The George Sargent Bar
The bar is open to members and non members from 11.00 am to 5.00pm weekdays ,8.00 till 5.00 weekends serving breakfast , bar snacks & specials ,please click the link below for the menu

scroll down for more

Members Bar

A comfortable and friendly bar to meet in, before or after a game of golf.
A selection of drinks, both alcoholic and non alcoholic are served throughout the day along with food and hot beverages.

George Sargent Bar Menu

Visitors Welcome

Quality food served with all the usual fayre for the hungry golfer along with some specials to tempt you. For visiting parties, specific meals can be catered for by prior arrangement.


Society Prices
Society Menu

Bar snacks & specials available to enjoy on the patio (weather permiting )

During warmer days you can sit on the patio overlooking the putting green and the 18th hole with great views looking out over the course.


Link to Open Competitions

George Jonathon Sargent
US Open Champion 1909 and DDGC Professional

George Jonathon Sargent

George Jonathan Sargent (2 August 1882 – 18 June 1962)[1] was an English professional golfer.

Sargent was born in Brockham, Surrey, England to William Henry Sargent and Amelia Jane Harkett.[2][3][1] The family moved to Epsom when he was young and he began his golf career at age twelve at Epsom Downs Golf Club in his home county. in 1899 Sargent spent some time at Ganton Golf Club under Harry Vardon. He first made an impact in the 1901 Open Championship at Muirfield where he was in 6th place after the first round. Soon afterwards he became the professional at Dewsbury DistrictGolf Club. Later he moved to Canada, where he served as a professional at Royal Ottawa Golf Club and finished second in the 1908 Canadian Open. He married Beatrice Margaret Pearse (1886–1968) in 1907 and fathered eleven children.[1]

Sargent won the 1909 U.S. Open at Englewood Golf Club in New Jersey. He set a new 72-hole scoring record for the tournament of 290. He played in sixteen U.S. Opens in total, and finished in the top-10 six times. He also won the 1912 Canadian Open and the 1918 Minnesota State Open.

Sargent became a member of the Professional Golfers' Association of America at its inception in 1916, and served as president for five years. He is credited with introducing the use of motion pictures to study the golf swing. He was head professional at Scioto Country Club in Columbus, Ohio, from 1912 to 1924, at Interlachen Country Club in Minneapolis, Minnesota, from 1924 to 1928, at the Chevy Chase Club from 1928 to 1932, and at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta, Georgia, from 1932 until his retirement fifteen years later. He is a member of the Georgia Golf Hall of Fame, as are his sons Harold and Jack.