 3. As you face the Mobil gas station, Clubway is the first street to the left of the Mobil Station. 4. Walk up Clubway. Bear right into Scarsdale Golf Club. Note: If you walk more than five minutes after getting off train, you went too far. Driving Directions: Scarsdale Golf Club Please note that we do not have a street number for the Club. For GPS Directions please enter address as 1 Clubway, Hartsdale, NY, which is our closest neighbor From Manhattan 1. Take Major Deegan north (also called New York Thruway or Route 87) to Exit 4 (Cross County parkway) in Westchester (do NOT take Exit 4 (161st Street/Yankee Stadium) in Manhattan). 2. After exiting, you will need to get to the extreme right very quickly. As you enter the approach ramp to the Cross County Parkway east, be sure to keep to your right. Do NOT follow the sign for Hutchinson Parkway. Bear right onto Cross County Parkway east (follow signs for Bronx Parkway North) to Exit 6 (Bronx Parkway North). Note: Bronx Pkwy is also known as Bronx River Pkwy. 3. Shortly after getting on Bronx Pkwy north, the road will fork. Bear right (Bronx Pkwy/White Plains), staying on Bronx Pkwy. 4. Stay on Bronx Parkway for another 5.7 miles to Exit 15 (Fenimore Road). 5. Take left at stop sign. Go over highway and railroad tracks. 6. Take first left on Clubway (immediately before Mobil gas station). 7. Bear right into Scarsdale Golf Club. Park in lot on the left. Note: If you drive more than 0.2 miles after getting off at Exit 15, you went too far. .
Recommended publications
  • Teeing Off for 1921 a Brief Glance at the Possible Features for the Coming Season on the Links by Innis Brown
    20 THE AMERICAN GOLFER Teeing Off for 1921 A Brief Glance at the Possible Features for the Coming Season on the Links By Innis Brown IGURATIVELY speaking, the golfing lowing have signified a desire to join the on what the Britons are thinking and saying world is now teeing off for the good expeditionary force: Champion "Chick" of the proposal to send over a team. When F year 1921, though as a matter of fact a Evans, Francis Ouimet, "Bobby" Jones, Harry Vardon and Ted Ray arrived back moody, morose and melancholy majority is Davidson Herron, Max R. Marston, Parker home after their extended tour of the States, doing nothing more than casting an occasional W. Whittemore, Nelson M. Whitney, Regi- both Harry and Ted derived no little fun furtive glance in the direction of its links nald Lewis and Robert A. Gardner. It is from telling their friends among the ranks paraphernalia, and maligning the turn of probable that one or two others may be added of home amateurs just what lay in store for weather conditions that have driven it indoors to the above list. them, if America sent over a team. Both pre- for a period of hibernation. But that more This collection of stars will form far and claimed boldly that the time was ripe for fortunate, if vastly outnumbered element away the most formidable array of amateur Uncle Sam to repeat on the feat that Walter which is even now trekking southward, has talent that ever launched an attack against J. Travis performed at Sandwich in 1904, already begun to set the new golfing year when he captured the British title.
    [Show full text]
  • Rothley Park Official Opening
    Rothley Park Official Opening May 1912 The official opening took place on May 1912. In an article in the Dundee Evening Telegraph on the 21st of May 1912, James Sorley wrote: “Rothley Park Golf Club is a new one, and the course has not yet been properly opened. At present we are playing over 12 holes , but we will have at our disposal in a few days 16 holes. When completed the Rothley Course will be 6000 yards, the longest hole measures about 500 yards”. The fact that the golf course consisted of only 12 holes at the time of the official opening probably explains why there was no record of an exhibition match being played at that time. It is interesting to note that in the above photograph, Braid and Vardon are both wearing golf shoes. It would be reasonable to assume that they perhaps had a drive in of some sort, with an exhibition match arranged when the 18 holes were completed. The Great Triumvirate In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, a trio of players dominated professional golf to such an extent that they earned a collective nickname. “The Great Triumvirate” of Harry Vardon, J.H. Taylor and James Braid won 16 of the 21 Open Championships held between 1894 and 1914. The members of the Great Triumvirate made a very good living out of Golf Club openings and exhibition matches. The usual fee was £8 plus expenses, at a time when winning the Open Championship was worth £50. In the month of May 1913, Vardon played no less than five exhibition matches at golf clubs all around the country.
