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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, Bill
Heafner, Clayton
Hensley, Bill
Hoch, Scott
Jackson, Tom
Knowles, Bobby
Lathrop, Happ
Lewis, Jack
Mangum, Clyde
Maples, Dan
Maples, Ellis
Moore, PattyMorey, 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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Dale Morey
One of the country’s leading amateurs for almost three decades, Dale Morey was born in Martinsville, Ind., where he was a high school basketball star in the late 1930's. He moved to North Carolina over 20 years ago at the urging of his friend and fellow Carolinas Hall of Famer, Billy Joe Patton.
At Louisiana State University, he was on a basketball scholarship and played on NCAA championship golf teams with such notables as Jay and Lionel Hebert, Gardner Dickinson, Johnny Pott, and Earl Stewart.
He was unbeaten in match play in both high school and college. After graduation, Morey played pro basketball briefly with the Anderson Packers (Anderson, Ind.) and then served as a golf pro in St. Louis and Louisville before regaining his amateur status. His best tour finish was 4th at Montgomery, Ala. He has won most of the country’s amateur and senior amateur events among his over 200 tournament victories.
His list of wins includes state championships in 4 states (North Carolina, Indiana, Kentucky and Texas), two Southern Amateur crowns, a Western Amateur, The North and South, The Mid Atlantic Amateur, four Indiana Opens, two NC Amateurs, a Carolinas Amateur, an NC Open and 14 major senior championships.
Although he never won the US Amateur, he did reach the finals in 1953 and birdied the 34th and 35th holes at Oklahoma City to bring Gene Littler back to all square. However, Littler’s birdie on the last hole cost Morey the championship. Morey also reached the quarterfinals in 1954 and 1964, ten years apart! Dale played on two Walker Cup Teams, two Americas Cup Teams and a World Amateur Team.
He was voted into The Carolinas Golf Hall of Fame in 1982. As a competitor, he won the 1970 Carolinas Father-Son with Clyde III and took the 1962 Dunes International Four-Ball title. |
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