US2003074A - Golf playing field - Google Patents

Golf playing field Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2003074A
US2003074A US654571A US65457133A US2003074A US 2003074 A US2003074 A US 2003074A US 654571 A US654571 A US 654571A US 65457133 A US65457133 A US 65457133A US 2003074 A US2003074 A US 2003074A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
tee
green
yards
playing
fairway
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US654571A
Inventor
Benjamin E Gage
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
KELLOGG HUNTINGTON
Original Assignee
KELLOGG HUNTINGTON
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by KELLOGG HUNTINGTON filed Critical KELLOGG HUNTINGTON
Priority to US654571A priority Critical patent/US2003074A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2003074A publication Critical patent/US2003074A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A63SPORTS; GAMES; AMUSEMENTS
    • A63BAPPARATUS FOR PHYSICAL TRAINING, GYMNASTICS, SWIMMING, CLIMBING, OR FENCING; BALL GAMES; TRAINING EQUIPMENT
    • A63B69/00Training appliances or apparatus for special sports
    • A63B69/36Training appliances or apparatus for special sports for golf
    • A63B69/3691Golf practising terrains
    • A63B69/3697Golf practising terrains with putting taking place on a green other than the target green
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S273/00Amusement devices: games
    • Y10S273/13Artificial grass

Definitions

  • This invention relates to improvements in golf playing fields, and more particularly to a novel design of a field upon which the game of golf may be played, but with certain departures from the method of play as ordinarily followed on a regular golf course, due to the comparatively small area of the field.
  • the primary object of the invention is to provide facilities for playing the game of golf within the limits of a relatively small tract of ground, but without materially detracting from the enjoyment of the game or eliminating the varied conditions of play that characterize the game as played on regulation courses.
  • a further object of the invention is to supply the need for improved facilities for competitive pla-y, practice or instruction in a fraction of the time required to play the usual nine or eighteen hole course, and without entailing the time and expense of such play.
  • the purpose of the herein described playing field and method of play is not to supplant, but rather supplement the established courses, and to do so by eliminating the chief time consuming aspect of regular play, namely, the wa1king,not that this is not one of the beneficial and enjoyable aspects of the game, but rather that it permits the players to concentrate on the execution of the strokes, and it is in this department of the game only in which proficiency is recognized.
  • the object of the present invention is to provide a field so designed as to permit the playing of any number of holes, varied as to length and terrain and calling for the use of the full complement of clubs, but with this difference, that all strokes are made from a limited area and without following the ball from tee to green.
  • the same ball used for successive strokes inasmuch as the point at which each ball comes to rest is immediately shifted back to the point from which the stroke was made, and another ball is used for the next stroke, and so on until each hole is played.
  • the play on a field of the present disclosure is based on the theory that the player remains within a limited playing area, and the objective, that is, thegreen ultimately to be reached, advances closer to the player with each stroke, so that the greater the distance obtained or the accuracy with which each shot is executed, the less the distance required for the next shot, and so on until the ball is either on the green or within short approaching distance therefrom. And when this position is reached by the player or players (if a competitive match is being played) they move over to a standard putting green immediately adjacent the playing area, place their balls approximately at the point on or near the green which was their last objective, and then proceed to approach and putt on that green exactly as they would in regulation play,
  • the playing field may be any suitable tract of land selected for the purpose, although preferably of a contour not unlike the terrain on which an average fairway would be laid out.
  • the tract selected should be roughly 400 yards long by yards wide, although these dimensions would be governed somewhat by the location and ground available for the purpose.
