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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, 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, GarySifford, 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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Charlie Sifford
Born and raised in Charlotte, Charlie Sifford was the first African-American ever to play on the PGA Tour and became the first black to win a Tour event when a closing-round 64 propelled him to first place in the 1967 Greater Hartford Open. He also won the 1969 Los Angeles Open and took the 1980 Suntree Classic on the Senior PGA Tour. Other victories came in the 1975 PGA Seniors’ Championship, the 1957 Long Beach Open and the 1971 Sea Pines Open on the so-called “second” tour.
A long-time caddie at Charlotte Country Club and Myers Park Country Club, Sifford eventually decided he wanted to play golf for a living and turned pro in 1948 (although he didn’t join the PGA Tour until 1960 at age 36). He quietly endured taunts and insults for more than a decade before becoming the first black to play in a Tour event the 1961 Greater Greensboro Open, where he eventually finished fourth. Breaking the color barrier and playing well at Greensboro didn’t end his race-related problems, however. He wasn’t allowed to play at some tour stops and wasn’t allowed to use the locker room at some of the places that let him play. The galleries weren’t always kind to him either. “I’ve had some hard days and some good ones, but if I had it to do over, I’d do the same thing,” Sifford said at his induction ceremony. “I love the game and the world knows what I did. I feel good about myself.” He was inducted in the North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame in 1992. Charlie Sifford was inducted into the Carolinas Golf Hall of Fame in 1985.
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