Fourth Generation
19. Robert James Quirk
"Bob"
(William Edward, Robert, Edward) was born
30 Aug 1917 in Fort Dodge, Webster County, Iowa. He died
21 Feb 1982 in Kansas City, Jackson County, Missouri and was buried
23 Feb 1982 in Mt. Mariah Cemetery, Kansas City, Jackson County,
Missouri.
Bob
was accounted for 10 Apr
1930 in 5th Precinct, Dubuque, JT, Dubuque County, Iowa. He was
accounted for
25 Apr 1976 in Shawnee Mission, Johnson County, Kansas.
Notes -
1. Ref.
given names, birth date and death date of Robert James Quirk as
cited by Katie Quirk to Richard C. Casey, 7 May 2004.
'Robert
James Quirk was born August 30, 1917 in Ft. Dodge, Iowa. Died
February 21, 1982. James was his confirmation name.'
2. Ref.
general biographical information as cited by John A. Casey,
'Descendants of Edward and Johanna Quirk ref. Patrick and Bridget
Casey', 27 Mar 1991:
Robert J.
and Fronalee Eaker Quirk inherited a piece of land in Colony, Kansas
from the estate of Father Michael Quirk.
3. Ref.
general biographical information as cited by Katie Quirk, e-mail to
Richard C. Casey, 7 May 2004.
William
E. Quirk, Sr. [Robert's father] inherited the land in Colony,
Kansas. It was originally 40 acres purchased as an investment
because it was suspected that oil could be found. When Bob and Fron
came to KC someone contacted William E. Senior about drilling there,
and he referred them to Bob. No oil but Bob and his dad decided to
start raising cattle. After William's death in 1955, Bob added more
land until there was approximately 2000 acres fenced with cattle.
After Bob's death [son] W.E. (Bill) managed it until it was sold in
1998.
4. Ref.
general biographical information as cited by Katie Quirk, e-mail to
Richard C. Casey, 1 May 2004.
'[My] dad
turned the Colony, Kansas land into a cattle ranch, which he enjoyed
for many, many years. He had a man [,Ed] (and later. . .[Ed's]. .
.son) running the ranch for him during the weekdays, but he rarely
missed going on a Saturday - (Sundays were always reserved for
golf).
I
remember getting up early occasionally on a Saturday morning and
driving down there with him. We'd go out in Ed's truck and drive
around in the fields and look at the cattle. We'd sit in the middle
of all the cattle and talk and talk about the ranch and the trials
and tribulations Ed was faced with during the week. My dad was
always so relaxed there.
My
brother Bill continued to run the ranch after my dad's death, and we
only sold the land a few years ago. My brother just didn't have the
time and cattle prices were so low then that it was a good time to
get out of the business.'
5. Ref.
death of Robert J. Quirk as cited by Katie Quirk, e-mail to Richard
C. Casey, 1 May 2004.
'My dad
died of a brain tumor. He was originally diagnosed by his doctor as
being depressed. He had retired from his job, and I remember the
doctor thinking that my dad was having a tough time dealing with
retirement, when in reality he had developed this tumor. By the
time he was diagnosed and he went through an operation to remove the
tumor, it was December of that year, and he died the following
February, so it was all rather sudden and fast - of course it didn't
seem all that fast at the time. My dad was a great
guy....I
still think of him often and miss him terribly.'
6.
Obituary of Robert J. Quirk, Dubuque, Iowa: Dubuque Telegraph
Herald, 26 Feb 1982.
Services
for Robert J. Quirk, 64, of Mission Hills, [Johnson County,] Kan.,
formerly of Dubuque, were held at 10 a.m. Tuesday [23 Feb 1982] at
St. Ann's Catholic Church in Prairie Village, [Johnson County,]
Kan. Burial was in Mount Mariah Cemetery, Kansas City, [Clay
County,] Mo.
Mr. Quirk
died Sunday morning [21 Feb 1982] in a Kansas City (Mo.) hospital.
He graduated from Loras College in Dubuque, and the University of
Iowa Law School in Iowa City. He was an FBI agent during World War
II, and upon completion of his FBI assignment and a brief service in
the practice of law in Dubuque, he was called for special military
service with the Army. Following his service duty, he was employed
with the Atomic Energy Commission, and Bendix Corporation in Kansas
City, Mo., where he served as plant manager for 13 years prior to
his retirement two years ago.
Surviving
are his wife, Fronalee; two sons, William and Jim, and a daughter
Katie, all of Mission Hills[, Johnson County, Kansas].
Bob
married Fronalee Eaker "Casey"
on 16 May 1947 in Charlotte, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina.
They
had the following children:
+ 33 M i.
William Edward Quirk was born 20 Jan 1950.
34 F ii.
Katherine Ann Quirk "Katie"
was born
12 Sep 1954 in St. Luke's Hospital, Kansas City, Jackson County,
Missouri.
Katie graduated from Sunset Hill School 1972 Kansas City, Jackson
County, Missouri. She attended college
at H. Sophie Newcomb College, Tulane University, NO, Louisiana. She
graduated from Katherine Gibbs School, Providence, PC, Rhode
Island. She graduated from Dec 1980 Rockhurst University, Kansas
City, Jackson County, Missouri. She was
an operations manager for Knight-Ridder Financial for 13 years
1980/1993. She was accounted for
21 Feb 1982 in Mission Hills, Johnson County, Kansas.
Notes -
1.
Ref. biographical information for Katherine Quirk as cited by
herself to Richard C. Casey, 7 May 2004.
'Katherine Ann Quirk, born September 12, 1954, St. Luke's Hospital,
etc. Graduated Sunset Hill School, KCMO, 1972. Attended Tulane
University/Sophie Newcomb, Katharine Gibbs Secretarial School in
Providence, RI and graduated from Rockhurst College, KCMO in
December 1980. Associated with Knight-Ridder Financial for 13
years in various management positions. Married in 1994 to Michael
J. McCormick and divorced in 1999.'
Katie married Michael J. McCormick
in 1994. The marriage ended in divorce.
+ 35 M iii. Robert James Quirk was
born 31 May 1961.
