Up for auction "Golfing Greats" Multi Signed Album Page. Signers are; Ben Crenshaw, Dutch Harrison and Marty Fleckman.


ES-244A



Ben Daniel

Crenshaw (born January

11, 1952) is a retired American professional golfer who has won 19

events on the PGA Tour,

including two major championships: the Masters Tournament in 1984 and 1995. He is

nicknamed Gentle Ben. 



Ernest

Joseph (E. J.) "Dutch" Harrison

(March 29, 1910 – June 19, 1982) was an American professional golfer whose career spanned over

four decades—one of the longest in the history of the PGA Tour. Born in Conway,

Arkansas and nicknamed "The Arkansas Traveler", Harrison

turned pro in 1930 at the start of the Great

Depression. Although he played in what tournaments existed in those

days, the mainstay of his income was the many exhibitions and private

"money" matches in which he, as well as many of his fellow

professionals, played. Harrison had a total of 18 career victories spanning from

the 1939 Bing Crosby Pro-Am to the 1958 Tijuana Open Invitational. However, as

late as 1969, Harrison had a top-25 finish in the Canadian Open at the age of 59. He played

on three Ryder Cup

teams: 1947, 1949,

and 1951.



 



Martin

Alan Fleckman (born April 23, 1944) is an

American professional golfer who played on the PGA Tour

in the 1960s and 1970s. Born in Port Arthur, Texas, Fleckman credits Byron Nelson,

Carl Lohren, and Jim Hardy with teaching him how to play golf. At the age of 20 in

1964, Fleckman won the individual title at the Texas State Amateur. In 1965, he

won the NCAA Championship while at

the University of Houston,[2] where he was a three-time All-American

member of the golf team: third-team in 1964, first-team in 1965 and 1966. He

was a member of the Walker Cup team in 1967. While still an

amateur, Fleckman played in the U.S. Open

at Baltusrol in 1967. He led after the first and third

rounds, but shot 80 (+10) on Sunday amid a surge by eventual champion Jack Nicklaus.

The last amateur to lead the U.S. Open at 54 holes was Johnny

Goodman, 34 years earlier in 1933. (Seven years earlier in 1960, Nicklaus led as an amateur during

the final round.) Fleckman finished in a tie for 18th place and was the low

amateur, a stroke ahead of Bob Murphy, who shot 69 in the final round. In his first

start on the PGA Tour in December 1967,

Fleckman won the Cajun Classic Open Invitational

in a playoff. At Oakbourne Country Club in Lafayette, Louisiana, he sank a 30-foot

(9 m) birdie putt on the first extra hole to defeat Jack Montgomery and

take the winner's share of $5,000. It was his third consecutive

birdie, finishing regulation play with two. Fleckman is only one of four other

players to win his first tour event, and has since been joined by Ben Crenshaw

(1973),

Robert Gamez

(1990),

and Garrett Willis (2001).

His best finish in a major was a tie for fourth

at the PGA Championship in 1968.