Edean Anderson Ihlanfeldt Explained

Edean Anderson Ihlanfeldt
Birth Date:15 April 1930
Birth Place:Helena, Montana, U.S.
Death Place:Wenatchee, Washington, U.S.
Residence:Seattle, Washington
Education:Oregon State University
Occupation:Amateur golfer, college golf coach
Spouse:Robert Ihlanfeldt
Sport:Golf

Edean Anderson Ihlanfeldt, pronounced island-felt,[1] (April 15, 1930 – April 27, 2020) was an American amateur golfer from Montana, coach and founder of the University of Washington women's varsity golf team, and one of the most successful female golfers in the Pacific Northwest. She won several amateur tournaments, including the Canadian Women's Amateur and the U.S. Senior Women's Amateur.[2] [3]

Early life and education

Anderson began training at age 13; in 1944, at age 14, she won her first out of six consecutive Montana State Women's Amateur golf championships (1944–49), with a local outlet calling her a child prodigy. In 1949, Anderson moved to Corvallis, Oregon to attend Oregon State University, where she joined the sorority Alpha Phi.[4] While there, she practiced with friend and fellow golfer Grace DeMoss, competing as both partners and opponents at times. Anderson would continue a streak of winning one major championship a year until 1954. That year Anderson met her husband Robert Ihlanfeldt while playing golf. He proposed a week later, and the two were married in two months.[3] [5]

Career

During the first two decades of her career after graduation, Ihlanfeldt won numerous tournaments: "five Pacific Northwest titles, the Washington state crown four times, the Trans-Mississippi championship, and the 1952 Canadian Open crown."

In 1974, Ihlanfeldt brought the U.S. Women's Amateur to Seattle and founded the women's varsity golf program at the University of Washington; she accepted no salary during the time she coached the team for the next eight years. In 1989, the University inducted her into its Hall of Fame.

In 1997 Ihlanfeldt, once again, brought the U.S. Senior Women's Amateur to Seattle.

Ihlanfeldt died April 27, 2020.[6]

Amateur wins

Notes and References

  1. News: Senior Women Golfers Arriving in Town . Branton . B.B. . September 6, 2011 . The Chattanoogan . August 23, 2018.
  2. Web site: Edean (Anderson) Ihlanfeldt, Inducted 1985 . Pacific Northwest Golf Association . August 23, 2018.
  3. News: Edean a prodigy at any age . Synness . Curt . September 8, 2004 . Helena Independent Record . August 23, 2018.
  4. Web site: Famous Phis . Alpha Phi . August 22, 2018 . May 23, 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170523050214/http://www.alphaphi.org/aboutus/famousphis . dead .
  5. News: Golf's Robert Ihlanfeldt Dies . October 21, 1993 . The Seattle Times . August 25, 2018.
  6. News: Hanson . Scott . Edean Ihlanfeldt, amateur golf star and first UW women's coach, dies at 90 . The Seattle Times . April 29, 2020 . April 28, 2020.