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Carolinas Golf Hall of Fame
Alexander, Skip
Aycock, Dugan
Beck, Chip
Bell, Peggy Kirk
Bennett, Grant
Boatwright, Jr, PJ
Boros, Julius
Boswell, Larry
Brandon, Cecil
Bulla, Johnny
Burns, Marge
Chapman, Richard
Cheves, Joe
Covington, Jane Crum
Cudone, Carolyn
Cunningham, Cliff
D'Angelo, Jimmy
Daniel, Beth
Derr, John
Fazio, Tom
Ferree, Jim
Florence, Terry
Floyd, L.B.
Floyd, Raymond
Ford, Sr, Frank
Glover, Randy
Grainger, Ike
Green, Sr, Ron
Griffin, Ellen
Haas, Jay
Haddock, Jesse
Hamm, Gene
Harvey, BillHeafner, Clayton
Hensley, Bill
Hoch, Scott
Jackson, Tom
Knowles, Bobby
Lathrop, Happ
Lewis, Jack
Mangum, Clyde
Maples, Dan
Maples, Ellis
Moore, Patty
Morey, Dale
Padgett, Don
Page, Estelle Lawson
Palmer, Arnold
Palmer, Johnny
Patton, Billy Joe
Penfield, Add
Picard, Henry
Poe, Henry
Rawls, Betsy
Ross, Donald
Schaal, Gary
Sifford, Charlie
Simson, Paul
Smallwood, Irwin
Smith, Sr, Charles B.
Souchak, Mike
Stranz, Mike
Taylor, Dick
Thompson, George
Thorpe, Jim
Tufts, Richard S.
Van Hoy, Hale
Ward, E Harvie
Ward, Howard
Watson, Roger
Welch, Harry
White, Orville |
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Clayton Heafner
One of the most feared competitors on the professional golf tour in the 1940's and ‘50's, Heafner gained a reputation for unpredictability and was once described as the angriest man in golf.
Before his death in 1961 at age 47, Heafner bought and operated the Eastwood Golf Club in his native city Charlotte. When his wife died a year later, Eastwood was left in trust for his three children. One of his sons, Mike, operates the club and another son, Vance, followed his father to the PGA Tour for a brief stint.
Among Heafner’s notable tour victories was the Mohoning Valley Open in 1941 and 1942, the Jacksonville (Fla.) Open in 1947, and the Colonial Invitation in 1948. Locally, he won the Carolinas Open in 1939 and 1953 and the Carolinas PGA Section title in 1950. He was twice runner-up in the US Open and first came to public eye in the Open of 1939 at Medinah. He shot a third round 66, the lowest round of that championship. It raised him into a tie for second place, but his last round of 80 dropped him out of contention. Two years later he was tied with Ben Hogan with one round to play but Hogan returned an unanswerable 67 and won by 2 stokes.
Heafner played in two Ryder Cup matches and was unbeaten in four matches. In 1951 at Pinehurst he halved with Fred Daly. In that match he was laid a stymie by the Irishman, believed to be the last stymie on record. the stymie was abolished six weeks later. He played in nine Masters Tournaments with his best finish in 1946 when he took seventh.
Clayton Heafner was inducted into the Carolinas Golf Hall of Fame in 1982.
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