    [Show full text]
  • 2019 MASSACHUSETTS OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP June 10-12, 2019 Vesper Country Club Tyngsborough, MA
    2019 MASSACHUSETTS OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP June 10-12, 2019 Vesper Country Club Tyngsborough, MA MEDIA GUIDE SOCIAL MEDIA AND ONLINE COVERAGE Media and parking credentials are not needed. However, here are a few notes to help make your experience more enjoyable. • There will be a media/tournament area set up throughout the three-day event (June 10-12) in the club house. • Complimentary lunch and beverages will be available for all media members. • Wireless Internet will be available in the media room. • Although media members are not allowed to drive carts on the course, the Mass Golf Staff will arrange for transportation on the golf course for writers and photographers. • Mass Golf will have a professional photographer – David Colt – on site on June 10 & 12. All photos will be posted online and made available for complimentary download. • Daily summaries – as well as final scores – will be posted and distributed via email to all media members upon the completion of play each day. To keep up to speed on all of the action during the day, please follow us via: • Twitter – @PlayMassGolf; #MassOpen • Facebook – @PlayMassGolf; #MassOpen • Instagram – @PlayMassGolf; #MassOpen Media Contacts: Catherine Carmignani Director of Communications and Marketing, Mass Golf 300 Arnold Palmer Blvd. | Norton, MA 02766 (774) 430-9104 | [email protected] Mark Daly Manager of Communications, Mass Golf 300 Arnold Palmer Blvd. | Norton, MA 02766 (774) 430-9073 | [email protected] CONDITIONS & REGULATIONS Entries Exemptions from Local Qualifying Entries are open to professional golfers and am- ateur golfers with an active USGA GHIN Handi- • Twenty (20) lowest scorers and ties in the 2018 cap Index not exceeding 2.4 (as determined by Massachusetts Open Championship the April 15, 2019 Handicap Revision), or who have completed their handicap certification.
    [Show full text]
  • 19 Michigan Golf Hall of Fame Welcomes Janke
    These Guys are Good?! Michigan Golf Hall of Fame By Jeff Bairley Welcomes ast Sunday I went to the 90th PGA Championship at Oakland Hills. It had been Janke, Leeke, Morgan and awhile since I’d attended a profes - Lsional golf tournament. It’s hard to say whether I was more excited to be Salutes the Buick Open a spectator at the PGA or a concert By Michigan Golf Foundation goer at the heavy metal festival I full spectrum of golf in Michigan a varsity sport. Leeke was inducted attended the night before. In many was honored May 18 at into the Northwestern Athletic Hall ways, the anticipation was exactly Indianwood Golf & Country Club of Fame in 1992 although the the same, aside from the obvious in Lake Orion when Ken Janke, Meriam school didn’t hand out varsity let - n o aesthetic and sonic differences. i Bailey Leeke and John Morgan will be t ters to all the past women athletes a A d n inducted into the Michigan Golf Hall of u until a special ceremony at half - o F f 19 Despite the lack of the tradition - Fame and the Buick Open was given a spe - l time of a football game in 2002. 18 o G al big “rock star” names in the cial award as it celebrates its 50th anniver - n a g i field and the less-than-ideal weath - h c Leeke’s father, who played foot - sary as the state’s long-running PGA Tour i M er at Oakland Hills, people showed e ball at Illinois with Red Grange, event.
