The Palo Alto History Project
The Lawn Bowls Club
                                                                                            474 Embarcadero Road
The Lawn Bowls Club: Old Time Palo Alto

Perhaps you think that there isn’t too much in the way of athletics for the 80-something crowd? Not so in
Palo Alto, where the old English tradition of lawn bowling is alive and well. Palo Alto octogenarians and their
younger rival sportsmen happen to live in “Lawn Bowling Central” as it were --- thanks to the storied club
located along side the Gamble Gardens on Embarcadero Road.  On August 10th from 3-5pm, the Lawn
Bowls Club is inviting the public to join them in celebrating its 75th Anniversary with fun, festivities and a
narrated bowling demo.  Of course, at 75, the Lawn Bowls Club is now older than many of its members ---
although certainly not all.

When Hoover Pavilion opened in 1931 to treat patients in Stanford and Palo Alto, the old Peninsula
Hospital on Embarcadero Road was no longer needed.  After its demolition, the city took up the question of
how best to use the weedy land left in its wake.  In 1933, the answer was provided by Ginny Arnott ---
who had loved to bowl when she lived in San Francisco and played on the green that her friend John
McLaren had built when constructing Golden Gate Park.  With an OK from the city, Arnott convinced
McLaren to build a Palo Alto version, which was constructed by Depression-era Civil Works
Administration laborers in 1934.

The Club opened on March 10th, 1935 with welcoming speeches by Arnott (who was elected the first Club
President), McLaren and Mayor Earl C. Thomas.  The annual membership cost just 5 bucks and the
majority of the first 43 members were women.  Since that time both men and women have been active on
the greens.

And although the quiet sport does attract primarily older Palo Altans, this is no elderly-paced game of
shuffleboard. Some say the rules and strategy are as complicated as chess, and with the oblong, periodically
curving balls and the variable slickness of the greens, the game takes quite a bit of skill and effort. In general,
the main idea is for members of each team to take turns rolling the oddly shaped balls --- or "bowls" ---
toward a smaller, white ball called a "jack.” After all the bowls are thrown, the one closest to the jack wins a
point for their team.

The games can range from friendly and easygoing to the somewhat more competitive. The social bowler will
enjoy the club’s Wednesday Pizza Nights, Luau Bowls, BBQ Bowls, and Blue Grass Band --- as well as
the Sunday afternoon beginning lessons.  Attempting to lure interested old-timers to learn the game, the club’
s website tells interested seniors to “get your spouse off the rocker!”

For the more competitive bowler, the club hosts many tournaments, in which players don “dress whites,” as
well as an annual match with Berkeley to decide who takes home the coveted Meat Axe, a cleaver mounted
on a plaque. Over the years, the Palo Altans have matched brains and bowls with teams from San
Francisco, Oakland and even Australia.  In recent years, the Palo Alto club has included some U.S. lawn
bowling national champs.

Over the years, the Lawn Bowls Club has expanded and prospered.  The clubhouse was first erected in
1954 and expanded twenty years later.  When Elizabeth Gamble died in 1981 and turned her house and
grounds over to the city, the Lawn Bowlers proposed adding a second green.  However, the city eventually
decided to create the Gamble Garden House that exists today.  Still, membership ranks have now steadily
climbed and now top
120, including a member as young as 17 and another as old as 101.

So while Palo Alto may have many attributes of a city larger than its size---high density traffic, high-tech
Fortune 500 companies, Bloomingdale’s and Tiffany’s--- it also still possesses some of the serenity of
yesteryear. And if you ever want to get away from the hustle and bustle, just head to the Lawn Bowls Club
and listen for the distinctive “clack” of the Gentleman’s Game.
       
                                                                                                                -Matt Bowling
Oh so close!
(PA Weekly)
Palo Alto Home Page
Old Palo Alto Page
1974 club president Paul
Houseman
in the center pose
with
Monty Moncure at left
and Floyd Carpenter
at right.   
Gertrude Cobb i
s getting ready
to bowl. (PAHA)
The entrance gate to the Lawn
Bowls Club --- "visitors
welcome."
The map below shows the Embarcadero Road area
Berkeley and Palo Alto
bowlers posing with the Meat
Axe
.
Entertainment
Palo Alto: Then & Now
2007
circa
1915
The Peninsula Hospital, built in 1910 once stood at Churchill and Embarcadero where the Lawn Bowls Club now resides.  It was Palo
Alto's second hospital and functioned as a main hospital until 1931.  Today the same angle shows the clubhouse at the Lawn Bowls Club.  
Palo Alto Memory Bank
Do you have memories or stories
of the Lawn Bowl's Club?  Post
them in our memory bank.  
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Links:
Lawn Bowls Club
Sources:
Palo Alto Weekly, Palo Alto Historical Association
One of the all-time best
lawn bowling teams in Palo
Alto and winners of the

1957 State Rinks
Championship
.  From left
to right:
Sandy Lockhart,
Henry Rosande
r,  Spencer
Fish
and Brad Bradshaw.
The smaller version of the
clubhouse in 1955.
John McLaren designed much
of Golden Gate Park.
(PALBC)
Virginia C. Arnott, founder
and first club president,w
ith
her grandson Peter Jr..
(PALBC)