|
History
The development
of Sawgrass Players Club, and its sister community to the east, Sawgrass
Country Club, took seed in 1972, when developer James Stockton Jr. broke
ground for the 1,100-acre Sawgrass community east of State Road AIA.
The name Sawgrass was said to be chosen by Stockton one restless night,
after he tossed around names such as Sea Spray and Dune Village.
The next year, developers Paul and Jerome Fletcher bought 5,300 acres
west of AlA from Land Corporation of America. The property included an
18 hole golf course and an apartment complex, both of which bore the name
Thousand Oaks.
When the Fletchers submitted a development plan for the huge parcel in
the mid 70s, it called for 14,000 modular homes. The Caballos De Mar Development
of Regional Impact (DRI) was one of the earliest such planned communities
in the state.
The first homes, along with the existing club and golf course, were known
as Innlet Beach. Later, the golf course was renamed Oak Bridge, and eventually
Innlet Beach became part of the Oak Bridge community.
In February 1979, the Fletchers sold for $1 417 acres of the DRI to the
Professional Golf Association Tour.That parcel was developed as the Stadium
Course, one of two Tournament Players Club courses within Players Club.
The Stadium Course is the site of The Players Championship, held every
March.
The 1979 completion of J. Turner Butler Boulevard, linking Ponte Vedra
and Jacksonville, opened the area to development.
The massive Caballos Del Mar development was split in 1980, when 1,300
acres was sold to Arvida Corp. The name Sawgrass, acquired by Arvida when
it bought Stockton's development from a banking group in 1977, became
part of the new community as well as Marsh Landing, the 1,200 acres the
Fletchers kept and developed.
Arvida developed the parcel as a controlled-access community, building
what is now PGA Tour Boulevard and adding security gates at Solana Road
and the southern entrance.
Sawgrass Village, near the southern entrance to Players Club, opened in
1984. Three years later, the $40 million Marriott at Sawgrass Resort opened
in the shadow the PGA Tour headquarters, which relocated from Washington,
D.C., in 1979. |
 |