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  1. www.golfpass.com › architects › 1755-joe-leeJoseph Lee - GolfPass

    Joe Lee might be the most prolific golf course architect you've never heard of. Over his 40-plus year career, Lee would leave a mark on some 200 golf courses. A direct descendant of Civil War general Robert E. and a veteran of the U.S. Navy, Lee got his start in golf working for Louis Sibbett “Dick” Wilson.

  2. golfproperty.com › course-architects › joe-leeJoe Lee - Golf Property

    Joe Lee was one of golf's most celebrated architects of the 20th century. Over his 40-plus year career, Lee left a mark on some 200 golf courses. A direct descendant of Civil War general Robert E. and a veteran of the U.S. Navy, Lee got his start in golf working for Dick Wilson.

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  4. For over 50 years, Mr. Joe Lee was a golf course architect and a consummate gentleman of the game. After his death in 2002 the Joe Lee Scholarship Foundation was created to help college bound children and employees working at courses he designed.

  5. Oct 23, 2015 · Photo by: Jekyll Island Golf Club Lee went on to build more than 200 courses worldwide before passing away in 2003. He didn’t just sketch a blueprint and leave the dirty work to his crew, either. Lee was a hands-on architect who didn’t mind getting his hands a little muddy. In fact, he loved it. And it shows in his golf courses.

  6. “Gentleman Joe Lee” earned a reputation as a southern gent who designed and built player-friendly golf courses around the world including, Palm Beach National Golf and Country Club. His courses are known to challenge all levels of golfers. Blue Monster, LaCosta, Bay Hill, Cog Hill (Western Open) and Warwick Hills (Buick Open).

  7. The Blue Monster at Doral, Cog Hill in the suburbs of Chicago, Warwick Hills in suburban Detroit, and Bay Hill, the central Florida course that Arnold Palmer bought in 1976. Lee constructed approximately 146 of his courses in the Southeast with 71 in Florida and 30 in Georgia.

  8. "Golfers want a challenge, but they want a fair one." That's what Lee was all about, right up until his death in 2002. His last course, Musket Ridge in Maryland, is one of the most popular upscale public tracks in the Washington/Baltimore area. "Joe Lee has never built a bad course," Jack Nicklaus said.

  9. For over 50 years, Mr. Joe Lee was a golf course architect and a consummate gentleman of the game. After his death in 2002 the Joe Lee Scholarship Foundation was created to help college bound children and employees working at courses he designed.

  10. Musket Ridge is proud to be the final jewel in Gentleman Joe Lee’s design crown, which has more than 250 courses to his resume, including names like Cog Hill, Doral, Bay Hill and La Costa. Encompassing some of the most scenic property the Mid-Atlantic has to offer, the impeccably conditioned fairways and greens of Musket Ridge combined with ...

  11. Legends Golf & Country Club. 8600 Legends Blvd. Fort Myers , Florida 33912. (239) 561-7757. Year Built: 1999. Video. 1 Ranking / Review. Diamondback Golf Club, CLOSED 2014. 6501 State Road 544 E.

  12. Joe Lee, a prolific and respected golf course designer, has died in Boynton Beach, Fla., of heart disease. He was 81. Lee was involved in the design and renovation of more than 250 courses,...

  13. Course Designed by "joe lee" Joe Lee might be the most prolific golf course architect you've never heard of. Over his 40-plus year career, Lee would leave a mark on some 200 golf courses. A direct descendant of Civil War general Robert E. and a veteran of the U.S. Navy, Lee got his start in golf working for Louis Sibbett “Dick” Wilson.

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