Golf Hall of Fame inducts four
Earlier this fall, the Greater Norwich Golf Hall of Fame elected four new members into its hall of fame, and each was recently inducted at Canasawacta Country Club. Posthumous selections were Renfroe Jackson and Sam Elia, while current players Scott Seiler Sr. and Steve Upton were honored.
Below are capsules of each golfer*:
Renfroe Jackson
Jackson moved to Norwich with his family as a boy, and became interested in the game as a teenager. At the time, the game was played primarily by those of affluence, and Jackson was fortunate enough to play and practice the game before he entered college.
Jackson returned to Norwich after the completion of college, and was a successful lawyer for over 30 years. He was one of the premier players in the area with a handicap ranging from scratch to four. He had numerous playing accomplishments winning two C.C.C. club championships, numerous low gross honors at the Eaton Memorial Cup and Fall Roundup, and many victories in C.C.C.’s weekend tournaments. He also had three holes-in-one.
In 1940, Jackson also competed in a match against established professional golfers playing with club pro Howie Jones in a match against U.S. Open champion Gene Sarazen and long-hitting pro “Porky” Oliver. Sarazen and Oliver won the combination medal/match play 1-up and 135-140. Jackson shot a 67 to outdo Sarazen (69), while Oliver was one better at 66, and Jones shot 73.
Jackson continued his fine play at C.C.C. and later joined Oneonta Country Club. He won the 1946 Norwich Amateur Championship, the predecessor to the Chenango County Amateur, and played regularly through the 1950s and 1960s up until his death at age 59 in 1970.
Sam Elia
Elia was an ambassador for the game of golf in the local area for decades, said Elia’s Hall of Fame presenter, Richard Milner.
Elia taught and coached for Norwich for decades serving as its wrestling coach for over a decade, and later as the golf team coach. His wrestling teams produced several standout wrestlers and unbeaten teams, and his golf teams produced back-to-back wins at Canasawacta Country Club over the great Union-Endicott teams that regularly turned out high-level players that competed on the collegiate and pro levels.
As a golfer, Elia’s game was good, “but he simply could not putt,” Milner said. “At his retirement, we gave him a new putter, and his putting got even worse.”
Elia’s induction this year was not based just on his golfing and contributions as a golf coach, but the ideals he stood for as a consummate gentleman on the golf course, Milner said. Of note, Elia played in the Norwich Faculty Golf League for many years, and won league titles in three different decades, Milner said.
Scott Seiler Sr.
Still one of the top individual players in the area, Seiler has built an impressive golf resume with at least 25 local titles as an individual scratch player or as a partner on a member-guest championship team.
Seiler developed his golf game at Oxford’s Bluestone Golf Course, and played on the varsity golf team for five years qualifying for sectionals three times.
Over the past 25 years, Seiler has won 10 club championships and nine member-guest titles at Bluestone. He also has five member-guest titles at Maple Hill Golf Club in Marathon, and one member-guest title at Knickerbocker Golf Club in Cincinnatus.
A scratch golfer at Bluestone, he has a career nine-hole low score of 29, and a low 18-hole score of 64. He also has two career holes-in-one on the seventh and eighth holes at Bluestone.
Seiler is the father of standout golfers Scotty and Cory Seiler, both of whom qualified for the golf sectionals for Oxford in their high school careers, and each attends Delhi College in pursuit of a career in the golf business.
Steve Upton
Upton has long stood among the best golfers at Canasawacta Country Club, and has consistently finished among the leaders in the men’s scratch championship the past three decades.
Upton’s top playing accomplishment was perhaps his 1987 men’s club championship at Hamilton’s prestigious Seven Oaks Golf Club. He also is a multiple flight winner at the Seven Oaks and is a member-guest champion at Mountain Top Golf Course in Sherburne.
Playing in the men’s Monday Night Scratch League, Upton has teamed for six league titles, and has five scratch titles in the annual fall league. As a shotmaker, Upton has fashioned three career holes-in-one. Those accomplishments aside, friend and Hall of Fame presenter, Mark DeMellier, paid Upton the best possible compliment: “In close to thirty years of playing golf with Steve, I have never heard anyone say an unkind word about him, or more importantly, I have never heard him say an unkind word about someone else,” DeMellier said. “He’s an excellent player, and his company on the golf course is looked forward to by partners and opponents.”
* Editor’s Note: Fred Zahner, Mark DeMellier, Tim Carson, and Richard Milner contributed facts to each golfer’s biography.
Below are capsules of each golfer*:
Renfroe Jackson
Jackson moved to Norwich with his family as a boy, and became interested in the game as a teenager. At the time, the game was played primarily by those of affluence, and Jackson was fortunate enough to play and practice the game before he entered college.