    [Show full text]
  • Met Open Championship Presented by Callaway 103Rdaugust 21 - 23, 2018 Wykagyl Country Club History of the Met Open Championship Presented by Callaway
    Met Open Championship Presented by Callaway 103rdAugust 21 - 23, 2018 Wykagyl Country Club History of the Met Open Championship Presented by Callaway From its inception in 1905 through the 1940 renewal, the Met Open was considered one of the most prestigious events in golf, won by the likes of Gene Sarazen, Walter Hagen, Johnny Farrell, Tommy Armour, Paul Runyan, Byron Nelson, and Craig Wood, in addition to the brothers Alex and Macdonald Smith (who together captured seven Met Opens, with Alex winning a record four times). The second edition of the championship was hosted and sponsored by Hollywood Golf Club, when George Low won in 1906. After an eight-year hiatus overlapping World War II, the Met Open became more of a regional championship, won by many of the top local club professionals, among them Claude Harmon, Jimmy Wright, Jim Albus, David Glenz, Bobby Heins and Darrell Kestner, not to mention such storied amateurs as Chet Sanok, Jerry Courville Sr., George Zahringer III, Jim McGovern, Johnson Wagner, and Andrew Svoboda. The purse was raised to a record $150,000 in 2007, giving the championship added importance. In 2015 the MGA celebrated a major milestone in marking the championship’s 100th playing, won by Ben Polland at Winged Foot Golf Club. In 2017, The MGA welcomed a new Championship Partner, Callaway Golf. Callaway Golf is the presenting sponsor of the Met Open Championship. Eligibility The competition is open to golfers who are: 1. Past MGA Open Champions. 2. PGA Members in good standing in the Metropolitan and New Jersey PGA Sections.
    [Show full text]
  • Major Tournament Golf
    Major Tournament Golf by Patricia Loehr the first “articles and conditions” in 1744. The St. Andrews golfers (later the Royal and Ancient Golf f all golf competitions, the “majors” have, Club of St. Andrews) made some revisions in 1754. through the years, established them- The Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews selves as significant contributors to the continues to make rules and revise existing rules for O history of the sport of golf. Although the sport (Figure 1). there may have been a few years when Previously, I have written about The (British) they were not held, the majors have evolved from Open Championship as the start of championship their many years of organizer support, player golf, thereby making it also the first-ever major participation, and spectator interest. Each year (Figure 2). Instead of having separate competitions brings renewed preparation and much anticipation for professional and amateur golfers, a single for these events. tournament open to all began in 1861. Both amateur For men’s golf, some writers and historians of and professional golfers may qualify to play in open the sport have determined there are two eras of tournaments. major tournaments. The first era was dominated Wanting to resume an amateur-only champion- more by amateur golfers. Then a second era ship, the Royal Liverpool Club (Figure 3), also established itself when professional golf rose to known as Hoylake, initiated a British Amateur prominence. Championship in 1885. In the years that followed, Let’s take a step back to remember that before the British Amateur was won by some of the famous the now-major tournaments began, “rules of play” golfers of their time including Horace Hutchinson were created to govern them.
    [Show full text]
  • CS2884 Golf Materials Golf Trivia Quiz ANSWERS.Indd
    par for Parkinson’s Golf trivia quiz answers 1. What is the surname of double US Open winner Andy? a. North b. South c. East d. West 2. What was awarded to the winners of the Open Championship between 1860 and 1870? a. Red belt b. Yellow tie c. Green hat d. Blue jacket 3. At which course do the World Match Play Championships take place? a. St Andrews b. Wentworth c. Muirfield d. The Belfry 4. How many times did Spaniard Seve Ballesteros win The Open? a. 3 b. 1 c. 4 d. 2 5. The Claret Jug is famously awarded to the winner of which golf major? a. US Open b. US Masters c. US PGA d. The Open 6. Which course has hosted The Open more times than any other? a. St Andrews b. Muirfield c. Prestwick d. Royal Troon 7. First awarded in 1949, who is given a Silver Medal at The Open? a. Leading amateur b. Last place c. Leading British player d. Runner up 8. How many years were there between Gary Player’s first and final triumphs at The Open? a. 15 b. 5 c. 10 d. 20 9. How many points are available in each Ryder Cup tournament? a. 26 b. 24 c. 20 d. 28 10. Who was the first player from outside the British Isles to captain a European Ryder Cup team? a. Sergo Garcia b. Bernhard Langer c. Jose Maria Olazabal d. Seve Ballesteros 11. Who captained the US team to victory in the 2008 Ryder Cup, ending a streak of three European victories? a.
