Virginia Golfer Jul / Aug 2017 | Page 23

n Above: Golf pro Al Green works with a group of young golfers at Langston Golf Course in 1979. At left: Lee Elder, the first African- American golfer to play in the Masters, poses with members of the Wake-Robin Golf Club, the oldest African-American Women’s Golf Club in the United States. T by LEONARD SHAPIRO vsga.org HE CALL CAME LAST FALL from Peggy Norton, project manager for the World Golf Association. It was answered by Kim Thomas, president of Golf Course Specialists, the company that owns the concession rights to Washington’s three public courses, the only three golf venues in the District of Columbia. The WGA was preparing for the annual April Golf Day in the nation’s capital, and Norton wanted to discuss a possible community service project that would help the city game. At first, the focus was on East Potomac Park, the largest golf complex among the three courses and located on Hains Point, just across the Poto- mac River from Reagan Airport. Norton and Thomas kicked around several ideas, and when Norton came to town last January, Thomas had the best thought of all. Why not do something at the historic Langston Golf Course in Northeast Washington, not far from Robert F. Kennedy (RFK) Memorial Stadium, she suggested. After all, it was also the home for a thriving First Tee program, and the course itself had a special place in the hearts of the area’s African-American community. J U LY / A U G U ST 2 0 17 | V I R G I N I A G O L F E R 21