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Terre Haute group moves to save 90-year-old park clubhouse

TERRE HAUTE, Ind. (AP) - The glow was its trademark.

As a kid, riding in the family car down South Seventh Street in the evening, Mike Harding saw it as they passed by countless times, like thousands of other Terre Hauteans.

"Rea Park's clubhouse used to be lit up at night. You could see it from Seventh," recalled Harding. "There was a lot of community pride about Rea Park."

Now 62 years old, Harding holds a sentimental attachment to the facility. The 1970 medalist at the local sectional, Harding played Rea as a high schooler. He got job there at age 14 and kept it through his college years at Indiana State University, watering the greens at night. Harding moved to Evansville in 1980, working as a mine engineer and then an administrator for the Pike County schools.

Harding returned to his hometown in 2013 and played the course and found its condition to be "better than ever." When he walked through the stately, white clubhouse, though, Harding was "taken aback" by the worn state of the historic building. He moved back to Terre Haute last year, enlisted the support of Scott Williams of the Wabash Valley Foundation and Tommy Kleckner of Indiana Landmarks. They shared ideas and concerns with Eddie Bird, the Terre Haute city parks superintendent, and helped then form the Friends of Rea Park.

The grassroots group earn nonprofit 501(c)(3) status last week, thanks to Friends member and local attorney Bill Olah, Harding told the Tribune-Star (http://bit.ly/1BN60kT ). The Friends' ranks include others, just like Harding, with fond memories of playing golf or tennis at Rea. "The older you get, you start thinking, 'What can I do to help and leave a legacy?'" Harding explained, "just like Mr. and Mrs. Rea."

The Friends hope to raise funds to renovate the clubhouse, repair the aging tennis courts and get the entire 160-acre park placed on the National Register of Historic Places.

And restore the glow.

"We hope to get it back to that point, where it's a respected part of the city's parks system," said Kleckner, director of the Indiana Landmarks western regional office in Terre Haute.

Kleckner aims to see Rea Park added to the National Register of Historic Places by late 2016. His office is working on the nomination process for Rea. It deserves the distinction for several reasons, including its age, architecture, landscape and connection to the Rea family. "We don't see public buildings built like that anymore," Kleckner said.

It's a Terre Haute icon.

"Even if it's someone born and raised here who never visited it, it's still one of those identifiable landmarks of this community to them," Kleckner said.

'Something needs to be done'

The park and clubhouse mark their 90th birthday this year. The course opened Aug. 1, 1925, thanks to a $100,000 trust left in the will of William S. Rea, who died in 1919, to turn the 160 acres on the city's south side into a park, with an 18-hole golf course. On Sept. 10, 1925, the city dedicated the clubhouse, funded by an additional $60,000 donation from Rea's widow, Geraldine. She donated the extra money when the city administration struggled to raise funds to carry out her late husband's wishes.

As the master of ceremonies at that 1925 ceremony, Rea family friend John T. Beasley, put it, Geraldine Rea "in her quiet and beautiful way ... expressed a determination to build a clubhouse," according to a Terre Haute Tribune report. "This magnificent structure, the finest of its kind in the state, that we are dedicating today, is the result of that gift."

And, "that was quite a gift," Harding said last week. Indeed, her $60,000 donation would be worth $811,666 in 2015 dollars. Her husband's contribution of $100,000 would equal $1.37 million today. Those gifts allowed the city to hire the local architectural firm Johnson, Miller, Miller and Yeager - prolific in the early 20th century - to design a clubhouse as a "high-style example of Mediterranean style," as Kleckner described it. The structure is surrounded by a course landscaped by prominent Indiana architect Lawrence Sheridan.

"Despite its conditional issues, it looks like something you could see sitting in a village along the Mediterranean (Sea)," Kleckner said.

Its conditional issues are significant. They threaten the clubhouse's chances of marking its 100th birthday, or perhaps even its 91st.

"Something needs to be done right away," Bird said.

Roof leaks caused a hole in the ceiling of the main pro shop room, an otherwise impressive, high-ceiling space where golfers and tennis players gather before and after playing. Damage from water leaks is visible not only in the ceiling tiles but also in the upper walls, floors, and in the basement, where rooms once used for parties, lockers and storage sit mostly idle. The foundation shows the effects of drainage problems. The first-floor and basement rooms need refurbished, said Dave Kennedy, the golf pro at Rea.

"It's a big building that right now is really only using one room, and it's just a waste," Kennedy said.

"Obviously, it was a great building back in the day," he added, "and that's what Mike's and the Friends of Rea Park's vision is - to bring it back."

Its revival will require an investment. Bird said a local construction firm estimated the repairs would top $320,000. The cost to repair the roof would involve $20,000 for materials alone, he added. Bird shared his concerns about the roof with the Terre Haute Parks and Recreation Board at its meeting last week. Board members, in agreement with Bird, decided that before pursuing a full roof repair, a structural engineer should determine whether the building itself is salvageable.

Bird wants such an inspection to also make sure the clubhouse is safe to use in the meantime. Rea's golf season begins March 1.

"I think it's just been neglected for so many years," Bird said. "It just needs a lot of work right now." A plaque in the clubhouse marks renovations to the course done in 1984-86.

Harding patterned the Friends of Rea Park on a similar group in Evansville that generated funds to restore that community's historic Bosse Field. The Friends of Rea Park hope to draw funding support from private foundations, government entities, grants (thanks to the group's nonprofit status), individual donors. A renovation of the clubhouse could top $1 million, Harding said, emphasizing that's a "wild guess." The tennis courts, added to the park years after the golf course opened, need vast repairs, as well.

The park is worth the investment and effort, Harding contends. Its grounds have been toured by countless golfers, tennis players, cross country runners and casual walkers through nine decades. The names of those visitors include baseball great Tommy John, basketball legend John Wooden and LPGA pioneer Patty Berg, among others.

"That's a beautiful building out there. If an architect got a hold of it, they could really redesign and repurpose it," Harding said, rattling off a list of functions the clubhouse could house beyond golf and tennis events. "I think it could be something the whole community could use and have pride in.

"It was once a grand old building," he added, "and it can be brought back."

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Information from: Tribune-Star, http://www.tribstar.com

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