  • the field is laid out so as to reproduce one hole of fairly long yardage, that is, a tee or driving area and a fairway of average width with the usual rough along the sides, together with sand traps and such other hazards as desired.
  • the design or layout departs from the architecture of a regular golf hole in that there is not a single green located at the far end of the fairway,
  • the tee l is a plot or area located at the playing end of the field. Its shape is generally rectangular but preferably elongated lengthwise in the direction of the fairway 2 beyond. Moreover, the tee is preferably larger than the average tee, first, because it permits frequent changes in the point from which the drives or shots are made, secondly, because suflicient yardage is provided to adjust the length of the shot to the distance from the particular objective green being played, and lastly, because the tee may be divided lengthwise into two sections, thus permitting two persons or groups of persons to play independently of each other.
  • the tee may be, say, 40 yards long by 30 yards wide, with a dividing fence 3 or the like extending along the center line near the rear end of the tee.
  • Racks for holding clubs and score boards would be located along or upon the fence, together with such other conveniences as may be necessary.
  • the surface of the tee is covered with a grass turf kept smooth and closely clipped, after the manner of the ordinary tee.
  • a series of distance markers 4 of any suitable kind the first being located at the front edge of the tee and spaced apart, say, five yards apart throughout the length of the tee.
  • these markers are used for computing the distances from the point from which a shot is to be made to any one of the objective greens.
  • sand 5 are relatively narrow strips or plots of sand 5, 5 of the same depth and condition as would be found in the average sand trap.
  • a mound simulating a bunker can be erected at some point in the sand plot so that shots from a sand trap behind a bunker can be made if called for.
  • sand plots are wider plots 6, 6 of comparatively rough, uneven and uncut ground, designed to simulate the so-called rough which is usually found bordering the fairway or at the sides and back of a green.
  • these rough plots are used when playing a shot calling for a lie in the rough".
  • This playing fairway differs from the ordinary fairway, however, in that it is lined with distance markers 2 spaced apart, say, 10 yards throughout its length. These lines may be marked in any suitable manner, as for instance white parallel lines of crushed stone, or any other material which would not be readily obliterated by rain. Again, the markers may be targets placed along the side of the fairway, in fact, any means of indicating the yardage from the tee may be used, each marker indicating the distance in units of 10 yards.
  • the objective greens 1 shown as nine in number are of the average size, say, 60 feet in diameter, and are placed on or about the fairway in any manner best suited to the contour, the only requirement being that the distances from the tee to each green be increased by definite known distances, say, 25 yards.
  • tee directly in front of the tee may be a green yards from the forward edge or other given point on the tee I, two greens a little farther out and on the sides of the fairway and both yards from the tee (one for use by each of the two groups playing from the corresponding sides of the tee), and beyond these are other objective greens at distances of yards, yards, yards, yards and so on to the most distant green which may be 250, 300 or even 400 yards from the tee, depending on the length of the fairway and the particular arrangement followed in laying out the field.
  • the four greens laid out along the centerof the fairway are merely circular plots surrounded entirely by the fairway, while those located along the edges of the fairway are irregular in shape with sand traps 8 partially surrounding them and areas of rough beyond and along the far sides thereof.
  • the several greens located in the fairway may be designated as the easy holes, and are provided for the beginners and less experienced players, while the other greens are intended for the more experienced players and more nearly simulate the more difiicult conditions of play encountered on a regulation course.
  • these objective greens being merely dummy greens, so to speak, and not actually played upon, need not be constructed with the same degree of care as a putting green or kept up with the same degree of care, although they should be kept in such condition that a ball alighting on their surface will act in much the same way as it would on a regular putting green.
