A winner of more than 50 amateur golf tournaments, Dye earned the Indiana State Championship nine times, and won three Florida State Championships and 11 Indianapolis City Championships. She also won the Doherty Cup, and secured a place on the U.S. team for the 1970 Curtis Cup.
She met her future husband, Pete, at Rollins College in Winter Park, Florida. The couple married in 1950 and moved to Indiana, where Pete began a career in golf course architecture in 1955.
Their commitment to golf course design was cemented after a tour of Scottish golf courses that followed Pete’s competing in the 1963 British Amateur. “Both Pete and I were champion golfers and played famous courses, which influenced our design features,” Dye said in a 2018 interview.
“I think our golfing ability was significant to our design work. It helped us to make tees for all abilities, as we truly understood the game. I have worked hard on playable yardages for women,” she said.
Alice joined Pete in the design and construction of their first course, El Dorado (Royal Oak), now called Dye’s Walk, in Indianapolis. She continued as co-designer for numerous courses, including: PGA West, LaQuinta, California; Harbour Town Golf Links and Long Cove Club, Hilton Head, South Carolina; Crooked Stick Golf Club, Carmel, Indiana; and Teeth of the Dog, La Romana, Dominican Republic.
Her “Two Tee System for Women” was cutting edge, encouraging clubs to introduce an additional set of forward tees for women.
"Alice was certainly a pioneer and inspiration to us all regardless of gender, but she blazed a trail as only she could for great architects like Jan Bel Jan, Vicki Martz and Cynthia Dye McGarey to follow," ASGCA President Jeff Blume said. "She will definitely be missed."
A leader in golf administration, Dye served on the USGA Women’s Committee and USGA Handicap Committee, the LPGA Advisory Council and on the Board of the Women’s Western Golf Association.
The Dyes’ golf course legacy stretches far beyond the courses they designed themselves. Many of golf’s leading course architects honed their craft while working alongside the Dyes. The couple’s sons, P.B. Dye, ASGCA, and Perry Dye, ASGCA, have also gone on to develop their own golf course design portfolios. Many other members of the extended Dye family are now also involved in golf course architecture, including their niece, Cynthia Dye McGarey, ASGCA.
Alice Dye received numerous awards and honors, including inductions into the Indiana Hall of Fame and Florida State Golf Association Hall of Fame; The Heritage of Indianapolis Award; the Don Rossi Award for Lifetime Contributions to Golf; the Women’s Western Golf Association’s Woman of Distinction Award; and the PGA of America’s 2004 First Lady of Golf Award.
Dye became an ASGCA member in 1983, served as President from 1997-98 and achieved Fellow status in 2004. She is survived by her husband, Pete, and sons, P.B. and Perry.
A Florida Celebration of Life will be held at Gulf Stream Golf Club on Feb. 20, 2019, 2 p.m. – 4 p.m. An Indiana Celebration of Life will be held at Crooked Stick Golf Club on May 29, 2019, 2 p.m. – 4 p.m.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Wayside House, 378 NE 6th Avenue, Delray Beach, FL 33483, or the Indiana Golf Foundation, 2625 Hurricane Road, Franklin, IN 46131.
ASGCA Background
Founded in 1946 by Donald Ross, Robert Trent Jones and 12 other leading architects, the American Society of Golf Course Architects is a non-profit organization comprised of experienced golf course designers located throughout North America. Members have completed a rigorous two-year long application process that includes the peer review of representative golf courses. ASGCA members are able to counsel in all aspects of golf course design and remodeling and comprise many of the great talents throughout the golf industry.
For more information about ASGCA, including a current list of members, visit http://www.asgca.org or call (262) 786-5960.