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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, 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, RogerWelch, Harry
White, Orville |
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Harry Welch
While football was his main game in college—as a lineman under the legendary Wallace Wade at Duke University—it was in golf that Welch made his mark. He not only was a fine player, but he also proved to be a great leader.
Welch teamed up with fellow Hall of Famer Dale Morey to win the Carolinas Senior Four-Ball Championship on eight occasions, including the first four times the championship was played, from 1969 to 1974. He and Jack Crist won the Carolinas Four-Ball title in 1963 and he and son Charles captured the Carolinas Father-Son Championship in 1977.
His most satisfying golfing achievement, perhaps, was in the 1966 Carolinas Amateur Championship at Linville Golf Club, where he had a monumental struggle on the way to the title. In the quarterfinals, he needed 21 holes to prevail over Dillard Traynham and in the semi-finals, he went to the 20th hole before toppling the legendary Billy Joe Patton. In the championship match, he disposed of Joe Inman Jr., then a member of the Wake Forest University golf team, 5 and 4.
Additionally, Welch was medalist in the Carolinas Amateur in 1951 and ‘52 and reached the championship match in 1951, where he was defeated 2 & 1 by P.J. Boatwright Jr.
Welch, who served on the CGA’s Board of Directors for more than 40 years, was the organization’s President from 1959 to 1960.
Harry Welch was inducted into the Carolinas Golf Hall of Fame in 1981.
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