23. Robert Edward Casey
"Bob"
(Francis Edward Casey, Mary G. Quirk, Edward) was born
17 Jun 1918 in Iowa. He died
30 Oct 1998.
Bob
was accounted for 6 Jan
1920 in Ward 3, Mason City, Cerro Gordo County, Iowa. He was
accounted for 10 Apr
1930 in Ward 3, Mason City, Cerro Gordo County, Iowa.
Bob
married Helen Jean Latimer.
They
had the following children:
36 M i.
Michael Casey.
37 M ii. Marc Casey.
38 M iii.
Robert Edward Casey.
39 F iv. Jean Casey.
40 F v.
Therese Casey.
25. Frances Aileen Casey
"Aileen" (Francis Edward
Casey, Mary G. Quirk, Edward) was born
about 1922 in Iowa. She died
before 14 Aug 2003.
Aileen was accounted for
10 Apr 1930 in Ward 3, Mason City, Cerro Gordo County, Iowa.
Notes -
1. Ref.
given name of Frances Aileen Casey:
US
Census, 1930 - Ward 3, Mason City, Cerro Gordo County, Iowa cites
Aileen F.
Aileen
married
Lynn A. Stambaugh.
The marriage ended in divorce.
They
had the following children:
41 F i. Mary
Stambaugh.
42 F ii.
Beth Stambaugh.
26. Genevieve Marie Casey "Marie"
(Francis Edward Casey, Mary G. Quirk, Edward) was born
16 Aug 1924 in Iowa. She died
1 Jul 1999 in Dallas, Dallas County, Texas and was buried
7 Jul 1999 in Nacogdoches, Nacogdoches County, Texas.
Marie was accounted for
10 Apr 1930 in Ward 3, Mason City, Cerro Gordo County, Iowa.
Notes -
1. Ref.
given names of Genevieve Marie Casey:
a. US
Census, 1930 - Ward 3, Mason City, Cerro Gordo County, Iowa cites
Marie G.
2.
Obituary for [Genevieve] Marie Casey MacPeak, Mason City Globe
Gazette, July 6, 1999.
MARIE
MACPEAK
NACOGDOCHES, Texas - Mrs. Marie MacPeak, 74, of Nacogdoches, died
Thursday (July 1, 1999) in Dallas.
Funeral
services will be held at 10 a.m. Wednesday at the Cason Monk-Metcalf
Sunset Chapel, in Nacogdoches, with Monsignor James E. Young, of
Sacred Heart Catholic Church, officiating.
Visitation will be held from 5 to 8 p.m. today at the Cason
Monk-Metcalf Funeral Home, 5400 North Street, Nacogdoches.
3.
Obituary for [Genevieve] Marie Casey MacPeak, Mason City Globe
Gazette, July 7, 1999.
MARIE
CASEY MACPEAK
NACOGDOCHES, Texas - Mrs. Marie Casey MacPeak, 74, of Nacogdoches,
died Thursday (July 1, 1999) in Dallas.
Funeral
services will be held at 10 a.m. today at the Cason Monk-Metcalf
Sunset Chapel, in Nacogdoches, with Monsignor James E. Young, of
Sacred Heart Catholic Church, officiating.
Visitation was held Tuesday at the Cason Monk-Metcalf Funeral Home,
Nacogdoches.
Marie
married Malcolm D. MacPeak.
Malcolm was born 9 Apr
1931. He died 8 Jul 2000.
They
had the following children:
+ 43 F i.
Terri MacPeak.
44 M ii.
John MacPeak.
45 M iii.
Michael MacPeak.
27. John Augustus Casey
"Jack" (Francis Edward
Casey, Mary G. Quirk, Edward) was born
4 Jun 1928 in Mason City, Iowa. He died
14 May 2000 in Valparaiso, Indiana.
Jack was accounted for
10 Apr 1930 in Ward 3, Mason City, Cerro Gordo County, Iowa.
Jack
married Mary Lou Margaret
Flynn on 25 Aug 1951.
Mary was born 1 Mar 1929
in Gary, Indiana.
They
had the following children:
+ 46 M i.
Kevin John Casey was born 16 Jun 1952.
+ 47 M ii. Francis William Casey was
born 19 Jun 1953.
48 M iii.
Patrick Flynn Casey
was born 28 Jun 1954 in
Saginaw, MI.
+ 49 M iv.
Sean Christopher Casey was born 10 Feb 1956.
50 F v.
Bridget Catherine Casey
was born 22 Mar 1957 in
Gary, Lake County, Indiana.
+ 51 F vi. Maureen Ann Casey was born
13 Feb 1959.
+ 52 F vii.
Sheila Aileen Casey was born 3 Sep 1962.
53 M viii.
Brian Joseph Casey
was born 22 Oct 1964 in
Valparaiso, Porter County, Indiana.
28. John Joseph Casey (Charles Harold Casey, Mary G. Quirk,
Edward) was born
7 Jan 1928 in Mercy Hospital, Mason City, Cerro Gordo County, Iowa
and was christened 10
Jan 1928 in Mercy Hospital, Mason City, Cerro Gordo County, Iowa. He
died
30 Dec 1988 in St. Mary's Home, St. Paul, Ramsey County, Minnesota
and was buried
5 Jan 1989 in Fort Snelling National Cemetery, Minneapolis, Hennepin
County, Minnesota.
John was accounted for 4
Apr 1930 in Ward 3, Mason City, Cerro Gordo County, Iowa. He was
inducted into the United States Marine Corps Aug 1945 Great Lakes
Naval Station, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois. He received his basic
training in (PFC) Aug 1945 Camp Pendelton, San Diego, San Diego
County, California. He was discharged in (CPL) Sep 1948 Camp
Elliott, California.
Notes -
1. Ref.
birth of John Joseph Casey, Birth Announcement, Mason City Globe
Gazette, Mason City, Iowa, Jan 1928.
Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Casey, 536 Seventh street southeast, are the parents of
a boy born at Mercy hospital Saturday morning at 1:30 o'clock.
2. Ref.
birth of John Joseph Casey, Baby Book, St. Joseph Mercy Hospital,
Mason City, Iowa, Jan 1928.
B.
Saturday January 7, 1928 at 1:30 am. Physician - Dr. M. J.
Fitzpatrick. Nurse - Miss Fitzpatrick. Weight - 4 lbs., 12 oz.
Lenght - 21 1/2 inches.
Christened - January 10, 1928 at 10:20 pm, Mercy Hospital, by Rev.