  • these greens are provided with flags 9 marking an actual or imaginary hole or cup located at or near the center thereof.
  • a circle I0 is marked on the green in any suitable manner, the radius of the circle being 15 feet, with the flag as the center.
  • each circle of 30 foot diameter marks the middle distance from the edge of the green to the flag.
  • a tower or elevated observation post II is placed along the left side of the fairway approximately midway its length and, say, from 150 to 200 yards from the tee.
  • this tower is located an observer or call-boy whose duty is to locate or spot the balls as they are played and to inform the players on the tee either by calling through a megaphone or, if necessary, through a telephone and loud speaker system.
  • the information given is in terms of the distance, location and "lie" of each ball with relation to the particular objective green being played, and is used by the player in playing of the next'stroke, as will be presently seen from the description of the method of play.
  • the puttinggreen I 2 is located near and to one side of the tee or playing area I, and although only one of these greens is shown, there may be another on the opposite side. one for each group of players using the tee.
  • the playing green is actually played upon and, therefore, is the duplicate of a regulation green with a smooth putting surface guarded by sand traps or bunkers and otherwise designed to aiford actual playing conditions.
  • the area of ground l3 in front of the green and paralleling the tee is of the same character as the fairway and simulates that portion of the fairway from which approach shots are made.
  • This area of fairway is marked as by a series of arcuate parallel lines l4 preferably spaced 5 yards apart and indicating distances of 5 to 25 yards from the near edge of the green. And finally the green has-the usual hole and marking flag but no distance indicating circle as in the case of the objective greens.
  • the first hole to be played is 285 yards, and since the objective green corresponding more nearly to this distance is 275 yards from the tee, this green is selected as the objective, and consequently the first player places his ball opposite the second five yard marker from the front edge of the tee or other point indicating the zero or base line, thus making the full distance 285 yards (275+10).
  • the player drives toward the green and his ball comes to rest, say, 55
  • the call-boy in the tower spots the ball and signals back 55 yards short-fairway.
  • the second player now drives a ball from the same point, but not with as good direction or distance as his opponent, with the result that his ball lands in the rough some 85 yards short to the far side of the green.
  • the call-boy then signals "85 yards short-mug
  • the first player now prepares for his second shot, having entered the length of his drive on the score card, viz: 230 yards (285-55), leaving a distance of 55 yards to reach the green.
  • the second player now takes his second shot, and since his remaining distance is 85 yards and from a lie in the rough, he drops his second ball in the rough plot 6 at the side ofthe tee and plays for the objective green 75 yards from the tee but from a distance 10 yards back from the forward tee marker so as to obtain the required 85 yards (75+10).
  • Such a field may be operated for the benefit of the public for which a playing fee would be charged, or it may be installed as a part of an established golf course for practice purposes or for those not having the time to play the regular course.
  • the exact design of the field may be varied to conform to the terrain or ideas of the architect, so long as it permits of the style of play herein described wherein all of the strokes are made from within a comparatively small area wherein the objective greens 5 actual putting green.
  • a golf playing field comprising: a fairway 10 provided with sand traps; a tee-area at one end of said fairway comprising co-extensive longitudinally extending strips'of sand and surface corresponding to said fairway surface; a pinrality of objective greens disposed along said fairway at measured distances in advance -of said tee area, the distance between adjacent objective greens being not greater than the length of said tee-area; and a playing green and associated approach-area in rear of said objective greens and apart from said fairway.

