The Tribune Democrat, Johnstown, PA

Local News

November 2, 2012

Family-operated golf course shuts

EBENSBURG — The picturesque Appledale Public Golf Course – a nine-hole course easily visible from the four-lane Route 22 – not  only closed for the season Wednesday, but is shutting after nearly 60 years in operation on what was once farmland.

Sisters Ellen Grove and Sarah “Sally” Wess, who own and operated the course along with Wess’ husband, Theo, decided after long deliberations it was time to end the family-operated golfing operation. Declining memberships and increased operating costs were major factors, they said Friday.

However, the facility’s party room/banquet facility will continue to be in business. Bookings can be made by calling the course number at 472-6080.

The golf course was started in 1966-67 by the sisters’ parents, Don and Charlotte Wolf, who wanted to make sure their physically handicapped son, Lane, would have an occupation after he graduated from college. Lane, despite his physical challenges, worked at the course until his death in 2005.

The news of the course’s closing came as a shock to Mayor Randy Datsko, who said, “It’s been a great asset for the borough. It’s been wonderful to have a course such as that within the borough’s limits.”

Although not a golfer himself, Datsko said, “I knew guys who would walk or ride their bikes there to play when they were kids. And, it’s a close place to drive to in your car.”

The course was designed by L. Robert Kimball, who founded a local architectural/engineering firm and was a friend of the Wolfs. Its name came from the many apple trees that once stood on the farmland. It’s a nine-hole regulation course over nine acres. The old farmhouse became the clubhouse.

Don Wolf, now deceased, had told a school class once, “We began our business with the idea of giving our son, Lane, an interest and purpose in his life. He was a senior in high school when I returned home for lunch one day, and Charlotte suggested we build a golf course so Lane would have an occupation.”

The Wolfs – who were not golfers and who knew nothing about the business – “would take Lane and the dog and drive around to golf courses to look at them” to get ideas, Grove said.

Both father and son became certified chemical operators so they could treat the grass and greens, she said. Years later, Theo Wolf, who had worked at the course after his full-time job in other occupations, also became certified and started full time at the course in 1998.

The Wolf family lived in the stone house that Wolf built in 1946. It was adjacent to the farmland that the parents purchased in 1951. It’s now occupied by the Wess family.

Over the years, the Wolfs hired many local high school and college students to work summers at the golf course. Of course, the sisters said that they, too, worked there and learned to play golf.

They recalled that the Wolfs had purchased the old soda fountain out of the original Tibbott’s Drug Store and would sell sodas, milkshakes and ice cream sundaes. But that fell by the wayside after nearby fast-food operations opened some years ago.

Sarah Wess recalled the days “when people lined up to play – sometimes for an hour. The course was just loaded. People loved to come and enjoyed it, but it just seemed as time went by, there were less and less people.”

After their mother died in 2011, the sisters began thinking it was time to close the course. Their father had died in 2010.

“We try not to feel bad (about closing). But it served the purpose our parents intended. It was a fun operation. They (parents) had influenced a lot of lives over the years,” Grove said.

Click here to subscribe to The Tribune-Democrat print edition.

Click here to subscribe to The Tribune-Democrat e-edition.

Text Only | Photo Reprints
Local News
  • election_prep_21.JPG Independents, minor-party members locked out of primary election

    More than 1 million registered voters in Pennsylvania will be barred from casting a ballot today because the state only allows registered Democrats and Republicans to participate in the primary election.

    May 20, 2013 1 Photo

  • Permit path cleared: Construction soon on Rt. 219 project

    The final permit is on the way for a Somerset-to-Meyersdale Route 219 improvement project to begin.
    It’s a years-in-the-making step that will allow the estimated $300 million plan to be advertised for bids in the coming weeks – and if all goes well, move it to construction this fall, U.S. Rep. Bill Shuster said Monday.

    May 20, 2013

  • odyssey_a1.JPG Emergency response team hones skills at training camp

    Almost certainly, no Cambria County Special Emergency Response Team members will ever be called upon to create a small bridge out of two pieces of wood and rope, use the newfangled walkway to get a group of individuals from one point to another, pick up an object at the end of the course and then figure out a way back to the starting point.
    But the skills SERT officers gain by participating in drills like those – leadership, teamwork, trust and creativity – can be invaluable when they are serving and protecting the community.

    May 20, 2013 2 Photos

  • Fun Day event to spotlight YMCA expansion

    The Y logo may be seen from the sky June 15 when Greater Johnstown YMCA community members get together to form a logo comprised of people at a Community Fun Day.

    May 20, 2013

  • Agency will provide produce vouchers to eligible seniors

    Income-eligible residents ages 60 and older will have a chance to stock up a bit on locally grown produce through a voucher program offered in Cambria and Somerset counties this year.

    May 20, 2013

  • Poverty simulation slated for today

    Annamarie Pihs experienced firsthand the kind of harsh economic times she will be helping educate Johnstown community leaders about during today’s Walk a Day in My Shoes: Understanding Poverty event at Greater Johnstown High School.

    May 20, 2013

  • chatman21.JPG In Brief | 27 students escape injury in bus crash

    State police in Ebensburg are investigating a school bus crash that happened Monday on Route 36 in Clearfield Township.

    May 20, 2013 1 Photo

  • State police investigating school bus crash

    State police in Ebensburg are investigating a school bus crash that happened Monday on Route 36 in Clearfield Township. The Cambria Heights school bus was carrying 27 students when the driver apparently blacked out and sheared off a pine tree between the Chest Spring and Patton areas, schools superintendent Michael Strasser said. None of the high school or elementary students was hurt, he said. The students were triaged at the scene and released to their parents, Strasser said.   
    The driver was taken to Altoona Regional Hospital, he said.

    May 20, 2013

  • Study: Hospitals’ finances are healthy

    Hospitals across the region maintained financial health last year, a new state report shows.
    But leaders say the continued strength required constant scrutiny and creative programming to identify new opportunities in a dynamic industry.

    May 20, 2013

  • Local politicians will feel impact of redistricting

    This time next year, as primary election day draws near, two close friends and colleagues likely will find themselves in a face-off, each in the hopes of holding his job in the state House.

    May 20, 2013

Poll

Do we have too many economic development agencies in our area?

Yes, they end up fighting over the same money
No, our region needs all of the help it can get
I'm not sure
     View Results
AP Video
Raw: Widespread Destruction in Moore, Okla. Raw: Massive Funnel Clouds in Oklahoma Raw: Japan's WWII Atrocities Under Fire in Seoul Voters Could Elect LA's First Female Mayor Huge Tornado Kills Dozens Near Oklahoma City Raw: Rescuers Pull Tornado Survivors to Safety Oklahoma Gov: 'Hearts Are Broken' After Tornado Raw: Walking in a Flattened Okla. Neighborhood Raw: Rescue Workers Search Oklahoma School Raw: Witness Describes Scene After Okla. Tornado Raw: Aftermath of Massive Tornado in Oklahoma Raw: House Burns After Massive Oklahoma Tornado Raw: Tornado on the Ground in Oklahoma Split-second Choice Ended With NY Student Dead White House Backs 'Shield Law' for Media Wave of Attacks Kills Scores in Iraq Pug Life on Display at Wisconsin Festival Company Promises to Make All Snail Mail Digital Analyst: Tumblr Fills Void in Yahoo's Offerings
Community Calendar
Loading…
Events by eviesays.com
House Ads
Hyperlocal Search
Premier Guide
Find a business

Walking Fingers
Maps, Menus, Store hours, Coupons, and more...
Premier Guide