P. S. O'Connor. Godparents - Mr. and Mrs. Gus Casey.
First toy
- rattle. First tooth - 8 months 14 days. First short clothes - 4
months. First shoes - 6 months. First presents - Blanket, shoes,
booties, cap, sweater, bath robe.
John
married
Elizabeth Jane Swanson
"Betty", daughter of Paul Everett Swanson
and Helen Marie Buffington, on 2
Mar 1950 in Holy Family Catholic Church, Mason City, Cerro Gordo
County, Iowa. Betty was born 6 Aug 1930 in Clear Lake, Cerro Gordo
County, Iowa and was christened 9 Oct 1954 in Immaculate Conception
Church, Sumner, Bremer County, Iowa.
Betty made made her
First Communion 10 Oct 1954 at Immaculate Conception Church, Sumner,
Bremer County, Iowa. She was confirmed on
17 Oct 1954 in Immaculate Conception Church, Sumner, Bremer County,
Iowa.
They
had the following children:
54 M i.
Richard Charles Casey "Rick" was born
7 Apr 1952 in Sartori Memorial Hospital, Cedar Falls, Black Hawk
County, Iowa and was christened
4 May 1952 in St. Patrick's Church, Cedar Falls, Black Hawk County,
Iowa.
Rick made made his First
Communion 19 Jun 1960 at St. Bonafice Church, Exira, Audubon County,
Iowa. He was confirmed on
4 May 1966 in Our Lady Of Good Counsel Church, Holstein, Ida County,
Iowa. He received his diploma from Galva Community School 1970
Galva, Ida County, Iowa. He attended college 1970 - 1972 at
University Of Iowa, Iowa City, Johnson County, Iowa. He was employed
1974 - 1975 at St. Mary's School, Storm Lake, Buena Vista County,
Iowa. He received his B.A. degree from Buena Vista College 1975
Storm Lake, Buena Vista County, Iowa. He studied 1975 - 1979 at St.
Paul Seminary, St. Paul, Ramsey County, Minnesota. He was employed
1982 - 1991 at NCR Corporation, Roseville, Ramsey County, Minnesota.
He was employed 1979 - 1982 at Church Of St. Margaret, N. St. Paul,
RC, Minnesota. He received his MBA degree from the College of St.
Thomas 1990 St. Paul, Ramsey County, Iowa. He was employed 1991 -
1994 at Minnesota Project Innovation, Minneapolis, HC, Minnesota. He
was employed 1994 - 1997 at BlueCross BlueShield Of Minneosta,
Eagan, Dakota County, Mi. He was employed 1997 - 2000 at ISI
Partners, St. Paul, Ramsey County, Minnesota. He was employed 2000 -
2003 at Unisys Corporation, Golden Valley, HC, Minnesota.
+ 55 M ii.
Gregory Donald Casey was born 12 Feb 1953.
56 M iii.
David Franklin Casey was born
23 Oct 1956 in Waverly, Bremer County, Iowa. He died
23 Oct 1956 in Waverly, Bremer County, Iowa and was buried
in Immaculate Conception Cemetery, Sumner, Bremer County, Iowa.
+ 57 F iv.
Linda Carolyn Casey was born 12 Oct 1957.
58 F v.
Carol Ann Casey was born
17 Dec 1958 in Waverly, Bremer County, Iowa and was christened
11 Jan 1959 in Immaculate Conception Church, Sumner, Bremer County,
Iowa.
Carol made made her
First Communion 15 May 1966 at Our Lady Of Good Counsel Church,
Holstein, Ida County, Iowa. She was confirmed on
25 Feb 1969 in Our Lady Of Good Counsel Church, Holstein, Ida
County, Iowa.
Carol married (1)
James Healy on 6 Jun 1981 in Sacred Heart Church, Spencer, Clay
County, Iowa. The marriage ended in divorce.
Carol also married (2) Claude
W. Hansel,
son of Walter A. Hansel and
Florence Molotta on 23 Jul 1994 in Bernham Harbor, Chicago, Cook
County, Illinois. The marriage ended in divorce. Claude was born
5 Feb 1946 in Chicago, Cook County, Illinois. He died
24 Nov 2004 in Palatine, Cook County, Illinois and was buried
27 Nov 2004 in Illinois.
Notes -
1.
Obituary of Claude W. Hansel.
Claude W. Hansel
Claude W. Hansel of Palatine Funeral services for Claude W. Hansel,
58, will be held at 3 p.m. today, at Smith-Corcoran Funeral Home,
185 E. Northwest Highway, Palatine. Interment is private. Visitation
will be held from 1 p.m. until the time of services today, at the
funeral home. Born Feb. 5, 1946, in Chicago, he died Wednesday, Nov.
24, 2004. Claude was a member of the Suburban Harley Davidson family
and a project manager at Airoom Architects & Builders. He was also a
master amateur gardener. He was the loving son of Florence (nee
Molotta) and the late Walter A. Hansel; beloved husband of C.J.;
stepfather of Shawn (Zia) Boley, Brook (Isabel) Boley, Erin (Kevin)
Nealis and Regan (Andrew) Jasinski; grandfather of Logan Nealis and
Keira Boley; brother of Walter (Elly) Hansel; and uncle of David,
Kimberly, Kristina and Micah. For information‚ (847)359-8020.
Published in the Chicago Suburban Daily Herald on 11/27/2004.
31. K. Ann Casey "Ann"
(Regina M. Dillon, Johanna B. Quirk, Edward) was born
14 Feb 1922 in Mason City, Cerro Gordo County, Iowa.
Ann
was accounted for 7 Apr
1930 in Ward 3, Mason City, Cerro Gordo County, Iowa. She won
the first of six Iowa Women's Amateur Titles 1941. She graduated
from the University of Iowa 1944 Iowa City, Johnson County, Iowa.
She was teaching golf at
Stephens College 1944/1948 in Columbia, Boone County, Missouri. She
won runnerup, Iowa
Women's Amateur 1946. She moved
1948 to Mason City, Cerro Gordo County, Iowa. She won
her second title, Iowa Women's Amatuer 1951. She won
Iowa Women's Amateur 1954. She won
Palm Beach Invitiational 1956 in Palm Beach, Florida. She won
semifinalist, US Women's Amateur 1956. She won
runnerup, North and South, the Western Amateur and the
Trans-Mississippi 1956. She won
the Dorothy J. Manice Trophy as the No. 1 US Amateur 1957. She won
Iowa Golfer of the Year, amateur or pro 1957. She won
runnerup in the US Women's Amateur, North and South Amateur, Trans-Missippi
and Women's Western 1957. She won
low amatuer in the Women's All-American Open 1957 in Jacksonville.
