[1][2] It is two blocks away from the Aiken Thoroughbred Racing Hall of Fame and Museum, the Rye Patch Estate and the Hopelands Gardens.
[3] That year, Colonel Clarence Sutherland Wallace (1851-1903) of the Havemeyer Sugar Company organized the first match.
[3] Other players included Harry Payne Whitney (1872-1930), Devereux Milburn (1881-1942), Pete Bostwick (1909-1982), James P. Mills (1909-1987), brothers Elbridge T. Gerry, Sr. (1909-1999) and Robert L. Gerry, Jr. (1911-1979), brothers Seymour H. Knox III (1926-1996) and Northrup R. Knox (1928-1998), Francis Skiddy von Stade, Sr. (1884-1967) and his son Charles Skiddy von Stade, brothers Stewart Iglehart (1910-1993) and Philip L. B. Iglehart (1913-1993), Alan L. Corey, Jr., and Louis Ezekiel Stoddard (1881-1951).
[6] The Aiken team (Charles Leonard, Pete Bostwick, Alan Corey, Jr., and Devereux Milburn) beat the Aurora team (Jack Ivory, Seymour H. Knox II, Seymour H. Knox III and Northrup R.
[6] In the 1970s, Thomas Biddle, Sr., David Widener and Gene Kneece decided to revive the club.