Landscapes

  • Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • General Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Physical Education & Sports Medicine (AREA)
  • Management, Administration, Business Operations System, And Electronic Commerce (AREA)

Description

May 28, 1935. A E 2,003,074
GOLF PLAYING FIELD Filed Feb. 1, 1933 Patented May 28, 1935 GOLF PLAYING FIELD Benjamin E. Gage, Evanston, Ill., assignor to Kellogg Huntington, Evanston, Ill.
Application February 1, 1933, Serial No, 654,571
1 Claim.
This invention relates to improvements in golf playing fields, and more particularly to a novel design of a field upon which the game of golf may be played, but with certain departures from the method of play as ordinarily followed on a regular golf course, due to the comparatively small area of the field.
The primary object of the invention is to provide facilities for playing the game of golf within the limits of a relatively small tract of ground, but without materially detracting from the enjoyment of the game or eliminating the varied conditions of play that characterize the game as played on regulation courses.
A further object of the invention is to supply the need for improved facilities for competitive pla-y, practice or instruction in a fraction of the time required to play the usual nine or eighteen hole course, and without entailing the time and expense of such play. It might be added in this connection that the purpose of the herein described playing field and method of play is not to supplant, but rather supplement the established courses, and to do so by eliminating the chief time consuming aspect of regular play, namely, the wa1king,not that this is not one of the beneficial and enjoyable aspects of the game, but rather that it permits the players to concentrate on the execution of the strokes, and it is in this department of the game only in which proficiency is recognized.
It may be observed also that the opportunity for practice or play within comparatively small areas and in more or less concentrated form,
has been heretofore restricted to the so-called miniature putting courses and practice driving fields, but these facilities fall far short of offering an attractive substitute for regular play, since the variety of shots that can be played is: quite limited, the actual playing conditions are but meagerly simulated, and theopportunity for competitive play is largely lacking.
In the main then, the object of the present invention is to provide a field so designed as to permit the playing of any number of holes, varied as to length and terrain and calling for the use of the full complement of clubs, but with this difference, that all strokes are made from a limited area and without following the ball from tee to green. Nor is the same ball used for successive strokes inasmuch as the point at which each ball comes to rest is immediately shifted back to the point from which the stroke was made, and another ball is used for the next stroke, and so on until each hole is played. In short, the play on a field of the present disclosure is based on the theory that the player remains within a limited playing area, and the objective, that is, thegreen ultimately to be reached, advances closer to the player with each stroke, so that the greater the distance obtained or the accuracy with which each shot is executed, the less the distance required for the next shot, and so on until the ball is either on the green or within short approaching distance therefrom. And when this position is reached by the player or players (if a competitive match is being played) they move over to a standard putting green immediately adjacent the playing area, place their balls approximately at the point on or near the green which was their last objective, and then proceed to approach and putt on that green exactly as they would in regulation play,
Thus with the foregoing brief outline of the arrangement of the field and method of play, it will be seen that all of the conditions of actual play can be closely simulatedwithout the players walking any appreciable distance; in fact, the design of the field and particularly the actual playing area provides for the execution of strokes from the rough, sand traps or fairway, as well as drives from thetee, without moving more than a few yards.
A more complete conception of the field and method of play will be gained from the description to follow, and in connection with the accompanying drawing which shows a typical design for a playing field in plan view.
The playing field may be any suitable tract of land selected for the purpose, although preferably of a contour not unlike the terrain on which an average fairway would be laid out. Considerable latitude would be permitted in the selection of a site for the field, since it could be flat or rolling, although not so undulating as to conceal any considerable part of the field from view from the driving area. The tract selected should be roughly 400 yards long by yards wide, although these dimensions would be governed somewhat by the location and ground available for the purpose. In the main, the field is laid out so as to reproduce one hole of fairly long yardage, that is, a tee or driving area and a fairway of average width with the usual rough along the sides, together with sand traps and such other hazards as desired. The design or layout, however, departs from the architecture of a regular golf hole in that there is not a single green located at the far end of the fairway,
but a number of greens placed in or along the fairway and different and known distances from the tee. Here again the location of the greens is a matter of choice as well as-the number. In the plan herein disclosed there are nine greens ranging from, say, 25 to 200 yards from the tee, four of which are placed in the fairway and the reminder along one or both sides of the fairway. These nine greens which may be designated as the objective greens, are supplemented by one or more playing or putting greens'located to one side of and adjacent the tee or driving area. The so-called objective greens are not actually played upon but merely serve as objectives for the shots played, while a playing green is actually used in the making of approach shots and putting strokes.
It may be observed at this point that terms common to golf parlance are used freely, in the belief that the game has now become sufliciently well known to permit of such use without explanation.
