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Club History and Information

Our Founder - Arthur Cutten

Stanley Thompson Legacy

 
Cutten Fields' History
 
Our story began on a cold day in December, 1927. Mr. Arthur Cutten envisioned a golf course, a 200 room hotel and a sports complex located in the area of the College, accessible to all the citizens of Guelph. Mr. Cutten was prepared to underwrite the costs and donate the entire complex to the city where he was born.  The land, which was eventually acquired for the Cutten Club, included what was then known as the McDonald Farm, plus other parcels, which when tied together, consisted of 230 acres.
 
Mr. Chick Evans, a prominent golfer and golf course architect from Chicago, had been commissioned to design the course. He was subsequently joined by Mr. Stanley Thompson from Toronto, who was also a course architect. Together they completed the project in 1931.   While work was proceeding on the course, Mr. Arthur Cutten was searching for a suitable design for the Clubhouse. He was most impressed with the clubhouse built at the Knollwood Golf Club at Lake Forest, Illinois. He commissioned the architectural firm of Douglas E. Kirkwood to draw up the plans, and the contract for construction was awarded to the firm of Jackson Lewis of Toronto. They finished the structure at the same time as work on the golf course was completed. When the Club was officially opened on June 10, 1931, it was named Cutten Fields Golf Club.   At this time the course was 6,400 yards long and had a par 70 rating. It is reputed to have cost Mr. Cutten $750,000.00-a staggering sum when one realizes the year was 1931 and the country was in the midst of a depression.

 
Mr. Cutten had built the course and Clubhouse with the intention of presenting it to the City of Guelph; however, Mayor Robson and the City Council of the time felt that the maintenance costs and deficits that could be encountered should not be borne by the taxpayers of Guelph, so the offer was declined. The Club was a pay-as-you-play golf course when originally opened, although it also solicited members.

Mr. Arthur Cutten died in 1936 and a large funeral, attended by many prominent people, was held in Guelph. The Club was required to close the Cutten estate, which necessitated that the Club be sold.  A buyer was found for the Club in 1939. Mr. Stanley Thompson, together with Mr. Donald Ross, a stockbroker in Toronto and also owner of the Toronto Maple Leafs Baseball Club, joined together to purchase the golf club. They offered the sum of $22,500.00 for the entire layout. The arrangement was that Mr. Thompson would be responsible for the operation of the Club.  Around 1948 Mr. Thompson began selling some of the land for real estate development. The area alongside the thirteenth fairway was subdivided, and the lane to the stone house was called Dormie Lane.
 
The Club continued to operate from the large stone house situated on the thirteenth fairway.   In 1940, The RCAF took over the Ontario Agricultural College, while the Cutten Club Clubhouse was used as a short-term residence, providing meals and sleeping accommodations. 
 
In 1943, the RCAF closed the station and the Cutten Club and the College returned to normal.   Mr. Stanley Thompson died in 1953. Mr. G. Ernest Robertson, who was a club member and an ardent golfer, was concerned that the Club may eventually be sold for real estate development.   Mr. Robertson contacted sixteen of the major companies in Guelph and six decided to participate. They were the Biltmore Hat Co. Ltd., Fiberglas Canada Ltd., the Callendar Foundry, International Malleable Iron Co., the T. Eaton Co. Ltd. of Toronto and Matthew Wells Ltd.   As the membership was growing rapidly and the Club was developing in stature and tradition, the pay-as-you-play aspect was canceled and it became a private Club.  A large new addition to the Clubhouse was added with party and banquet space, which was now required to handle the additional membership. When completed in the mid 1970's, the Club took on an entirely new appearance and had added squash and two squash courts to its sporting activities.

The Club's tennis facilities were added in 1985 and continue to flourish today. Subsequent renovations in 1995 removed the then underutilized squash facilities to make room for a much needed, larger, and more modern Ladies' Locker room. In addition, the Men's Locker Room was expanded.

In the years between the late 50's and early 80's, the purchase of shares by the University of Guelph from the six participating Guelph companies leave the University as the sole shareholder of the Guelph Golf and Recreation Club Ltd., or as Cutten Fields as we fondly know it today.
 

The Club has progressed from a small pay-as-you-play Club to one recognized as one of the finest in the country. It is no longer just a golf course, but an institution, and proud to be a permanent part of the beautiful city of Guelph. The Club prides itself on its continued effort to improve and upgrade, both on the course (in the Stanley Thompson tradition) and in the Clubhouse.

It is sincerely hoped that in the years to follow, the members will continue to enjoy the warm and friendly atmosphere that prevails here today.