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Miniature golf (also known as minigolf, putt-putt, crazy golf, and by several other names) is an offshoot of the sport of golf focusing solely on the putting aspect of its parent game. The aim of the game is to score the lowest number of points.
John Garnet Carter (Feb. 9, 1883, in Sweetwater, Tennessee – July 21, 1954) [1] [2] was an American inventor and entrepreneur who is considered one of the fathers of miniature golf. In 1927, Carter was the first to patent a version of the game which he called "Tom Thumb Golf".
The Paris Landing State Park Golf Course is a Par 72, 18-hole course [1] situated on the western shore of Kentucky Lake. The entire course is tree-lined, and therefore provides some privacy screening for players on the course. Several holes skirt the Kentucky Lake, producing a natural balance of rolling land, trees, and water.
The golf part worked out well, even if it took some time to get to where he always wanted to be. Jaeger won six times in six years on the Korn Ferry Tour, winning the points list his final year.
Let’s Glow Mini Golf is an 18-hole, tropical safari-themed destination at 731 N. Columbia Center Blvd., No 114, south of Columbia Center mall in Kennewick. The 5,000-square-foot mini golf course ...
Putt-Putt, LLC (founded in 1954 as Putt-Putt Golf Courses of America, Inc.) is an American franchiser of Par 2 miniature golf businesses in several states as well as locations abroad. The franchise was originally branded as Putt-Putt Golf , but with franchise expansion into family entertainment centers , many locations are currently branded as ...
Monster Mini Golf is a franchised chain of entertainment centers. The locations feature an indoor, 18-hole glow-in-the-dark mini golf course, video and redemption arcade games, three-dimensional animatronic props, an in-house radio station, party rooms for hosting birthday parties and other special events, as well as laser-tag, laser-maze, and bowling in some of the newer, larger facilities.
Montgomery Bell State Park is a Tennessee state park in Burns, Tennessee, United States. The park covers 3,782 acres (1,531 ha) and its official elevation is 758 feet (231 m). [ 1 ] However, due to the dissected wooded terrain typical of the Nashville Basin, actual elevations range from 580 feet (180 m) to 860 feet (260 m).