She won membership on
the US Curtis Cup team 1958, 1960, 1962. She won
D. J. Manice Award as Outstanding Amateur Golfer 1958. She won
low amatuer, Women's All-American Open 1958. She won
the Trans-Mississippi, North and South Amateur and shared the Womens'
International Four-Ball title with Marlene Streit 1959. She won
low amateur, Women's All-American Open 1959. She won
runnerup, Palm Beach Invitational 1959 in Palm Beach, Florida. She
won her last Iowa
Amateur title 1959 in Mason City, Cerro Gordo County, Iowa. She won
Women's Western Amateur; semifinalist, US Women's Amateur;
semifinalist, French Open 1960. She won
runnerup with Marlene Streit, Women's International Four-Ball
championship 1961. She won
semifinalist, Women's Western Amateur; runnerup, Trans-Mississippi;
co-winner with Deane Berman, National Mixed Two-Ball championship
1962. She won runnerup,
Palm Beach Invitational 1962 in Palm Beach, Florida. She won
Iowa Husband and Wife championship 1963. She moved
1964 to Columbia, Boone County, Missouri. She was
teaching and coaching the golf team at Stephens College 1964 in
Columbia, Boone County, Missouri. She won
recognition as Ladies Professional Golf Teacher of the Year 1966.
She was co-author "Golf
- A Positive Approach" 1975. She won
inclusion as one of six Golf Digest outstanding women teaching golf
1976. She was running
the Stephens College golf course 1977 in Columbia, Boone County,
Missouri. She won a
place in The Sunday Register's Iowa Sports Hall of Fame 1977. She
was accounted for 27 Mar
1977 in Columbia, Boone County, Missouri. She won
LPGA Coach of the Year Award 1982. She won
Spalding Coach of the Year Award 1982. She was accounted for
1994 in 3806 Woodrail On The Green, Columbia, Missouri. She won
Ellen Griffing Rolex Award 1996. She won
the Gladys Palmer Meritorious Service Award 1997. She was accounted
for
2000 in 135 Crest Road, Southern Pines, North Carolina. She was
accounted for 2004 in
135 Crest Road, Southern Pines, North Carolina.
Notes -
1. Ref.
biographical information on the life and career of Ann Casey
Johnstone, as cited by 'Joanne Gunderson A Joyous Champion', USGA
Journal and Turf Management, September 1957.
Mrs.
Johnstone's Comeback
. . .Mrs.
Ann Casey Johnstone, of Mason City, Iowa, was four under par for 7.2
holes before the final. . .
. . .Mrs.
Johnstone, mother of a four-year-old girl, was runner-up in the
Women's Western Amateur and the North and South this year.
Mrs.
Johnstone lost her amateur status for a while [sic] due to teaching
golf along with other duties at Stevens [sic] College, Columbia,
Mo. She was a school-teacher rather than a golf professional in the
usual sense. After several years out of competition, she has made a
spendid return in the last two seasons. A year ago she was a
semifinalist in the USGA Women's Amateur, losing to Miss Gunderson,
1 down. Now 34, she is a jolly and popular player.
2. Ref.
North and South Amateur Championship, Pinehurst, Inc., Pinehurst,
North Carolina, 2004.
The North
and South Amateur
It began
as a means to afford golfers a competitive arena and to generate
publicity for a five-year old resort. Its name was created to foster
good relations between geographic regions that only a generation
earlier had battled one another in the Civil War.
The
mission over the years has been simple, according to Richard Tufts
of the Pinehurst’s founding family:
"To
provide an annual gathering of those who love the game, rather than
a spectacle."
The North
and South Women's Amateur began in 1903. The North and South Women's
played on Pinehurst No. 1 as well as Pinehurst No. 3. As for playing
Pinehurst No. 2, the Women’s North and South Amateur received that
honor in 1949. In the year 2002, the North and South Women's Amateur
celebrated its' 100th anniversary. A centennial celebration dinner
was held to honor all contestants as well as congratulate the past
champions. The North and South is contested on the famed Pinehurst
No. 2 course, which now plays 5,000-plus yards. On a historical
note, the Men’s North and South is the longest consecutive running
championship in the country. The U.S. Amateur started in 1895 but
was interrupted for two years because of World War I and four years
because of World War II.
What
draws many guests to Pinehurst is the challenge to play Pinehurst
No. 2. As once stated by contestant Kelly Miller (general manager of
Pine Needles Lodge & Golf Club and Mid Pines Inn & Golf Club), "On
No. 2 it’s not just pure power and brawn and making putts. You’ve
got to rely on a little thinking to get around, to understand you
just don’t fire at every pin."
The
addiction is the same: The thrill of competition. Add the experience
you get out of playing with the best amateurs from all across the
globe, and a historic setting such as Pinehurst No. 2, and you have
the essence of competition in championship form.
What each
contestant gets out of the championship will differ from person to
person, but the essence of the North and South remains the same. As
stated by Richard Tufts in his 1962 book, The Scottish Invasion:
"Golf came to America as a great amateur sport, rich with tradition
and enjoying the highest possible standard of ethics and good
sportsmanship in its play. The idea has been to accept the game at
Pinehurst in this form and to maintain and preserve these standards
in order that amateur golfers might find at Pinehurst those things
which James Tufts sought to provide."
Golfers
come from around the Carolinas, the East Coast, and the world to
enter the North and South each year. Most of the mid-amateurs at one
point dreamed of playing on the professional tour (some of them even
tried it), while the younger ones still harbor those dreams. Some
will make it as LPGA Tour stars, like Babe Didrikson, Louise Suggs,
and Donna Andrews.
Many
collegiate players have begun their careers participating in the
Women’s North and South Amateur. Peggy Kirk Bell, from Rollins, Page
Marsh, from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and Beth
Bauer, from Duke university-just to name a few.
