The Wells College Golf Course would’ve closed if Kevin Fitzgerald and his business partner, Brian Dugan, did not intervene three years ago.
Now, with the college closing, Dugan and Fitzgerald are in the process of buying the nine-hole golf course in Aurora.
Fitzgerald told The Citizen they have operated the golf club, which is on Wells College’s campus, under a lease agreement that includes an option to buy the course. They exercised that option before the college announced it will close at the end of the academic year.
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“It’s gotten a bit more complex with the closure of Wells,” Fitzgerald said. “But we remain hopeful that everything will fall in line and we’ll be able to purchase (the club).”
The golf course was part of the Aurora Country Club until it was bought by former Wells College President Kerr Duncan Macmillan in 1923. At the time, it was a six-hole golf course. It expanded to nine holes later in the 1920s, according to the club’s history.
Robert Trent Jones, a famed golf course architect, redesigned the course in the 1960s. Jones’ wife, Ione Davis Jones, was a Wells College alumna and served on the college’s board of trustees.
After Dugan and Fitzgerald became co-managers of the course in 2021, they renovated the clubhouse and deck. On the course, they improved the sand traps and turf maintenance.
“Wells really never had the appropriate budget to manage a golf course,” Fitzgerald said. “I think our success out here is directly attributable to the condition and the value. We are very reasonably priced. The course is in extraordinary condition for a small nine-hole course with limited irrigation.”
Their work has been supported by the community, Fitzgerald continued. The club’s membership is growing and non-member play is on the rise.
“The renovation and the investment here has turned, really, the state of the golf course here around,” he said. “It would’ve been closed had we not stepped in at the time we did.”
Fitzgerald noted that the future is bright for the club’s ancillary businesses, including its bar and restaurant. The course is also engaged in philanthropic efforts. Two weeks ago, a fundraiser was held for the Cayuga County Veteran Support Fund. Forty golfers participated in the event.
Once the sale is finalized, there might be one more change coming to the course. The golf club includes the school’s name, even though outside entities have managed the course.
Fitzgerald, who said it’s “unfortunate” that Wells College is closing, lauded the insitution for being a great partner. But he hinted there will be new branding after they acquire the club.
“We will pivot there,” he said.
What won’t change, Fitzgerald hopes, is the club’s presence in Aurora. With Dugan, he wants to build on the success they’ve had since taking over the course’s operations in 2021.
That success is why they exercised the option to purchase the golf club, which celebrated its centennial in 2023.
It was “a roll of the dice,” Fitzgerald said, but their plan has delivered results.
“It’s a community treasure,” he added. “It’s been here for 100 years. It’s incredibly important to the golfing community in southern Cayuga County.”
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Government reporter Robert Harding can be reached at (315) 282-2220 or robert.harding@lee.net. Follow him on Twitter @robertharding.