    [Show full text]
  • 2021 PGA Championship (34Th of 50 Events in the 2020-21 PGA TOUR Season)
    2021 PGA Championship (34th of 50 events in the 2020-21 PGA TOUR Season) Kiawah Island, South Carolina May 20-23, 2021 FedExCup Points: 600 (winner) Ocean Course at Kiawah Par/Yards: 36-36—72/7,876 Purse: TBD Third-Round Notes – Saturday, May 22, 2021 Weather: Partly clouDy. High of 79. WinD E 8-13 mph. Third-Round Leaderboard Phil Mickelson 70-69-70—209 (-7) Brooks Koepka 69-71-70—210 (-6) Louis Oosthuizen 71-68-72—211 (-5) Kevin Streelman 70-72-70—212 (-4) Christian Bezuidenhout 71-70-72—213 (-3) Branden Grace 70-71-72—213 (-3) Things to Know • Five-time major champion and 2005 PGA Championship winner Phil Mickelson holds a one-stroke lead and is looking to become the first player to win a men’s major championship after turning 50 years old • Mickelson is the fourth player to hold the 54-hole lead/co-lead in a major at age 50 or older during the modern era (1934-present) • Mickelson is 3-for-5 with the 54-hole lead/co-lead in major championships (21-for-36 in 72-hole PGA TOUR events) • 2018 and 2019 PGA Championship winner Brooks Koepka is one stroke back of Mickelson; last player to win the same major at least three times in a four-year stretch: Tom Watson, The Open Championship (1980, 1982, 1983) • Sunday’s final pairing includes two players that have combined for nine major championship titles (Mickelson/5, Koepka/4) Third-Round Lead Notes 13 Third-round leaders/co-leaders to win the PGA Championship since 2000 Tiger Woods/2000, David Toms/2001, Shaun Micheel/2003, Vijay Singh/2004, Phil Mickelson/2005, Tiger Woods/2006, Woods/2007,
    [Show full text]
  • 2011Traditions of Golf Challenge Study Guide
    2011Traditions of Golf Challenge Study Guide HISTORY SECTION PRE - 20th Century “When did the game of golf start?” Golf originated in the 15th century in Scotland. Mary, Queen of Scots introduced the word “caddie” to the game. While playing golf, she was accompanied by a club-carrying young boy whom she called the “cadet”, or “caddie.” Players would hit a pebble around a natural course of sand dunes, rabbit runs and tracks using a stick or primitive club. “How were golf balls developed?” The first real golf ball was known as the “feathery”. The feathery was a leather sack filled by hand with boiled goose feathers, and stitched up and painted. The feathery golf ball period may have started as early as the 1400’s and ended in the early 1850’s. The arrival of the gutta percha ball in 1848 or “guttie”, as it was called, revolutionized the game and allowed golf’s spread to the masses. The guttie was made from rubber, which could be heated, and formulated into a ball. The next revolution in ball design came around 1905 with the patented "Haskell" ball, which is a composite of a solid core wound with thin strips of rubber. Some modern balls (the expensive ones) are made this way today. This ball performed much better than the gutty and could be made cheaply compared to earlier balls. In 1972 the first two-piece ball was introduced by Spalding. These are more popular with amateurs, as they are more durable and considered to be longer and straighter. Many professionals are still devoted to the softer covered balls, since they prefer the added spin for control as opposed to distance.
    [Show full text]
  • Top 10 by DAVE HACKENBERG Moments at Inverness
    SECTION T , PAGE 22 toledoBlade.com THE BLADE: TOLEDO, OHIO ■ SUNDAY , JULY 24 , 2011 Top 10 BY DAVE HACKENBERG Moments at Inverness TWAY’S SHOT LORD BYRON Bob Tway One of the most famous shots won 1986 PGA. in golf history certainly has to be the single greatest moment in Inverness history. During the 1986 PGA Championship, Bob Tway rallied from a four-shot deficit on the back nine, made a magnificent par save to stay tied with British In 1939, after interviewing the Open champ Greg Norman at the 17th hole, and then hit his approach to the last hole into the two finalists for the vacant head greenside bunker short and right of the pin. Norman’s wedge shot spun back into the fluffy rough professional job at Inverness, between the two front bunkers. With some 15,000 fans crowded around the final green for a past president Cloyd Haas wrote Byron Nelson, Inverness Club Pro. weather-delayed Monday finish, Tway stepped into the bunker and into history, holing his sand shot a letter to the runner-up. It to win a major championship. began, "Dear Mr. Hogan." The now-legendary Ben Hogan OPEN DOORS didn’t get the job, but the man who did became just as large a legend. Byron Nelson signed a contract with Inverness in early summer of ’39 and won the U.S. Open two weeks later. He started work in the spring of 1940 and resigned at the end of the summer in 1944, a year before compiling the greatest single season in PGA Tour history with 18 wins, including 11 straight.