The
common thread is a total devotion to Pinehurst No. 2. As North and
South competitor Chris Dalrymple believes, "Strolling down the first
fairway, I always think of everyone that’s played here. It’s a
pretty incredible thought – that everyone who’s ever been anything
in golf has been right here."
The North
and South Amateur Championship will put you through a complete test
of skill. By the end of the championship, you will know that you
have had to hit every shot. It’s just you, the golf course, and the
guys you’re playing with. It is golf at its purest form.
NORTH AND
SOUTH AMATEUR CHAMPIONS
1959 Mrs.
Ann Casey Johnstone
3. Ref.
biographical information on the life and career of Ann Casey
Johnstone, as cited by Sterling G. Slappey, USGA Assistant Director,
'Lindrick and St. David's, To Test Curtis Cuppers', USGA Journal and
Turf Management, Apr 1960.
For years
the folk around Lindrick, Nottinghamshire, England, have been so
keen on golf that they maintained at a railway station a small but
well-tended hole for practice use as they waited for their trains.
With such
a love as this you can imagine the resentment stirred up when the
German Luftwaffe ran a stick of bombs alarmingly near the Lindrick
Golf Course during World War Two.
Into this
hotbed of golfers seven young American women launch themselves on
May 20-21 in search of a Curtis Cup victory. The members of the
American team are:
Miss Judy
Bell, 23, Wichita, Kansas.
Miss
Joanne Goodwin, 23, Haverhill, Mass.
Miss
JoAnne Gunderson, 20, Kirkland, Wash.
Mrs. Ann
Casey Johnstone, 37, Mason City, Iowa.
Miss
Barbara McIntire, 25, Lake Park, Fla.
Miss Anne
Quast, 22, Marysville, Wash.
Non-playing Captain is Mrs. Henri Prunaret, Chairman of the USGA
Women's Committee.
Alternates are: Miss Barbara Williams, Richmond, Calif., Mrs. Paul
Dye, Jr., Indianapolis, and Mrs. Mary A. Porter, Westmont, N. J.
The last
four of America's biennial Curtis Cup teams managed to win only once
against the British, while losing twice and halving on another
occasion. The British presently hold the Curtis Cup on the strength
of having been the holder at the time of the last halved match in
1958.
The venue
for the 1960 match will be the Lindrick Course, which is near the
town of Worksop and only a few miles from the geographic heart of
England. The course, beside being a good inland course, is notable
as the site of Britain's only recent victory in the Ryder Cup
matches.
British
men professionals won there in 1957 against an American team.
At one
time the first green at Lindrick was noted locally as the
amphitheater for some of the best cock fights in Central England.
But that was many years ago, and now the bit of moorland near the
meeting place of Yorkshire, Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire is used
just for golf.
Lindrick
is a tight course with an extra amount of bunkers and an approximate
par of 71. Its length is 6,471 yards. England can be wet in
mid-May but Lindrick rests on a shelf of rock and its drainage is
rapid. The going is likely to be good.
For the
Americans who think of British courses only in terms of The Old
Course at St. Andrews, of Hoylake or of Muirfield, the Lindrick
course would be a surprise. In several ways it looks and plays like
some American courses.
A second
course in Britain where the American women will play this spring is
much closer to the concept of a British seaside links. It is Royal
St. David's at Harlech, North Wales, where the British Women's
Amateur Championship will be May 30-June 2. The American Curtis Cup
players intend to compete.
St.
David's lies just by Cardigan Bay, which is part of the Irish Sea.
A tremendous old castle sits on a hill and you never seem to get out
of sight of it.
Snowdon
Mountain is in the distance and altogether the site is a grand one
for golf.
Strangely
golf came to St. David's by way of Australia. Apparently the game
was introduced to a Briton while he was in Australia. He returned
to the home island and introduced in at Harlech. The course laid
out was given the name of Wales' Patron Saint, St. Dai, or St. David
in English.
Dunes dot
St. David's and many a shot must be hit in a low trajectory through
a saddle in the hills to a green you cannot see until you are right
on it. A high ball can be blown completely off course along the
windy Welsh Coast.
The
American Curtis Cup team flies from New York to London by jet
aircraft May 13. A charter bus takes the team and its entourage
straight to Ye Olde Bell Hotel, Worksop.
Practice
sessions will be held through May 19. The three foursomes over 36
holes will be played May 20 and the six singles over 36 holes will
be may 21.
The team
then disbands, and its members will return to London May 22 for a
few days of relaxation and sightseeing before the British
Championship at Harlech.
After the
British Championship, some of the American players will return home
and others will go on European holidays.
Following
are geographical data about the team:
Miss
Judith May Bell was born in Wichita, Kansas, on September 23, 1936,
and still lives there. She is in her last year a Arizona
University. Her most notable performance was reaching the
quarter-finals of the 1959 Women's National Amateur Championship.
She has won the Kansas State Championship three times. During 1959
she also was quarter-finalist in the Women's Western Amateur and the
North and South. She was runnerup at both the South Atlantic and
Florida East Coast tournaments. Her favorite shot is with the
wedge.
Miss
Judith Carol Eller, the youngest member of the Team, is a newcomer
to international competition. She was born August 24, 1940 at Old
Hickory, Tenn., where she still resides.
Her
biggest golf thrill came in winning the Nationals Girls' Junior
Championship for the second year in a row in 1958. Miss Eller's
1959 record included victory in the National Collegiate, the
Tennessee State and the Southern Championships. during the 1959
Women's National Amateur she lost in the quarter-finals on the 22nd
hole to Miss Joanne Goodwin. She is in her second year at the
University of Miami of Florida. One of her hobbies is collecting
hats. The wedge shot is her favorite.
Miss
Joanne Goodwin is a new member of the Curtis Cup Team. The was born
in Plymouth, Mass., February 26, 1936, very near the site where the
Pilgrim fathers landed, and new lives in Haverhill, Mass. Her
favorite shot is with the wedge. Her occupation is bookkeeping and
her hobbies outside of golf are domestic. . . sewing, knitting and
baking.
In 1959
Miss Goodwin was runner-up in the Women's National Amateur, the
North and South and the Doherty Tournament in Florida. She tied for
second low amateur in the Women's National Open and as second in the
Eastern championship (amateur). In 1958 she lost to Scotland's Mrs.