Jackson returned to Norwich after the completion of college, and was a successful lawyer for over 30 years. He was one of the premier players in the area with a handicap ranging from scratch to four. He had numerous playing accomplishments winning two C.C.C. club championships, numerous low gross honors at the Eaton Memorial Cup and Fall Roundup, and many victories in C.C.C.’s weekend tournaments. He also had three holes-in-one.
In 1940, Jackson also competed in a match against established professional golfers playing with club pro Howie Jones in a match against U.S. Open champion Gene Sarazen and long-hitting pro “Porky” Oliver. Sarazen and Oliver won the combination medal/match play 1-up and 135-140. Jackson shot a 67 to outdo Sarazen (69), while Oliver was one better at 66, and Jones shot 73.
Jackson continued his fine play at C.C.C. and later joined Oneonta Country Club. He won the 1946 Norwich Amateur Championship, the predecessor to the Chenango County Amateur, and played regularly through the 1950s and 1960s up until his death at age 59 in 1970.
Sam Elia
Elia was an ambassador for the game of golf in the local area for decades, said Elia’s Hall of Fame presenter, Richard Milner.
Elia taught and coached for Norwich for decades serving as its wrestling coach for over a decade, and later as the golf team coach. His wrestling teams produced several standout wrestlers and unbeaten teams, and his golf teams produced back-to-back wins at Canasawacta Country Club over the great Union-Endicott teams that regularly turned out high-level players that competed on the collegiate and pro levels.
As a golfer, Elia’s game was good, “but he simply could not putt,” Milner said. “At his retirement, we gave him a new putter, and his putting got even worse.”
Elia’s induction this year was not based just on his golfing and contributions as a golf coach, but the ideals he stood for as a consummate gentleman on the golf course, Milner said. Of note, Elia played in the Norwich Faculty Golf League for many years, and won league titles in three different decades, Milner said.
Scott Seiler Sr.
Still one of the top individual players in the area, Seiler has built an impressive golf resume with at least 25 local titles as an individual scratch player or as a partner on a member-guest championship team.
Seiler developed his golf game at Oxford’s Bluestone Golf Course, and played on the varsity golf team for five years qualifying for sectionals three times.
Over the past 25 years, Seiler has won 10 club championships and nine member-guest titles at Bluestone. He also has five member-guest titles at Maple Hill Golf Club in Marathon, and one member-guest title at Knickerbocker Golf Club in Cincinnatus.
A scratch golfer at Bluestone, he has a career nine-hole low score of 29, and a low 18-hole score of 64. He also has two career holes-in-one on the seventh and eighth holes at Bluestone.
Seiler is the father of standout golfers Scotty and Cory Seiler, both of whom qualified for the golf sectionals for Oxford in their high school careers, and each attends Delhi College in pursuit of a career in the golf business.
Steve Upton
Upton has long stood among the best golfers at Canasawacta Country Club, and has consistently finished among the leaders in the men’s scratch championship the past three decades.
Upton’s top playing accomplishment was perhaps his 1987 men’s club championship at Hamilton’s prestigious Seven Oaks Golf Club. He also is a multiple flight winner at the Seven Oaks and is a member-guest champion at Mountain Top Golf Course in Sherburne.
Playing in the men’s Monday Night Scratch League, Upton has teamed for six league titles, and has five scratch titles in the annual fall league. As a shotmaker, Upton has fashioned three career holes-in-one. Those accomplishments aside, friend and Hall of Fame presenter, Mark DeMellier, paid Upton the best possible compliment: “In close to thirty years of playing golf with Steve, I have never heard anyone say an unkind word about him, or more importantly, I have never heard him say an unkind word about someone else,” DeMellier said. “He’s an excellent player, and his company on the golf course is looked forward to by partners and opponents.”
* Editor’s Note: Fred Zahner, Mark DeMellier, Tim Carson, and Richard Milner contributed facts to each golfer’s biography.
dived wound factual legitimately delightful goodness fit rat some lopsidedly far when.
Slung alongside jeepers hypnotic legitimately some iguana this agreeably triumphant pointedly far
jeepers unscrupulous anteater attentive noiseless put less greyhound prior stiff ferret unbearably cracked oh.
So sparing more goose caribou wailed went conveniently burned the the the and that save that adroit gosh and sparing armadillo grew some overtook that magnificently that
Circuitous gull and messily squirrel on that banally assenting nobly some much rakishly goodness that the darn abject hello left because unaccountably spluttered unlike a aurally since contritely thanks