ABOUT H. CHANDER EGAN |
|
U.S. Amateur Champion 1904 & 1905; Finalist 1909 ![]() Western Amateur Champion 1902, 1904, 1905 & 1907; Finalist 1903 PNGA Men´s Amateur Champion 1915, 1920, 1923, 1925 & 1932; Finalist 1914 & 1921 Walker Cup Team Member 1934 Inducted into Pacific Northwest Golf Hall of Fame 1985 For a 21-year period in the early 1900´s, the standard of golf excellence in the Northwest was defined by the “Grand Old Master,” Henry Chandler Egan. Playing in only 10 PNGA Men´s Amateur championships, Egan reached at least the semifinals in eight of them. The other two were in 1933 and 1934, at the end of his golfing prime.
Chandler Egan was the most sensational of all Chicago´s golfers. While a sophomore at Harvard in 1902, he won his first championship of note, the U.S. Intercollegiate title. That same year he defeated his cousin Walter in the Western Amateur. The next year the pair reversed the order, with Walter the winner. Chandler´s run continued with Western Amateur wins in 1904, 1905 and 1907. He brought fame to the Chicago area in 1904 when he captured the first of two successive U.S. Amateur crowns. Egan began a trend in the U.S. Amateur which survives today: the collegiate golfer as amateur champion. As the reigning U.S. Amateur champion, Egan was expected to win the gold medal for America at the 1904 Olympics in St. Louis. But it was not to be. Gold medal-winning George Lyons enjoyed match-play defeats of the French champion A.B. Lambert, the PNGA Champion F.C. Newton of Seattle, and Egan. As always, Egan took the loss with grace, admitting he´d been outclassed by “one of the cleverest players I have met.”
After visiting Oregon in 1910, Egan returned the following May to buy the Bates orchard for $75,000. The property included 115 acres of apple and pear trees. Perhaps the real winners in the relocation were the members of Medford Golf Club. Shortly after arriving in Oregon, Egan upgraded the Medford golf facility, and later, designed the present-day Rogue Valley Country Club. Meanwhile, on the Northwest tournament scene, area players would need to raise their standard of play to beat this former U.S. Amateur champion.
In the 1915 PNGA Men´s Amateur Championship at Tacoma Country & Golf Club, Neville and Egan met again in the semifinals. But this time the Medford resident played steadier and defeated the Californian, 5 & 4. In the bottom half of the draw, Paul Ford bested former California Amateur champion, Robin Hayne. Hayne said of Ford, “If ever a man deserved to win, he did. There is not a shot in the bag he does not possess and if he is defeated by Egan in the finals, it will be because of the former champion´s greater experience.” Hayne´s analysis was correct. Egan beat Ford 3 & 2.
In 1929 Egan formed a partnership with the fabled golf architect, Alister MacKenzie (designer of Augusta National, Cypress Point Club, et al). Together, they renovated Pebble Beach for the 1929 U.S. Amateur. Egan played in this championship and reached the semifinals. While supervising the construction of Everett´s Legion Memorial course, this gentleman of the links contracted pneumonia, and died shortly after in April 1936. The tributes paid to Egan reflect widespread appreciation for the influence he had on Northwest golf. Perhaps D. Scott Chisholm best summed up this feeling. ‘´A real champion at heart — at home and on the links, at the card table and in the cocktail lounge. He is imbued with kindly consideration for an opponent in any sort of contest. There was a champion to the very core. He possessed every fine and gracious sporting quality a true champion should possess. He more than any other of my ken represented the very essence of what a champion should be like. When in the heat of battle, he preferred to help an opponent — never to hinder him. He was an outstanding credit to golf and a grand example for the youth of our land to follow. We ill could spare such a magnificent sportsman [in] these days of masterful chiseling.” A lasting legacy to Egan was proposed by the president of the California Golf Association, E.B. Yoakum. The perpetual award given to the low-gross winner in the California Amateur Championship is the H. Chandler Egan Memorial Trophy. |