George Valentine in the fourth round of the Women's National
Amateur.
Miss
JoAnne Patricia Gunderson's favorite shot is one that isn't
universally loved - the bunker shot from sand. Miss Gunderson is
making her second Curtis Cup appearance. In the 1958 match she
defeated Mrs. George Valentine. Partnered with Miss Anne Quast, she
lost her foursome against Mrs. Frances Smith and Miss Jeanette
Robertson by 3 down and 2 to play.
Miss
Gunderson's record in the Women's National amateur Championship is
one of the finest in recent years. In 1956 when she was 16 years
old he was runner-up to Miss Marlene Stewart. Next year Miss
Gunderson won the Championship. In 1958 she lost in the semi-finals
to Miss Quast, who went on to the title. Last summer she lost in
the fourth round.
In 1959
Miss Gunderson won the Western Amateur and she was low amateur in
the Western Open, scoring 299, which put her in a tie the
Professional Patty Berg for second place in overall scoring.
Miss
Gunderson was born April 4, 1939. Her home is in Kirkland, Wash.
She attends Arizona State University.
Mrs. Ann
Casey Johnstone won the 1959 North and South and the
Trans-Mississippi Tournaments. She lost in the third round of the
Women's National Amateur. In 1958 she lost in the quarter-finals of
the National and in 1956 she went to the finals. Also during 1956
Mrs. Johnstone was runner-up in the North and South, the Western
Amateur and the Trans-Mississippi. She played on the 1958 Curtis
Cup Team. In singles she lost to Miss Janette Robertson and in
foursomes she and Miss Barbara McIntire defeated Miss Bridget
Jackson and Mrs. George Valentine.
Mrs.
Johnstone was born February 14, 1922 at Mason City, Iowa, where she
still lives. She attended the University of Iowa. Her husband, Les
Johnstone, is also a fine golfer. They have a daughter, Jean Ann
Johnstone. Mrs. Johnstone's favorite shot is the drive and she has
aced two holes. Her conspicuous interests include church work and
assistance to retarded children.
Miss
Barbara Joy McIntire is the present Women's National Amateur
Champion. She also gained the high distinction in 1956 of tying
with Mrs. Kathy Cornelius, professional, for the Women's National
Open title. Miss McIntire lost in the play-off.
She was a
member of the 1958 Curtis Cup Team, halving her singles against Mrs.
Michael Bonallack and joining Mrs. Ann Casey Johnstone for a victory
in foursomes against Miss Bridget Jackson and Mrs. George Valentine.
Besides
winning the Women's National Amateur last year Miss McIntire was
tied for second low amateur in the Women's National Open, was low
amateur in the Titleholders, and the Palm Beach Championship. She
won the Western Amateur in 1958 and the North and South in 1957.
Miss
McIntire was born January 12, 1935, in Toledo, Ohio, and now lives
in Lake Park, Fla. She attended the University of Toledo and
Rollins College. She is a real estate saleswoman. Her hobbies are
art and reading. Her favorite shot is the drive, and she has scored
one hole-in-one.
Miss Anne
Karen Quast will be making her second appearance on the Curtis Cup
Team. In the 1958 match she defeated Miss Elizabeth Price in
singles: in foursomes she and Miss JoAnne Gunderson lost to Miss
Janette Robertson and Mrs. Frances Smith.
In the
last five years of the Women's National Amateur Championship, Miss
Quast won the title in 1958, was a semi-finalist in 1956 and a
quarter-finalist in 1955, 1937 [1957] and 1959. Miss Quast has an
excellent record in stroke play also. She was low amateur in the
last two National Open Championships. In the 1956 Titleholders
tournament for amateurs and professionals, Miss Quast was runner-up
by three strokes to Professional Patty Berg. She had 299.
Miss
Quast was graduated from Stanford University last year. She was
born August 31, 1937, at Everett, Washington, and her home is in
Marysville, Washington. One of her hobbies is playing the piano.
Mrs.
Henri Prunaret, Natick, Mass., the non playing Captain of the
American team, was the United States Senior Champion in 1953. She
is Chairman of the USGA's Women's Committee and President of the
United States Senior Women's Golf Association. She is a past
president of both the Women's Golf Association of Massachusetts and
the Women's Eastern Golf Association. Mrs. Prunaret's hobbies
include not only golf but also beagling and curling. She attended
Briarcliff College.
4. Ref.
biographical information on the life and career of Ann Casey
Johnstone, as cited by Maury White, The Des Moines Register, 27 Mar
1977.
Ann Casey
Johnstone in 'Hall'
WON 6
WOMEN'S AMATEUR GOLF TITLES
By MAURY
WHITE
Register
Staff Writer
03/27/1977
The
golfing Saga of Ann Casey Johnstone started in Mason City about 1935
when she was 13 and "put to work" by her mother, the late Regina D.
Casey.
"My
father didn't play golf, but mother was pretty good," says Johnstone,
55, now of Columbia, Mo. "I started caddying for her, then started
hitting a few balls."
A few
months later, Johnstone got the only set of women's clubs she has
ever owned. A few years later, in 1941, she won the first of six
Iowa Women's Amateur titles.
That's
not bad, being a record number, which has since been tied by Corkey
Nydle of Ottumwa. But Ann Casey's fame and success spread far beyond
state borders.
During a
tremendous 1957 campaign, she was a finalist in four of the nation's
major amateur tournaments for women, including the U.S. Amateur.
That won
her the Dorothy J. Manice trophy as our nation's No. 1 amateur. On
the home front, she was named top Iowa golfer for 1957 -- woman or
man, amateur or pro.
Johnstone
was selected to the U.S. Curtis Cup team to play against England in
1958, 1960 and 1962. Just last year, Golf Digest named her as one of
six outstanding women teaching golf in the nation.
Small
wonder that today Ann Casey Johnstone becomes the eighty-third
person, and second woman, to be named to The Sunday Register's Iowa
Sports Hall of Fame.
FROM THIS
moment on, because wife and husband are integral parts of the tale,
let us speak of Mr. and Mrs. Johnstone as Les and Ann.
Let us
also speak of how they got together and where they are now, since
that is an important part of how the druggist's daughter got the
inspiration to rise to national prominence.
"I shot
72, for nine holes the first time I tried," recalls Ann. "A couple
of years later, I won the city meet. And I started taking lessons
from Les Bolstead."
