A $300,000 Offer
In the 1920s, Chicago was one of the fastest-growing metropolitan areas in the United States. The city’s population in 1920 was 2.7 million, which had grown from just under 2.2 million in 1910. Population growth would be even sharper during the 1920s. Chicago’s population would top 3.5 million in 1930, a near 25 percent increase from the population in 1920.
Thousands of homes and dozens of residential real estate developments sprouted up beyond the city limits. Bedroom communities such as LaGrange, Oak Park, and Winnetka all became increasingly popular during the 1920s because they offered land for affordable homes, and they were close to the Loop and downtown via the ubiquitous network of rail lines radiating out from downtown train stations. LaGrange boasted that commuters were only 28 minutes away from Union Station via the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad.
By the mid-1920s, Edgewood Golf Club’s 83 acres on Ogden Avenue was attracting developers’ attention as residential real estate. Late in 1924, H.O. Stone & Company offered the club $200,000 for the land - $50,000 in cash and $150,000 in five equal payments. At the same time, William E. Harmon Company offered the club $500,000 for the land. The club elected to accept the Harmon offer, who wanted possession of the land on October 1, 1925.
Key to selling the original club to Harmon was purchasing land in the area for a new club and course. In the fall of 1924, Edgewood Golf Club took an option on the 184-acre Willis Ward farm south and west of LaGrange along Willow Springs Road. Ward, a pioneer of the area, had been born on the farm in 1852, the son of a farmer and cattle horse dealer from New York. He was 73 when he sold the property to Edgewood Golf Club.
The 177 acres of the Ward farm stretched along Willow Springs Road from 71
st to 79
th Streets and was more heavily wooded on the south end of the property, where the first dozen or so holes of the new golf course would be located. The northern end of the property was more open and would become the location of the closing holes and practice area.
When the members had first given the board authorixation to enter into an agreement to sell the old course and buy the land for a new course in September 1924, they anticipated construction starting in the spring of 1925. But Edgewood was able to hire a fully organized crew who was just finishing the Elmhurst Golf Club, so construction was underway in October 1924. At the same time, the club signed a contract with William Diddel, a noted Indianapolis golf course architect, to design the new course, and with Howard Van Doren Shaw, the Chicago architect who designed the new clubhouse.
Work on the new course proceeded throughout the summer and fall of 1925, while surveyors from the Harmon Company dodged golf balls as they laid out lots and streets for the new Edgewood Park development.