Posted: 7:00 a.m.
Sunday, Sept. 13, 2015
Weatherwax’s future hard to read
By http://www.journal-news.com/staff/rick-mccrabb/" rel="nofollow - Staff Writer
BUTLER COUNTY —
Those
hoping to play Weatherwax Golf Course may not want to book a tee time beyond
next year.
Weatherwax
will remain a 36-hole public golf course through 2016, but the owner has
refused to announce future plans.
Myron
Bowling, of Myron Bowling Auctioneers Inc., in Hamilton,
purchased Weatherwax from the City of Middletown
for $1.6 million in 2014. Since then, he has leased the course to Jim Kraft,
former golf pro at Pleasant Hill Golf Club in Monroe. Kraft signed a one-year lease in
November 2014 and that lease expires on Nov. 2, 2015, but Kraft has signed a
one-year option through 2016, he said.
Kraft
and Bowling have declined to disclose the value of the lease agreement. Just
two weeks before Kraft signed the lease in 2014, an auction for the property,
equipment and other items was scheduled, but later canceled.
When
asked what will happen to the 425-acre property after the 2016 golf season,
Bowling refused to disclose his intentions. He confirmed the sale of the
property, but refused to say if the owners will continue to operate it as a
golf course or another use. There has been much speculation that Weatherwax,
once called the “gem” of Middletown,
will be turned into green space or used as horse trails.
“You
can write everything you hear on the street,” Bowling said, “and it will be all
wrong.”
Tim
Sorrows, 58, who holds the course record (63) at Weatherwax, has heard all the
rumors and said none of them “make any sense to all of us golfers.”
Sorrows
has joked he wanted his ashes spread at Weatherwax.
“I
planned to play there forever,” he said.
Eventually,
Bowling said, he will announce who purchased the course and their business
plans.
“I
can’t talk about that right now,” Bowling said Wednesday afternoon. “There will
come a time.”
He
was asked if Middletown
residents and the golf community will be satisfied with his decision.
“I
think so,” he said.
Bowling
said he purchased Weatherwax, not for its 36-hole tree-lined layout, but for
its acreage.
“Golf
is a terrible business,” he said.
If
given the opportunity, Kraft said he’d like to continue leasing Weatherwax.
“This
golf season has gone well,” he said. “It’s been a good year.”
And
what happens after 2016?
“I’d
rather not guess,” Kraft said softly.
Bowling
sounded impressed by the work that Kraft and his golf management team have done
keeping Weatherwax’s playing conditions up to its reputation. The course has
traditionally been ranked as one of the best public courses in Ohio.
“He
certainly has done everything to the letter,” Bowling said. “He works hard and
he’s dedicated to it.”
Weatherwax,
one of the few 36-hole public facilities in the state, hosts numerous men’s and
women’s leagues, the city’s golf championships, charity tournaments and the
boys and girls Ohio High School Athletic Association District Championships
every fall.
Several
people who were putting their clubs in their cars after playing Weatherwax this
week, said they have heard rumors that Weatherwax will be something other than
a golf course after 2016.
“That
would be a shame,” said Ken Knight, who lives in Fairfield
and started playing Weatherwax when he worked at Akers Packaging in Middletown.
Years
ago, he said, those in the Cincinnati area
considered Weatherwax a golf resort, a facility typically seen in Myrtle Beach.
Another
golfer, Tom Gallagher, of Middletown,
called Weatherwax “part of the community” because of its rich history and
connection to the city.
Gallagher
said when city leaders voted to sell the course to an auctioneer, that sent up
red flags.
He
said auctioneers “aren’t in the business of keeping property. They want to make
money.”
For
city leaders, selling Weatherwax was all about saving money. At the time,
Weatherwax was operating at a $150,000 deficit, which didn’t include the
$250,000 annual debt payment for past improvements, said then City Manager Judy
Gilleland.
The
city received two bids for Weatherwax: $1.6 million from Bowling and $225,000
from a local developer, Midwest Golf Investments LLC, which listed Howard
Jackson from MiddCities as a partner.
Just
12 years ago, Weatherwax was appraised at $4.5 million to $5 million, but
because of the weak economy and health of the golf industry, its worth has been
estimated at $1.2 million.
WEATHERWAX GOLF COURSE HISTORY
1969: Weatherwax is built on land purchased
from W.W. Sebald to be used for a golf course and public park. A $75,000
donation by Bessie Weatherwax, in honor of her husband Russell S. Weatherwax
Sr., is used for landscaping the course.
1972: The four nine-hole courses, designed
by Arthur Hills, open and Tour professional Tony
Jacklin plays the first round. Funding for the construction of the course is
through a 20-year bond that’s retired in 1995.
1996: The entire 36 holes and the driving
range are reconstructed with bunkers, tees and fairways. Another 20-year bond
is used to fund the work. As a result, the course rises from a three-star
rating to a four-star rating and is a top-10 ranked public course in Ohio from 2002 to 2006.
2012: Tim Sorrows fires a 63, sets course
record.
2014: City sells Weatherwax to Hamilton auctioneer
company for $1.6 million. Myron Bowling leases course to Jim Kraft, who signs a
one-year lease with a one-year option.
2015: Kraft plans to accept option year and
operate Weatherwax as golf course through 2016.
SOURCE: City of Middletown
records
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