    [Show full text]
  • Golf Golfers to Have Captured All Four of the Modern Five Stamps Featuring Scottish Golf Courses Go on Majors
    acquired names of their own - “Hell”, “Coffins” and “Grave”. Royal Mail News The 25p denomination shows the 18th Hole at Muirfield, described by Jack Nicklaus, as “probably the best hole on the best Open Championship course in Britain”. In 1966, when Nicklaus won the Open he joined Gene Sarazen, Ben Hogan and Gary Player as the only Golf golfers to have captured all four of the modern Five stamps featuring Scottish golf courses go on majors. The billowing rough was so deep that sale at post offices, the British Philatelic Bureau, Collections, Post Shops Plus, and Philatelic Counters on 5 July 1994. The Honourable Company of Edinburgh Golfers promulgated golf’s first set of rules, The Thirteen Articles, 250 years ago in 1744. Having moved from Leith Links to Musselburgh, they settled in 1891 at Muirfield in East Lothian where The Open Championship was first held there in 1892. It remains one of the world- famed Scottish links on the Open Championship rota. The Open has also been played at the Old Course, St Andrews, Carnoustie, Royal Troon, and the Ailsa, Turnberry, which is the venue for 1994. Doug Sanders, commented “Give me the lost ball and hay concession and you can keep the prize money! The winners of the Open at Muirfield have been:- 1892 Harold Hinton, 1896 Harry Vardon, 1901 and 1906 James Braid, 1912 Ted Ray, 1929 Walter Hagen, 1935 Alf Perry, 1948 Henry Cotton, 1959 Gary Player, 1966 Jack Nicklaus, 1972 Lee Trevino, 1980 Tom Watson, 1987 and 1992 Nick Faldo. The Fifteenth at Carnoustie: is shown on the 30p value.
    [Show full text]
  • Rare Golf Books & Memorabilia
    Sale 513 August 22, 2013 11:00 AM Pacific Time Rare Golf Books & Memorabilia: The Collection of Dr. Robert Weisgerber, GCS# 128, with Additions. Auction Preview Tuesday, August 20, 9:00 am to 5:00 pm Wednesday, August 21, 9:00 am to 5:00 pm Thursday, August 22, 9:00 am to 11:00 am Other showings by appointment 133 Kearny Street 4th Floor : San Francisco, CA 94108 phone : 415.989.2665 toll free : 1.866.999.7224 fax : 415.989.1664 [email protected] : www.pbagalleries.com Administration Sharon Gee, President Shannon Kennedy, Vice President, Client Services Angela Jarosz, Administrative Assistant, Catalogue Layout William M. Taylor, Jr., Inventory Manager Consignments, Appraisals & Cataloguing Bruce E. MacMakin, Senior Vice President George K. Fox, Vice President, Market Development & Senior Auctioneer Gregory Jung, Senior Specialist Erin Escobar, Specialist Photography & Design Justin Benttinen, Photographer System Administrator Thomas J. Rosqui Summer - Fall Auctions, 2013 August 29, 2013 - Treasures from our Warehouse, Part II with Books by the Shelf September 12, 2013 - California & The American West September 26, 2013 - Fine & Rare Books October 10, 2013 - Beats & The Counterculture with other Fine Literature October 24, 2013 - Fine Americana - Travel - Maps & Views Schedule is subject to change. Please contact PBA or pbagalleries.com for further information. Consignments are being accepted for the 2013 Auction season. Please contact Bruce MacMakin at [email protected]. Front Cover: Lot 303 Back Cover: Clockwise from upper left: Lots 136, 7, 9, 396 Bond #08BSBGK1794 Dr. Robert Weisgerber The Weisgerber collection that we are offering in this sale is onlypart of Bob’s collection, the balance of which will be offered in our next February 2014 golf auction,that will include clubs, balls and additional books and memo- rabilia.
    [Show full text]