Thus the tee l is a plot or area located at the playing end of the field. Its shape is generally rectangular but preferably elongated lengthwise in the direction of the fairway 2 beyond. Moreover, the tee is preferably larger than the average tee, first, because it permits frequent changes in the point from which the drives or shots are made, secondly, because suflicient yardage is provided to adjust the length of the shot to the distance from the particular objective green being played, and lastly, because the tee may be divided lengthwise into two sections, thus permitting two persons or groups of persons to play independently of each other. Thus for example the tee may be, say, 40 yards long by 30 yards wide, with a dividing fence 3 or the like extending along the center line near the rear end of the tee. Racks for holding clubs and score boards would be located along or upon the fence, together with such other conveniences as may be necessary.
The surface of the tee is covered with a grass turf kept smooth and closely clipped, after the manner of the ordinary tee. Along the sides of the tee are a series of distance markers 4 of any suitable kind, the first being located at the front edge of the tee and spaced apart, say, five yards apart throughout the length of the tee. As will be presently explained in greater detail, these markers are used for computing the distances from the point from which a shot is to be made to any one of the objective greens. Beyond the distance markers and extending lengthwise on both sides of the tee are relatively narrow strips or plots of sand 5, 5 of the same depth and condition as would be found in the average sand trap.
If desired, although not shown, a mound simulating a bunker can be erected at some point in the sand plot so that shots from a sand trap behind a bunker can be made if called for. And finally beyond the sand plots are wider plots 6, 6 of comparatively rough, uneven and uncut ground, designed to simulate the so-called rough which is usually found bordering the fairway or at the sides and back of a green. As in the case of the sand plots, these rough plots are used when playing a shot calling for a lie in the rough".
Referring now to the design of the fairway 2, it has already been explained that it is a reproduction of an average fairway both as to dimensions, contour and surface conditions, be-
ing of clipped turf with sand traps and whatever other hazards are permissible, placed here and there. This playing fairway differs from the ordinary fairway, however, in that it is lined with distance markers 2 spaced apart, say, 10 yards throughout its length. These lines may be marked in any suitable manner, as for instance white parallel lines of crushed stone, or any other material which would not be readily obliterated by rain. Again, the markers may be targets placed along the side of the fairway, in fact, any means of indicating the yardage from the tee may be used, each marker indicating the distance in units of 10 yards.
The objective greens 1 shown as nine in number, are of the average size, say, 60 feet in diameter, and are placed on or about the fairway in any manner best suited to the contour, the only requirement being that the distances from the tee to each green be increased by definite known distances, say, 25 yards. Thus directly in front of the tee may be a green yards from the forward edge or other given point on the tee I, two greens a little farther out and on the sides of the fairway and both yards from the tee (one for use by each of the two groups playing from the corresponding sides of the tee), and beyond these are other objective greens at distances of yards, yards, yards, yards and so on to the most distant green which may be 250, 300 or even 400 yards from the tee, depending on the length of the fairway and the particular arrangement followed in laying out the field.
It will be noted that the four greens laid out along the centerof the fairway are merely circular plots surrounded entirely by the fairway, while those located along the edges of the fairway are irregular in shape with sand traps 8 partially surrounding them and areas of rough beyond and along the far sides thereof. The several greens located in the fairway may be designated as the easy holes, and are provided for the beginners and less experienced players, while the other greens are intended for the more experienced players and more nearly simulate the more difiicult conditions of play encountered on a regulation course.
It will be manifest that these objective greens being merely dummy greens, so to speak, and not actually played upon, need not be constructed with the same degree of care as a putting green or kept up with the same degree of care, although they should be kept in such condition that a ball alighting on their surface will act in much the same way as it would on a regular putting green. However, these greens are provided with flags 9 marking an actual or imaginary hole or cup located at or near the center thereof. For convenience in estimating the distance that a ball on the green is from the flag on any green, a circle I0 is marked on the green in any suitable manner, the radius of the circle being 15 feet, with the flag as the center. Thus if the greens are of a 60 foot diameter, each circle of 30 foot diameter marks the middle distance from the edge of the green to the flag.
To complete the layout of the fairway and objective greens, a tower or elevated observation post II is placed along the left side of the fairway approximately midway its length and, say, from 150 to 200 yards from the tee. In this tower is located an observer or call-boy whose duty is to locate or spot the balls as they are played and to inform the players on the tee either by calling through a megaphone or, if necessary, through a telephone and loud speaker system. The information given is in terms of the distance, location and "lie" of each ball with relation to the particular objective green being played, and is used by the player in playing of the next'stroke, as will be presently seen from the description of the method of play.
To complete the field layout, the puttinggreen I 2 is located near and to one side of the tee or playing area I, and although only one of these greens is shown, there may be another on the opposite side. one for each group of players using the tee. As already noted, the playing green is actually played upon and, therefore, is the duplicate of a regulation green with a smooth putting surface guarded by sand traps or bunkers and otherwise designed to aiford actual playing conditions. Moreover the area of ground l3 in front of the green and paralleling the tee is of the same character as the fairway and simulates that portion of the fairway from which approach shots are made. This area of fairway is marked as by a series of arcuate parallel lines l4 preferably spaced 5 yards apart and indicating distances of 5 to 25 yards from the near edge of the green. And finally the green has-the usual hole and marking flag but no distance indicating circle as in the case of the objective greens.
