Since about 2001, Augusta National Golf Club, dubbed the
most powerful golf club on earth, has spent about $40MM to entice locals to
sell their properties and thereby bought up much of the land bordering their exclusive grounds. BUT there is one holdout on the northwest
corner of the club owned by a couple who just celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary. The area is a free parking
lot, Gate 6A, now bulldozed, that was once a fully lived in neighborhood, where
kids happily played in the streets. The
house in question at 1112 Stanley Road is in the middle of Gate 6-A.
Augusta National was designed by Bobby Jones and others and opened for play in 1933, with the Masters starting there the
following year. In Golf Digest’s 2009
list of 100 greatest courses, Augusta National ranked #1. In Golfweek Magazine’s
2011 list of best classic courses for course architecture in the US, it was
ranked #10. The first female members
were admitted in 2012, Condoleezza Rice and Darla Moore. In 1990, African Americans were admitted to this
exclusive membership. There are 10
cabins on the property, one built exclusively for member President Dwight D.
Eisenhower after his election, according to secret service specifications. Famous golfers Ben Hogan and Sam Snead were
also members. Others include Warren
Buffet, Bill Gates, Roger Goodell, Sam Nunn, T. Boone Pickens, Jr, Jack Welsh
and many other CEOs of top companies.
Membership numbers about 300 and is by invitation only. Members and tournament winners receive a
distinctive green sports coat.
Club officials stop by regularly with offers, but the
residents don’t want to go. They raised
their family in this 1900 sq ft 3-bedroom house, with everyone coming back for
the holidays, which Zillow values at $355,126. Initial sellers got about $250,000 for their homes. Built in 1959, on the cusp of being a historic home, it remains the “piece
de resistance”. Their grandson has
become a professional, Scott Brown, age 32. He is a PGA Tour member, not yet
making the Masters. Their brother sold
his home, on two acres, and two other homes he owned, for a cool $3.6MM. The residents owned another property across
the street that they sold to the club for $1.2MM. A nearby holdout wound up settling for
$960,000, for a very similar house.
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