From 1949 to 1952 the North Texas Golf Team accomplished a string of wins at the NCAA Championships, defeating larger schools with more established golfing programs. The four man team won this golf tournament for four years and put larger schools on notice that the Eagles competed to win. The team’s winning streak placed them alongside schools like Yale, Princeton, and University of Houston, where each school’s team won more than three tournaments in a row.

A large part of the success of the golf team was due to the thoughtful coaching of Fred Rayzor Cobb. Coach Cobb originally joined North Texas State Teachers College as an assistant football coach in 1940. He began working with the golf team that same year. His golf teams would go on to win all three of the major college golf tournaments: the National Collegiate Athletic Association, the Southern Intercollegiate, and the Rocky Mountain Collegiate.

Cobb was noted for not giving lessons in golf to his players. He would watch them from a distance, usually on the clubhouse hill, with a pair of binoculars. Then he would have a quiet word with them after the practice to provide advice and correct their mechanical faults.

In 1945 Coach Cobb was instrumental in setting up golf as a major sport for North Texas. The UNT golf program took off with the purchase and development of a nine-hole golf course. The course was located on a tract of land formerly known as Highland Park. In the 1890s this was a favorite spot for the citizens of Denton to hold picnics. By 1907 a street car system was installed and the line terminated at Highland Park. This was a tremendous aid in moving the citizens out to this area for recreational gatherings. One such event took place in June 1912, when over a thousand people gathered in the park to watch an exhibition of airplanes over Denton. Later the site was used as a training ground for soldiers in World War I and World War II and as a golf course for the rehabilitation of returning soldiers.

The construction of a Golf Club House was started in 1946 and the facility opened in 1947. The structure was approximately 84,707 square feet. It was a one and a half story structure with a glassed in solarium that faced southwest. Built on a hill, the structure overlooked a three acre lake. The famous Texas golfer Byron Nelson took part in the dedication ceremony for the building.

In 1949 the golf team took part in the NCAA meet in Ames, Iowa. Previous NCAA competitions had not gone well for the Eagles, with tenth place finishes their unfortunate outcome. The teams favored to win the 1949 event were Purdue and The University of Texas. However, the Eagles won by ten strokes. The team members were L. M. Crannell, Jr., Gene Towry, Captain Palmer Lawrence, and Buster Reed. When asked by a reporter for the Denton Record Chronicle what the biggest thrill of the tournament was, team captain Palmer Lawrence replied, “Showing the ‘big’ boys what North Texas State can do.” The North Texas win was the first time a Texas team had won the 52 year old tournament.

The winning streak would continue for three more years. North Texas golfers brought back the trophy from Albuquerque, New Mexico; Columbus, Ohio; and Lafayette, Indiana. The membership of the teams changed due to graduations and the NCAA rule that allowed members to compete for only three years. North Texas golfers sent to the NCAA competitions were: Ross Collins, Joe Conrad, L. M. Crannell, Jr., Marion Hiskey, Don January, Palmer Lawrence, Billy Maxwell, Buster Reed, and Gene Towry.

Several of the Eagle golfers would go on to professional golfing careers, among them Don January (who played in the PGA and Senior PGA), Billy Maxwell, Ross Collins, and Joe Conrad. Members of the Texas Golf Hall of Fame and the North Texas Athletic Hall of Fame are Ross Collins, Joe Conrad, Don January and Billy Maxwell. Fred Cobb is honored in the North Texas Athletic Hall of Fame and the Golf Coaches Association of America Hall of Fame.

Coach Cobb died in 1954 at the age of 55. His pallbearers were his former golf team members: Ross Collins, Palmer Lawrence, L. M. Crannell, Jr., Claude (Buster) Reed, Billy Maxwell, Don January, Joe Conrad, and Marion Hiskey.

— by Perri Hamilton, Assistant to the Archivist 

5 Responses to “North Texas golf champions”

  1. HARRY REYNOLDS

    I was there from 1948-1954. I still have a mallet head putter that Byron Nelson(He used a blade putter) gave to Buster Reed, and Buster sold to me. The best round of golf I ever witnessed was the 1953 Texas Cup Match between pros Nelson and Fred Hawkins versus Don January and Billy Maxwell at Dallas Country Club. January was 11 under, the team of January and Maxwell were 15 under and the foursome was 21 strokes under par.

    Reply
    • UNT Special Collections

      Hi Phyllis,

      Thank you for your question. The UNT golf course was leased to the building of the Sheraton Hotel in 1983. Sumner, Greener, Fussell Group of Dallas agreed to spend an average of at least $20,000 a year on capital improvements during the first 5 years. North Texas retained the sole right to relocate greens, tee boxes, and fairways. The course was to be maintained at no less than 6,200 yards with no fewer than 18 holes. The corporation was to receive all the profits or sustain all the losses of the golf course. [Denton Record Chronicle 5/27/84] The Club house was torn down in 1986 to make way for the construction of the Sheraton Hotel, and in 2001 when Apogee Stadium opened a large portion of the golf course was transformed into what is now the main tailgating area of the stadium.

      UNT Special Collections

      Reply

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