Bolstead,
an outstanding teacher who was also the University of Minnesota golf
coach, had a young redhead name of Patty Berg taking lessons, too.
She and Ann became fast friends.
"We were
playing a tournament in the Chicago area in 1946 and Patty
introduced me to the assistant pro at the club," recalls Ann. "A
fellow named Les Johnstone."
They were
married two years later and Les moved to Mason City to run one of
William Bernard Casey's drug stores. He applied and was granted
reinstatement as an amateur, and still is one.
Hold on
now, for this gets complicated.
Ann Was
graduated from Iowa in 1944 with a degree in physical education.
Stephens College was seeking a woman to teach golf.
"At the
time I started, you could retain your amateur standing if you had a
college degree in P.E." explains Ann. "Later, that rule changed and
I was declared a pro."
Les had
entered her life by then and in 1948 she left Columbia to return to
Mason City as a housewife. Ann also regained her amateur standing,
and kept it until 1964. Then...
"After 16
years of marriage, I had to turn pro again to put my husband through
college," point out Ann, with pride. She returned to Stephens to
teach and coach the golf team.
Les went
to school for four years and now is a pharmacist at the Missouri
Medical Center in Columbia. Recently, he won an area amateur
tournament for senior golfers.
Ann runs
the college's nine-hole course. Her daughter, now Jeann Grabias,
once played on the Stephens' team. In 1966, Ann was named "Ladies
Professional Golf Teacher of the Year."
She is
also the co-author of "Golf -- a Positive Approach," published in
1975.
OK, Now,
let us return to 1948. The couple had two children, including a boy
who died before he was two. The golf clubs were idle for a brief
spell. Then Ann was back at it.
Ten years
after her first state amateur title, she won a second in 1951. She
was 5 feet 5 inches, good for about 200 yards off the tee and was
rarely out of the fairway.
"I never
did consider myself a good putter," she says. "But I didn't waste
many shots, either, and generally had the ball in close." Ann
started putting it all together in the mid-1950s and Les and a
brother-in-law, Bill Martin, tossed out an intriguing idea one day.
"Why don't you try to make the Curtis Cup team?" asked Les, or maybe
it was Bill. If she was seeking a challenge, and she must have been,
there it was.
"That was
my inspiration. I wanted to show I could," she says. And in 1956,
Ann became the first (and only) Iowan to reach the semifinals of the
U.S. Amateur.
It was
match play and she lost in 19 holes to a young tigress from the
Pacific Northwest. A year later, the same woman defeated Ann in the
36-hole final, 8 and 6. You might say that Ann knows a lot about
JoAnne Carner Gunderson's burst onto the national scene. Gunderson
won $103,275 as a pro in 1976.
THE FUNNY
part of 1957 was that she wound up an excellent season with a
sneaking suspicion that she was destined to be El Floppo. Ann was
runnerup in the U.S. meet, the North and South Amateur,
Trans-Mississippi and Women's Western -- plus being low amateur in
Florida's Jacksonville Open.
"It
bothered me that I hadn't won one," admits Ann, who speaks of that
campaign as her "bridesmaid year." There are folks who make careers
out of coming close.
On the
strength of those many good showings, Ann was chosen on the 1958
Curtis Cup team for the matches in Newton, Mass. She played England
in 1960 and California in 1962.
"The
first Curtis Cup had to be the high point," she says. "Standing
there, representing your country, while they play the Star Spangled
Banner and God Save The Queen."
The first
international competition may have helped in other ways, too. In
1959, she won the Trans-Miss and North and South and shared the
Women's International Four-Ball title with Marlene Streit. A list of
the more important happenings is below.
IT WAS A
good playing career and Ann deserves to be enshrined alongside an
earlier heroine, Mrs. Lucile Robinson Mann, who was inducted last
year.
Ann could
shoot unbelievably low rounds. In 1955, she wheeled the back nine at
the Davenport Country Club in 30, helped by an eagle and a double
eagle.
It tied
the lowest known nine-hole mark by a woman at the time. Berg had
previously had a 30. Patty, by the way, also introduced Ann to
playing with men's clubs.
Ann's
playing partners and rivals of those days were the titans of their
time: Berg, Gunderson, Barbara Romack, Louise Suggs, Peggy Kirk Bell
and, yes, Babe Didrikson Zaharias.
"I played
several matches against Babe and she beat me every time," recalls
Ann. "Once I had her a hole down after the first nine, but she
pulled it out.
"After
the match, she laughed and said, 'Listen, you little pipsqueak, if
you think you can beat me, you've got another think coming."
Of the
Iowa titles, the first ("because it was the first") and the last
were the most meaningful. During the last, in 1959, she set the
present record of 296.
"But the
reason it was so important was that it was done at Mason City, my
home. I'm an Iowan, true and blue."
Mrs.
Regina Casey, the lady who started it all, died one month ago at 88.
She had lots of reasons to be proud of her favorite caddie.
Ann Casey
Johnstone's career highlights
1941 --
Winner, Iowa Amateur.
1946 --
Runnerup, Iowa Amateur.
1951 --
Winner, Iowa Amateur.
1953 --
Runnerup, Iowa Amateur.
1954 --
Medalist and winner, Iowa Amateur.
1955 --
Winner, Iowa Amateur.
1956 --
Winner, Palm Beach Invitational; semifinalist, U.S. Women's Amateur.
1957 --
Iowa Golfer of the Year; runnerup, U.S. Women's Amateur; runnerup,
Trans-Mississippi Amateur; runnerup, Women's Western Amateur; low
amateur in Jacksonville Open; winner, Iowa Amateur.
1958 --
Member of U.S. Curtis Cup team; Winner of D.J. Manoce [sic] Award as
"Outstanding Amateur Golfer;" low amateur, Women's All-American
Open.
1959 --
Winner, Trans-Mississippi; winner, North and South Amateur;
co-winner with Marlene Streit, Women's International four-Ball
championship; low amateur, Women's All-American Open; winner, Iowa
Amateur; runnerup, Palm Beach Invitational.
1960 --
Member of U.S. Curtis Cup Team; winner, Women's Western Amateur;
semifinalist, U.S. Women's Amateur; semifinalist, French Open.
