Lee Elder will always be remembered most for his 1975 Masters performance, but his entire career is a testament to the collapse of many racial barriers in professional tour golf in the late 1960s
In the Winter/Spring 1991 issue of the Trotter Institute Review I reported that a black dentist from...
Bobby Jones lived an admirable, extraordinary life, even for a famous athlete. Not surprisingly, go...
Deane Beman, Lee Elder, and Rick Bendall, University of Maryland Golf Course on October 16, 1971
Lee Elder will always be remembered most for his 1975 Masters performance, but his entire career is ...
Although it is early to evaluate Woods’s historical significance, it is safe to conclude that he is ...
A photo of an article about Lee Elder coming to Huntington, West Virginia. Elder was the first Afric...
PGA Golfer Lee Elder chipping on to the green, University of Maryland Golf Course on October 16, 197...
Instead of challenging the policies of the Professional Golfers Association’s tour, Wheeler seemed t...
Aside from being the first African American to compete in the U.S. Open, Shippen was also one of Ame...
A photo of a newspaper article of Lee Elder visiting Huntington to promote the Ebony Golf Classic. P...
Lee Elder, Frank Cronin, Deane Beman, and Jack Nicklaus at the University of Maryland Golf Course on...
Frank Cronin and PGA Golfer Lee Elder at the University of Maryland Golf Course on October 16, 1971
William Richardson of the New York Times called it “the greatest record in golf.” One of the most r...
From 1961 until the mid-1980s a weekend ritual was repeated by many African Americans who follow gol...
Contributions by Howard J. Bromberg to Great Lives from History: Asian and Pacific Islander American...
In the Winter/Spring 1991 issue of the Trotter Institute Review I reported that a black dentist from...
Bobby Jones lived an admirable, extraordinary life, even for a famous athlete. Not surprisingly, go...
Deane Beman, Lee Elder, and Rick Bendall, University of Maryland Golf Course on October 16, 1971
Lee Elder will always be remembered most for his 1975 Masters performance, but his entire career is ...
Although it is early to evaluate Woods’s historical significance, it is safe to conclude that he is ...
A photo of an article about Lee Elder coming to Huntington, West Virginia. Elder was the first Afric...
PGA Golfer Lee Elder chipping on to the green, University of Maryland Golf Course on October 16, 197...
Instead of challenging the policies of the Professional Golfers Association’s tour, Wheeler seemed t...
Aside from being the first African American to compete in the U.S. Open, Shippen was also one of Ame...
A photo of a newspaper article of Lee Elder visiting Huntington to promote the Ebony Golf Classic. P...
Lee Elder, Frank Cronin, Deane Beman, and Jack Nicklaus at the University of Maryland Golf Course on...
Frank Cronin and PGA Golfer Lee Elder at the University of Maryland Golf Course on October 16, 1971
William Richardson of the New York Times called it “the greatest record in golf.” One of the most r...
From 1961 until the mid-1980s a weekend ritual was repeated by many African Americans who follow gol...
Contributions by Howard J. Bromberg to Great Lives from History: Asian and Pacific Islander American...
In the Winter/Spring 1991 issue of the Trotter Institute Review I reported that a black dentist from...
Bobby Jones lived an admirable, extraordinary life, even for a famous athlete. Not surprisingly, go...
Deane Beman, Lee Elder, and Rick Bendall, University of Maryland Golf Course on October 16, 1971