For the purpose of illustrating the method of play, it will be assumed that two persons wish to engage in a competitive match. At the outset they agree upon a certain sequence of holes to be played, as for instance, the holes that make up a certain golf course'with which one or both are familiar, or they may agree upon an arbitrary selection of holes based upon average hole distribution, or elseplay the holes as they are laid'out on the field in a certain sequence. The method of play is the same in any case, although the possibility of duplicating the holes of any regulation golf course indicates the added interest that may be injected into the play. Special score cards are provided on which both distances and strokes can be tabulated in the playing of each hole, as will be presently explained. Assume then that the first hole to be played is 285 yards, and since the objective green corresponding more nearly to this distance is 275 yards from the tee, this green is selected as the objective, and consequently the first player places his ball opposite the second five yard marker from the front edge of the tee or other point indicating the zero or base line, thus making the full distance 285 yards (275+10). The player drives toward the green and his ball comes to rest, say, 55
yards short and in the fairway. The call-boy in the tower spots the ball and signals back 55 yards short-fairway. The second player now drives a ball from the same point, but not with as good direction or distance as his opponent, with the result that his ball lands in the rough some 85 yards short to the far side of the green. The call-boy then signals "85 yards short-mug The first player now prepares for his second shot, having entered the length of his drive on the score card, viz: 230 yards (285-55), leaving a distance of 55 yards to reach the green. He now selects the playing green located yards from the tee, takes his stance on the tee opposite the five yard line to make the total distance yards (50+5), selects the club he would ordinarily use from that distance and a fairway lie, and proceeds to make his second shot which lands on the green, say, 12 feet from the flag. The second player now takes his second shot, and since his remaining distance is 85 yards and from a lie in the rough, he drops his second ball in the rough plot 6 at the side ofthe tee and plays for the objective green 75 yards from the tee but from a distance 10 yards back from the forward tee marker so as to obtain the required 85 yards (75+10). But still somewhat erratic, his ball does not reach the green but stops, say, 15 yards short. Now, both players have completed two strokes each, and one is on the green and the other 15 yards short, so instead of playing the remaining strokes from the tee, they move over to the playing green l2, each playing his third ball from the same position on or near that green as their second balls were with relation to the last objective green, that is, one places his ball 12 feet from the flag, and the other player places his ball 15 yards from the edge of the green, using the five yard lines for this purpose, and then proceed to approach and putt out the hole exactly as they would had they been playing the same hole in the regulation manner. Thus it will be seen that all shots to be played from positions on or within 25 yards of the objective greens are actually played out on the playing green. In the same manner the second hole would be played, and so on, until the full round has been completed, in every instance playing successive strokes from the tee, sand or rough, and depending on the lie of the ball played on the preceding stroke, and playing for the objective green which gives them the correct distance, plus any additional correction as to distance by shifting their playing position on the tee with the aid of the five yard markers. There may be a variation in the method of playing out the holes, particularly when there are others waiting to play, and that is, instead of moving over to the playing green to complete each hole as played, all holes may be played from the tee to distances within 25 yards of the greens, after which the players proceed to the playing green and play out the holes in order.
Manifestly different balls are played for successive strokes except on or near the putting green, the balls on the fairway being collected from time to time and returned to the tee.
In the same manner a four ball match can be played, or a single person can practice or receive instructions in the use of all clubs under different conditions of play. In short, play on a field such as herein described, affords practically the same opportunity for play as would be found on a regulation course, except that the walking is eliminated and consequently the time consumed, it being estimated that a full round of 18 holes can be played in approximately 40 minutes as compared with from 3 to 4 hours on a regular course.
Such a field may be operated for the benefit of the public for which a playing fee would be charged, or it may be installed as a part of an established golf course for practice purposes or for those not having the time to play the regular course.
As already stated, the exact design of the field may be varied to conform to the terrain or ideas of the architect, so long as it permits of the style of play herein described wherein all of the strokes are made from within a comparatively small area wherein the objective greens 5 actual putting green.
are located at diflerent known distances from the stroke-making area; and wherein the conditions existing around those objectives are reproduced within said playing area. even to an Having set forth a preferred embodiment of my invention,
I claim: 4
A golf playing field comprising: a fairway 10 provided with sand traps; a tee-area at one end of said fairway comprising co-extensive longitudinally extending strips'of sand and surface corresponding to said fairway surface; a pinrality of objective greens disposed along said fairway at measured distances in advance -of said tee area, the distance between adjacent objective greens being not greater than the length of said tee-area; and a playing green and associated approach-area in rear of said objective greens and apart from said fairway.
immature IE. GAGE.
US654571A 1933-02-01 1933-02-01 Golf playing field Expired - Lifetime US2003074A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US654571A US2003074A (en) 1933-02-01 1933-02-01 Golf playing field

