Our Club Mona Vale Golf Club | Page 7

The club used a tent as a clubhouse, until eventually an old ambulance station on the corner of Pittwater and Barrenjoey Roads was obtained and moved to the course to become the first clubhouse. Over the years the clubhouse was expanded. When World War II broke out many club members enlisted and the Commonwealth exercised its right to establish a camp on part of the course. To prevent or stall a feared invasion by Japanese forces, a tank trap was built across the course from Turimetta to Mona Vale heads and barbed wire entanglements erected next to the beach. Although the influx of defence forces to the area briefly lifted the club’s bar sales, the clubhouse was later commandeered for use as administration offices and officers’ mess for the nearby army camp. When the war ended, the tank trap was filled in, the barbed wire entanglements removed and the club resumed its place in local life, but the course had been damaged and downgraded by the military activities and was not reopened until 1947. With the return of enlisted men and with new members swelling its ranks, the club was able to extend its clubhouse in stages and permission was sought to increase the boundaries of the course and enlarge it to one of 18 holes. In 1956, the club signed a lease with Warringah Council for additional land and an extra nine holes were laid out. The new 18-hole golf course was officially opened in August 1960. But the euphoria of the new 18-hole layout was soured when the clubhouse was destroyed by fire in September 1961. Along with the clubhouse, almost all the club’s records were destroyed. An igloo-type corrugated iron shed was obtained and used as a temporary clubhouse and, after two years of hard effort, a new clubhouse was built and officially opened in November 1963. The igloo hut was removed and is still used as an equipment shed. Since then, the club has invested much effort to improve the layout of the course, upgrade the drainage and to beautify the course. www.mvgc.com.au 5