Oswego Lake Country Club was officially founded in 1924 as the creation of Paul C. Murphy, who has been called the “Father of Oswego.” Murphy was the primary developer of the town then called “Oswego” through his involvement in the Ladd Estate Corporation, owners of much of the surviving lands of Oregon Iron and Steel. Commencing about 1910, he was involved with the first significant development of a Ladd Estate property the Laurelhurst neighborhood on the east side of Portland. In the mid-teens, Murphy continued to develop other areas of Portland, including Eastmoreland. As part of the Eastmoreland development, he constructed the first nine holes of the Eastmoreland Golf Course in 1916-17, with the assistance of golf course designer, H. Chandler Egan. Egan, the great golfing champion from Chicago, had moved to Medford to fruit farm and had already begun his golf course architecture career with the completion of Tualatin Country Club in 1916.
As Murphy considered the development of other Ladd Estate properties, he focused on the Oswego Lake area. In that process, he conceived his vision of the “Live Where You Play” slogan, leading to his idea for a golf course as a focal point, in fact, the crown jewel, of his development ideas for the town of Oswego. By 1923, Murphy had once again enlisted the skills of Chandler Egan to help site and design the golf course. The original design concept, in Egan’s own hand, drawing up more than 18 holes from which to choose the final hole routing. Influenced by his own playing experience in Scotland and Ireland, Murphy himself made some of the final hole and routing decisions.
The construction of the golf course and the clubhouse commenced in 1924. Murphy chose Wm. H. Tucker and Sons of New York, builders of some of the most famous courses in America, to build the course, and the architecture firm of Church and Whitehouse to construct the clubhouse, both of which were completed in 1925. On July 25th of that year, the course was inaugurated by the “First Foursome” of Murphy, Egan, Larry Newlands, and Prescott Cookingham. Newlands was the Club’s first president, and Cookingham was then a vice president of the Ladd Estate Corporation. The course was open for general play by August, 1925. The hilly and difficult par 73 course had expansive views of Mt. Hood and Oswego Lake, particularly on the finishing holes, such as the famous par 3 15th hole, located on the Iron Mountain bluff with majestic views of Oswego Lake.
By the time of the 1929 stock market crash and ensuing depression, Murphy, along with Frederick H. Strong, had purchased all the Ladd Estate Corporation properties and were now effectively the owners of OLCC. They created a new membership program and re-negotiated the debt with the Club officers to ensure its survival. By 1930, the first change to the original course occurred with the creation of the par 3 “water hole”, which had been a par 5 from the same tee, but played to a green located approximately where the 4th green is currently located. Number 4 became the 4th hole as we know it today. At the same time, the par 3, 6th of the original course was eliminated, all of which precipitated re-arrangement of the hole’s routing.
The Club managed through The Depression years of the 1930’s, but was far from thriving, when World War II commenced. Discussions began between the Club officers and Murphy, along with his son, Paul F. Murphy, and by 1942, an rearrangement of terms occurred, including a provision that the Club continue as a golf club, prohibiting it from selling the property for a minimum of seventeen years. During the same set of negotiations, the Club and the Murphy’s agreed that the upper part of the course property would no longer be a part of the golf course, reverting back to the Ladd Estate Company for possible, future development. As a result, the par 5 13th, running down to the West; the dogleg par 4 14th; the par 3 15th heading East along the cliff; and a portion of the long par 3 16th and its green which was just beyond the present 15th tee, were all eliminated.
From 1942 to 1945, modifications were made to rearrange the course to become a par 68, primarily by local contractor, Shirley Stone.
This course routing continued until the fall of 1960 and into the spring of 1961 when further changes were made to create the routing of the par 71 course as we know it today. This major work was completed under a plan that the Club’s greenskeeper, Fred Federspiel had devised, utilizing portions of a plan created for OLCC at one time by noted Canadian golfer and golf course architect, A. Vernon McCann. He supervised the construction which was successfully completed by the spring of 1961. One significant alteration in this plan was the elimination of the large swamp area, located between the current 1st and 18th holes, and extending back through the 18th fairway to the 18th tee. Federspiel had designed Royal Oaks in the early 1950’s and would go on to design the original course at Salishan on the Oregon coast, and the first course at Sunriver near Bend, among others. Both were commissioned by OLCC member John Gray, developer of these significant destination resorts.
In the early 1980’s, the Club utilized Architect Robert Muir Graves to study the course and come up with a new master plan, which contained some very interesting changes including a re-build of the 5th and 14th greens in 1984. As things progressed, the Club enlisted the services of John Fought, Tualatin U.S. Amateur Champion turned architect, who was instrumental in the development of Oregon golf courses, Crosswater, adjacent to Sunriver in the Bend area, Pumpkin Ridge in North Plains, and The Reserve in Aloha. His work resulted in the re-build of the 6th, 8th, and 9th greens during the late 1980’s.
In the early 1990s, a Master Plan Committee, under the guidance of architect Bill Robinson, was formed to study potential major course improvements, including possible re-routing. Instead of re-routing, a plan for significant green rebuilding, re-trapping, and creation or rebuilding of tee boxes was adopted. This work was completed in 1994. At the conclusion of this significant work, the only untouched greens remaining from the original course of 1925 are the 12th, 15th, 16th, and 18th. They retain a hint of Chandler Egan’s style of utilizing double or multi-levels and are arguably the best greens of the course for their variety of good pin placements and vexing subtleties.
In recent years, the final golf architectural work was undertaken with John Harbottle, primarily to revise the sand traps in order to solve problematic sand conditions, and attempt to both emulate the style of Chandler Egan’s design of the Club’s original course and incorporate elements of other sand traps Egan had designed. In particular, his work at Pebble Beach prior to the U.S Amateur held there in 1929.
Notable courses designed by H. Chandler Egan
- Eugene Country Club
- Eastmoreland Golf Course
- Tualatin Country Club
- Waverley Country Club (redesign)
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- Alder Wood Golf Club
- Riverside Country Club
- Pebble Beach Golf Links (redesigned with Allistar McKenzie)
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