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US654571A US2003074A (en) 1933-02-01 1933-02-01 Golf playing field

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2003074A true US2003074A (en) 1935-05-28

Family

ID=24625390

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US654571A Expired - Lifetime US2003074A (en) 1933-02-01 1933-02-01 Golf playing field

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2003074A (en)

Cited By (34)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2684849A (en) * 1950-07-07 1954-07-27 Bernhard R Bermann Simulated golf game apparatus
US2846229A (en) * 1954-05-24 1958-08-05 Luther O Morris Golf course
US3083021A (en) * 1960-07-05 1963-03-26 John E Reilly Golf course
US3156470A (en) * 1959-07-02 1964-11-10 Edgar H Newkirk Multiple golf course
US3342494A (en) * 1964-07-20 1967-09-19 D C May Ma Crepe Corp Simulated golf course
US3599981A (en) * 1969-04-21 1971-08-17 Joseph Zausmer Golf course
US3604710A (en) * 1969-08-15 1971-09-14 John Jacobs Indoor golf putting game
US3620536A (en) * 1970-03-06 1971-11-16 Edward L Lau Golf course
US3649027A (en) * 1968-12-04 1972-03-14 Theodore L Vallas Golf course
US3685832A (en) * 1968-07-12 1972-08-22 Theodore B Johnson Method of playing a golf game
US3877704A (en) * 1972-12-04 1975-04-15 Ralph Mytton Bayley Apparatus for playing a golf game
US3904209A (en) * 1974-03-25 1975-09-09 Clarence A Thomas Compact golf course
US4019748A (en) * 1974-03-15 1977-04-26 Healey Gerald P Method of playing a golf game
US4063738A (en) * 1975-10-07 1977-12-20 Michalson George M Golf courses
US4129300A (en) * 1976-11-18 1978-12-12 Magnuson Arthur P Compact golf course
US4145053A (en) * 1975-03-24 1979-03-20 Healey Gerald P Golf course
US4225136A (en) * 1978-05-18 1980-09-30 Monte Beam Condensed golf playing area with chance selected starting locations
US4572512A (en) * 1982-09-30 1986-02-25 Tegart Harold G Golf course
WO1989002298A1 (en) * 1987-09-16 1989-03-23 Ralph Perry A method and course for playing a golf-like game
US4941664A (en) * 1989-01-30 1990-07-17 Pate Dwight W Golf shot duplicator
US4988105A (en) * 1987-09-16 1991-01-29 Ralph Perry Method and course for playing a golf-like game
US5026059A (en) * 1989-01-30 1991-06-25 Dwight W. Pate Golf shot duplicator
US5112054A (en) * 1990-03-15 1992-05-12 Gordon Oswald Golf park
US5163677A (en) * 1990-12-03 1992-11-17 Foley Derek F Golf driving range
US5163683A (en) * 1990-03-15 1992-11-17 Gordon Oswald Golf park
US5184824A (en) * 1990-07-03 1993-02-09 Riedinger Thomas R Golf facility and method
US5265875A (en) * 1991-07-23 1993-11-30 Fitzgerald John H Reduced area, night playable golf course
US5564988A (en) * 1994-10-13 1996-10-15 Brooks; Jerry B. Range golf system
US5700204A (en) * 1996-06-17 1997-12-23 Teder; Rein S. Projectile motion parameter determination device using successive approximation and high measurement angle speed sensor
WO2001026743A2 (en) 1999-10-12 2001-04-19 Tri-Par Courses Inc. Golf course and method of play
US6409607B1 (en) 1999-04-20 2002-06-25 Jeffrey M. Libit Golf courses and methods of playing golf
US20050096143A1 (en) * 2003-10-30 2005-05-05 Terrence Anton Course layout and scoring method for playing a game on the course layout
US20060273505A1 (en) * 2005-06-01 2006-12-07 Erel Milshtein Apparatus for rolling and collecting a disk-like object on a surface
US20080268986A1 (en) * 2007-04-27 2008-10-30 Woodrow Lloyd Pelley Simulated Golf Game

