GAP Chat: A conversation with ... Bobbie RoseHer mother told Bobbie Rose to âgo out and playâ one day after school. Off she went, and the now 101-year-old never looked back. Rose, of Meadowbrook, Pa., embraces outdoor recreation. Check out her activities list as a youth: badminton, biking, dodgeball, hopscotch, jacks (remember jacks?), field hockey, skating, swimming and tennis. âOutdoors became my thing,â Rose, a four-time Athlete of the Year at Cheltenham High School, said. âThey used to call me a tomboy. I was fascinated with sports in school.â Golf, surprisingly, didnât enter the picture until age 32. Rose became pregnant with son Michael, a Golf Association of Philadelphia stalwart, and pursued the sport following her husband Leonâs suggestion. âThe first feeling of holding a golf club ⊠I knew that would be the game I would play the rest of my life,â Bobbie, a Temple University graduate, said. âI love to go on the range. I could spend hours, and still do, hitting one ball after the other. Iâve always tried to better myself.â The Rose family joined Ashbourne Country Club (now defunct) in 1947. Clarence Ehresman, the clubâs head professional at the time, taught Bobbie how to hold a golf club; she took care of the rest. âHe just let me go. I think Iâve been let go all of these years,â Rose said. âI havenât had too many people help me. Golf just seemed to be my thing.â Rose captured the womenâs championship at Ashbourne a remarkable 13 consecutive years (1949-61). In 1961, she joined Philmont Country Club because of playing restrictions for Michael and her daughter Bonnie. (âThey werenât allowed to play at Ashbourne until they were 12 years old. When they did become 12, they had to step aside when the adults came behind them,â Bobbie said.). She captured Philmontâs womenâs championship that year and represented the club during the WGAP Team Matches. âI learned about other people, and what a wonderful group they were. Even today I have these friends that Iâve competed with and against,â Bobbie said. âUnfortunately, a lot of my friends are no longer living, but Iâve picked up some new friends. Theyâre my childrenâs age. What a wonderful thing that is. Iâve been accepted. I have a lot to look forward to.â Also on the WGAP front, Bobbie paired with both Bonnie and Michael to win multiple WGAP tournaments. From 1967-95, she and Bonnie, 73, won the Mater Et Filia on four occasions (1973, 1982, 1987, 1995); she and Michael, 70, claimed nine Griscom Cup titles (1968-69, 1976, 1982-83, 1988-91) during that span, too. At age 90, Bobbie teamed with her daughter to win the Effie Derr Robey Cup. At age 91, she won the Super-Senior Championship (Class B), besting a field nearly 30 years younger. The WGAP made Bobbie an honorary member of their organization in 2006. She is one of 11 individuals, including Dorothy Porter and Glenna Collett Vare, to receive such an honor. In 2014, Rose joined both Bonnie and Michael as a Philadelphia Jewish Sports Hall of Fame inductee. Golf is their permanent bond. âWe can sit and talk golf. Unfortunately, sometimes we do it too much,â Bobbie said. âIâm still playing in the Mater Et Filia and Griscom. Even as we speak today, Iâm looking forward to this year. This is the year my golf swing is going to be better. Iâm going to do especially well with my chipping. Iâm looking forward to proving myself.â When she isnât presenting evidence of her competitive course chops, Bobbie is likely producing works of art inspired by her imagination. Sheâs created more than 2,000 decorative pieces â for interior and exterior display â and counting. âIf I just had one sport to play, Iâd probably be one of the best, but I varied in so many different ways. I like so many different sports,â Bobbie said. âItâs the same thing with art; I like to do it all, and thatâs my fun.â Age is just a number, as the clichĂ© goes. Bobbie Rose is living proof. âNumbers donât make you who you are; itâs what you make yourself,â she said. âI didnât think 50 and I didnât think 75. I thought about what fun it is to have a birthday. I always tell people, âDonât tell me about how old you are; tell me about how young you feel.â âI know I canât be what I used to be, but if I can be presentable â as good as I can be, Iâll be satisfied. Thatâs why I keep working. I love challenging myself. Iâm not going to give it up.â
GAP Chat
Golf Association of Philadelphia
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