1961 --
Runnerup with Marlene Streit, Women's International Four-Ball
championship.
1962 --
Member of U.S. Curtis Cup team; semifinalist, Women's Western
Amateur; runnerup, Trans-Mississippi; co-winner with Deane Berman,
National Mixed Two-Ball championship; runnerup, Palm Beach
Invitational.
1963 --
Winner, Iowa Husband and Wife championship.
5. Ref.
LPGA Coach of the Year Award, LPGA.com, 9 May 2004.
1981 Mary
Dagraedt
Miami-Dade Community
College
1982 Ann
Casey Johnstone
Stephens College
1983
Barbara B. Smith
Longwood College
1984
Patricia Weis
University of Texas
1985
Diane Thomason
University of Iowa
1986
Linda Vollstedt
Arizona
State University
1987 Mary
Beth Nienhaus
Appleton West High
School
1988
Jackie Steinmann
University of California-
Los
Angeles
1989
Barbara Smith
Longwood College
1990
Cathy Bright
University of California-
Los
Angeles
1991
Carol Ludvigson
University of Oklahoma
1992 Iris
Schneider
Rollins
College
1993
Linda Vollstedt
Arizona
State University
1994
Sarah Hindi
University of New Mexico
1995 Mary
Beth McGirr
UNC
Greensboro
1996
Beans Kelly
University of Georgia
1997
Debby King
University of Memphis
1998
Jackie Booth
University of New Mexico
1999
Kathleen Teichert
University of Michigan
2000
Nancy Lewis
San
Jose State University
2001
Dianne Dailey
Wake
Forest University
2002
Jackie Booth
University of New Mexico
2003
Nancy McDaniel
University of California at Berkeley
6. Ref.
Ellen Griffin Rolex Award, NCAA News NCAA Record, 10 Feb 1997.
NOTABLES
Ann Casey
Johnstone and Herb Wimberly were honored by the College Golf
Foundation and National Golf Coaches Association. Johnstone, a
physical education instructor and head golf coach at Stephens and
codirector of the Chapel Valley Golf Clinics for the past 20 years,
received the Rolex/Gladys Palmer Meritorious Service Award for
outstanding contributions to women's collegiate golf. Wimberly, who
was golf coach at New Mexico State for more than 30 years, received
the Rolex Honor Award for outstanding service and contributions to
men's collegiate golf.
7. Ref.
Ellen Griffin Rolex Award, LPGA News, www.czgolfschool.com, 9 May
2004.
The Ellen
Griffin Rolex Award, instituted by the LPGA T&CP Division in 1989 to
honor the late Ellen Griffin, recognizes an individual, male or
female, who has made a major contribution to the teaching of golf
and who emulates Griffin's spirit, love and dedication to students,
teachers, teaching skills and the game of golf. Griffin, who passed
away in 1986, was one of the best-known women's golf teaching
professionals in American history.
8. Ref.
Ellen Griffin Rolex Award, LPGA, LPGA.com, 9 May 2004.
1989
Peggy Kirk Bell
1990
Linda Craft
1991
Shirley Englehorn
1992
Harvey Penick
1993
Goldie Bateson
1994
Carol Clark Johnson
1995
Joanne Winter
1996 Ann
Casey Johnstone
1997 Dr.
DeDe Owens
1998
Shirley Spork
1999
Betty Hicks
2000 Dr.
Gary Wiren
2001
Penny Zavichas
2002
Annette Thompson
2003 Dr.
Barbara B. Smith
9. Ref.
Gladys Palmer Meritorious Service Award as cited by the National
Golf Coaches Association, http://ngca.collegiategolf.com, 9 May
2004.
The
Gladys Palmer Meritorious Service Award is given in recognition of
outstanding service above and beyond the call of duty. Outstanding
service may take the form of years of unselfish involvement in
promoting golf at any level, or highly significant service of
far-reaching proportions.
Gladys
Palmer’s contributions to women’s collegiate golf were highly
significant. As Chairperson of the women’s division of Physical
Education at Ohio State University, she organized the first women’s
golf championship in June 1941. She believed that it was up to the
educational institutions to run an event for collegiate women, and
at the request of a particular young woman the championship was
created. The Minnesota student that brought the idea to Palmer was
Patty Berg.
This
award is intended to honor individuals who have made a substantial
contribution to the evolution and growth of women’s collegiate golf.
Recipients of this prestigious award have influenced women’s golf in
a manner that changed the complexion of the sport. Accordingly, the
award is meant to honor a pioneering spirit. While all coaches have
a responsibility to give back something to the game, consideration
for this award will only be given to those services that extend
beyond that basic duty. Since new elements have been added to the
original Gladys Palmer Award, past recipients of that award are
eligible to be nominated for the Gladys Palmer Meritorious Service
Award.
Past
Recipients and Year of Award:
Dales
McNamara - 2004, University of Tulsa
Linda
Vollstedt - 2003, Arizona State University
Peggy
Kirk Bell - 2002
Patty
Berg - 2001
Ann Pitts
- 2000, Oklahoma State University
Jackie
Tobian-Steinmann – 1999, UCLA
Mary
Fossum – 1998, Michigan State University
Ann Casey
Johnstone – 1997, Stephens College
Liz
Murphey – 1996, University of Georgia
Dianne
Dailey – 1995, Wake Forest University
Sam
Carmichael – 1994, Indiana University
Dot
Gunnells – 1993, University of North Carolina
Diane
Thomason – 1992, University of Iowa
Pat Weiss
– 1991, University of Texas
Mimi Ryan
– 1990, University of Florida
Gary
Howard – 1988, Brigham Young University
Ann Pitts
– 1987, Oklahoma State University
Jackie
Tobian-Steinmann – 1986, UCLA
Ann
marriedLes Johnstone
in 1948.
They
had the following children:
59 F i. Jean
Ann Johnstone was
born about 1953.
Notes -
1.
Ref. given names of Jean Ann Johnstone:
a.
Maury White, 'Ann Casey Johnstone in 'Hall'', Des Moines Register,
27 Mar 1977 cites Jeann.
b.
Sterling G. Slappey, USGA Assistant Director, 'Lindrick and St.
David's, To Test Curtis Cuppers', USGA Jornal and Turf Management,
Apr 1960 cites Jean Ann.
Jean married Unknown
Grabias.
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