Cited By (36)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2684849A (en) * 1950-07-07 1954-07-27 Bernhard R Bermann Simulated golf game apparatus
US2846229A (en) * 1954-05-24 1958-08-05 Luther O Morris Golf course
US3156470A (en) * 1959-07-02 1964-11-10 Edgar H Newkirk Multiple golf course
US3083021A (en) * 1960-07-05 1963-03-26 John E Reilly Golf course
US3342494A (en) * 1964-07-20 1967-09-19 D C May Ma Crepe Corp Simulated golf course
US3685832A (en) * 1968-07-12 1972-08-22 Theodore B Johnson Method of playing a golf game
US3649027A (en) * 1968-12-04 1972-03-14 Theodore L Vallas Golf course
US3599981A (en) * 1969-04-21 1971-08-17 Joseph Zausmer Golf course
US3604710A (en) * 1969-08-15 1971-09-14 John Jacobs Indoor golf putting game
US3620536A (en) * 1970-03-06 1971-11-16 Edward L Lau Golf course
US3877704A (en) * 1972-12-04 1975-04-15 Ralph Mytton Bayley Apparatus for playing a golf game
US4019748A (en) * 1974-03-15 1977-04-26 Healey Gerald P Method of playing a golf game
US3904209A (en) * 1974-03-25 1975-09-09 Clarence A Thomas Compact golf course
US4145053A (en) * 1975-03-24 1979-03-20 Healey Gerald P Golf course
US4063738A (en) * 1975-10-07 1977-12-20 Michalson George M Golf courses
US4129300A (en) * 1976-11-18 1978-12-12 Magnuson Arthur P Compact golf course
US4225136A (en) * 1978-05-18 1980-09-30 Monte Beam Condensed golf playing area with chance selected starting locations
US4572512A (en) * 1982-09-30 1986-02-25 Tegart Harold G Golf course
WO1989002298A1 (en) * 1987-09-16 1989-03-23 Ralph Perry A method and course for playing a golf-like game
US4928973A (en) * 1987-09-16 1990-05-29 Ralph Perry Method and course for playing a golf-like game
US4988105A (en) * 1987-09-16 1991-01-29 Ralph Perry Method and course for playing a golf-like game
US4941664A (en) * 1989-01-30 1990-07-17 Pate Dwight W Golf shot duplicator
US5026059A (en) * 1989-01-30 1991-06-25 Dwight W. Pate Golf shot duplicator
US5112054A (en) * 1990-03-15 1992-05-12 Gordon Oswald Golf park
US5163683A (en) * 1990-03-15 1992-11-17 Gordon Oswald Golf park
US5184824A (en) * 1990-07-03 1993-02-09 Riedinger Thomas R Golf facility and method
US5163677A (en) * 1990-12-03 1992-11-17 Foley Derek F Golf driving range
US5265875A (en) * 1991-07-23 1993-11-30 Fitzgerald John H Reduced area, night playable golf course
US5564988A (en) * 1994-10-13 1996-10-15 Brooks; Jerry B. Range golf system
US5700204A (en) * 1996-06-17 1997-12-23 Teder; Rein S. Projectile motion parameter determination device using successive approximation and high measurement angle speed sensor
US6409607B1 (en) 1999-04-20 2002-06-25 Jeffrey M. Libit Golf courses and methods of playing golf
WO2001026743A2 (en) 1999-10-12 2001-04-19 Tri-Par Courses Inc. Golf course and method of play
US20050096143A1 (en) * 2003-10-30 2005-05-05 Terrence Anton Course layout and scoring method for playing a game on the course layout
US20060273505A1 (en) * 2005-06-01 2006-12-07 Erel Milshtein Apparatus for rolling and collecting a disk-like object on a surface
US20080268986A1 (en) * 2007-04-27 2008-10-30 Woodrow Lloyd Pelley Simulated Golf Game
US7479073B2 (en) 2007-04-27 2009-01-20 Woodrow Lloyd Pelley Simulated golf game

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2003074A (en) Golf playing field
US1851423A (en) Golf game
US4192510A (en) Apparatus for simulating game of golf
US5419561A (en) Method of playing golf game on reduced size course
US4277065A (en) Golf game and method for playing the same
US2248053A (en) Golf practice device
US3649027A (en) Golf course
US4145053A (en) Golf course
US3260526A (en) Simulated golf game
US4928973A (en) Method and course for playing a golf-like game
US4129300A (en) Compact golf course
US4283056A (en) Process for simulating game of golf
US4988105A (en) Method and course for playing a golf-like game
US5588652A (en) Golf range game
US3342494A (en) Simulated golf course
JPH06505891A (en) golf facilities
US4019748A (en) Method of playing a golf game
US2164808A (en) Golf game
US7291071B2 (en) Compact golf facility and a method of playing a golf game
US3892405A (en) Golf game
US6875121B2 (en) Method of playing an outdoor bulls-eye target golf game
US7479073B2 (en) Simulated golf game
US6336875B1 (en) Fantasy golf game
US20050096143A1 (en) Course layout and scoring method for playing a game on the course layout
US20120104740A1 (en) Enhanced Scorecard System For Golf