River Oaks Country Club
History
River Oaks Country Club was founded in 1923 in the River Oaks neighborhood in Houston. Architect John F. Staub was hired to design the original two-story Spanish revival clubhouse. The club house was built south of the golf course that was designed by Donald Ross. The current clubhouse was built in the 1950s on the same site as the original.
River Oaks' golf course was the venue for the PGA Tour's Western Open in 1940, and the Houston Open in 1937, 1938, and 1946.
River Oaks has been home to the River Oaks International Tennis Tournament from 1931 until it was merged with the oldest clay court tournaments in the United States, the U.S Men's Clay Court Championships. On May 8, 2007, the United States Tennis Association awarded River Oaks the U.S. Men's Clay Court Championships starting in 2008, taking over the event from Westside Tennis Club. Other cities that competed for the event were Atlanta, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, and Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida. The tournament purse is $415,000 with a winner's share of $65,850.
The new venue for the clay court championships was to feature American red clay courts that were installed in 2005, with a stadium capacity of 3,000. Temporary seating for 500 was to be installed for the second court.
Around 1993, River Oaks and some other area country clubs began claiming a new tax break. That same year, an article in the Houston Post alleged that even though River Oaks and two other area country clubs had bylaws stating that membership was open to people of all races, they covertly discriminated against black people. Admitting only white members for 73 years, River Oaks admitted its first black member, Baker Botts attorney Rufus Cormier, in 1997.
As of 2018, River Oaks had a waiting list of applicants for membership.
See also
- 2012 U.S. Men's Clay Court Championships
- Houston Country Club
- Royal Oaks Country Club
- List of tennis stadiums by capacity
References
- ^ "River Oaks Tournament". TTMHOF. Retrieved 2022-04-13.
- ^ Robertson, Dale (May 7, 2007). "River Oaks keeps Clay Courts in town". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 2007-05-09.
- ^ "Country clubs claim tax break Houston, area schools lose revenue, paper says." Associated Press report in The Dallas Morning News, March 1, 1993. Retrieved on October 5, 2012.
- ^ "Exclusive Houston clubs segregated, newspaper finds." Associated Press report in The Dallas Morning News. August 16, 1993. Retrieved on October 15, 2012. "Despite bylaws that say they are open to all, the area's three most prestigious clubs covertly discriminate, and no black has ever been admitted, the Houston Post reported Sunday."
- ^ Elder, Laura Elizabeth (2 February 1997). "Attorney first black member of River Oaks Country Club". www.bizjournals.com. Retrieved 2 February 2022.
- ^ Hveem, Todd. "Lakeside Country Club renovation draws rave reviews." Houston Chronicle. Wednesday December 15, 2010. Retrieved on October 15, 2012. "Lakeside, like River Oaks and Houston Country Club, has a waiting list."
External links
- Official website
- Original Harris County Block Book maps for the country club estate: Page 1 (PDF, JPG) and Page 2 (PDF, JPG)