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Guiding light!

In 1964, George Page brought night golf to Colonial CC in Lynnfield

September 19, 2024 by Steve Derderian

George Page was 24 and fresh out of the Navy when he decided to do something many thought was foolish: purchase the Colonial  Country Club in Lynnfield — which in 1946 was both rundown and on the verge of bankruptcy. 

But Page didn’t think like everybody else. He took the gamble and spent 30 years building  up the property into a multi-million  dollar business with an excellent  public 18-hole  golf course, a fitness center, an expanded  clubhouse and restaurant, and a hotel. With his vision and ability to make what was seemingly impossible happen, he was once dubbed  the “Aladdin  of public golf courses in New England.”

Page owned and operated  Colonial  along  with several other area courses such as Unicorn GC (Stoneham)  and Shaker Glen (now Woburn  CC). 

By the 1950s and 1960s, golf  began  taking root in American culture, trickling down from wealthy country clubs to middle-class America. Still, access and availability  were obstacles, especially for working-class golfers.

Page thought  to change all that by doing  what few had tried before — offering  golf after dark. A course in Natick had similar attempts rejected and plans to light  Putterham Meadows in Brookline  were also batted  aside.

In April 1964, Louisquisset  Golf Club, just outside  of Providence, RI, debuted  its $70,000  night golf project, claiming to be the first public regulation  course in the nation  to offer golf under the lights.

Despite that, Colonial  stole most of the headlines  when it illuminated  the first nine holes of its course for the first time just after 9 p.m. on June 11, 1964. The course hosted several area professionals for a historic tournament, with Oakley CC’s Paul Donahue taking home the title with a 1-under-par 34 (eight pars, birdie on the 5th). Former Boston Bruin Bill Ezinicki, a Mass Open winner in 1960 and 1964, also competed along with other local pros such as Ed Whalley (Charles River CC), John Thoren (Myopia Hunt), Tex McReynolds (Winchester CC), Bobby Gillis (Bass Rocks), Lyman Doane (Unicorn) and Mass Golf Hall of Famer Bill Flynn (Thomson CC), the 1963 Mass Open winner.

During the summer, the public was also allowed to tee off up until 10:30 p.m., with lights out promptly by 1 a.m.

Sylvania Electric Products Inc. installed  42 poles hidden  among the trees with 122 golf floods and 82 sun floods for tees and greens, with wires buried  underground. The lights were first of its kind for a golf course, and its quartz fixtures were reportedly  the same ones used to illuminate  the upper exterior of the Empire State Building. Page testified  that he spent about $110,000  on the project (equivalent  to more than $1M in 2023) and was expected to spend about $15 to light the course per evening.

Despite the increased  traffic, concerns of wear and tear were brushed aside by William Mitchell, a golf course architect who assisted Page at several of his golf courses.

“Evaporation,  which occurs at night, seems to protect the grass, and I’ve noted very little damage, if any, any place where golf after dark has been attempted,” Mitchell said.

Not all received the lights well, as Colonial found  itself in a dispute with community members. In August 1964, the Lynnfield Board of Appeals issued a cease and desist, claiming a zoning violation.  However, just over a year later, a Superior Court Judge granted  Page the right to operate the course at night. In October 1965, Lynnfield residents voted to reject an appeal  of the decision, which ruled in favor of the lights.

Through  it all, Page pressed on, knowing the added  benefits lights could provide to middle-class golfers.

“The lights remove one of the biggest obstacles that face the avid golfer with a daytime job,” Page said on June 11, 1964, the night the lights debuted at Colonial. “The working man who has had to limit his golf to weekends can now play more rounds of golf each week. I think it will become as popular as night baseball.”

The club pro Sam Videtta, who also played in the historic night tournament  at Colonial,  said in 1965 that it took a while for night golf to catch on, but by year two, the course was attracting  about  35-40 golfers per night and inquiries  were coming in from across the country.

“About  the only thing is understanding  differences,” Videtta said about adapting  to night golf. “Everything  looks farther away than it really is. Greens are a little tougher  to read perhaps, with rolls being a little more difficult to see. But once you get used to it, you can play as good a game of golf at night as during the day.”

Page’s favorite charity became The Jimmy Fund, as he often hosted many of the organization’s  benefits and tournaments  at Colonial.  Cancer had taken both his parents and other relatives, and unfortunately,  took Page’s life as well on Aug. 22, 1986.

Colonial closed in 2007 but was re-opened  in 2010 as King Rail GC, now owned and operated by the Town of Lynnfield.

Before he died, Page told a longtime friend, “Don’t mourn my death, celebrate  my life.”

While night golf eventually became a relic of the past with a relatively neutral effect on the course’s long-term success, today, we can still acknowledge  Page, who, among others, always strived to provide an enjoyable  and unique  golf experience to the masses — something indeed  worthy of celebration.

Steve Derderian is the Senior Manager of Communications for Mass Golf. You can contact him via email: sderderian@massgolf.org.

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