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Frank Richard Stranahan

1922 - 2013

BORN

1922

DIED

2013

Frank Stranahan Obituary

(NEWS ARTICLE) Frank Richard Stranahan, who was born into a Toledo industrialist family and went on to combine privilege with talent and hard work to become the greatest amateur golfer in the world of his era, died Sunday in Hospice of Palm Beach County, Florida. He was 90.

Mr. Stranahan, who was the oldest and only surviving member of his generation of one of Toledo's most prominent families, later in life became a noted weight lifter, bodybuilder, and health and nutrition fanatic.

He had been a patient in the hospice facility for about a week, said his son, Lance.

"He had been slowing down over the last few weeks," he said.

Mr. Stranahan said his father had kept a regular workout routine until he became ill. He said he went with him to a gym near their home in West Palm Beach several times a week.

"He was mostly doing the punching bag. He would lift some weights and do exercise machines and weight machines. He did a little bit of light jogging," his son said.

Mr. Stranahan said his father also accompanied him to the golf course, where he would hit balls on the driving range.

Mr. Stranahan embarked on a career that would see him win 51 amateur titles and six PGA Tour events after learning the game on the fairways and greens of Inverness Club, where his family was among the most prominent of members.

Mr. Stranahan ran in 102 marathons and was winning body-building and weight-lifting championships well into his 70s.

Mr. Stranahan was described as living a Spartan existence in his later years as he followed a strict vegetarian diet, often fasting for long periods, and chased longevity with a stated desire to live to the age of 120.

Dick Torio, who for more than 50 years owned a West Toledo gymnasium on Berwick Avenue called Torio's Health Club, said a lot of people might be surprised to learn how down to earth Mr. Stranahan was.

"He was friendly and kind. He was a kind man. He appreciated any athlete who accomplished anything," Mr. Torio said.

Mr. Stranahan was the son of Robert A. Stranahan and the nephew of Frank D. Stranahan, who together moved a struggling auto-parts manufacturing company from Boston to Toledo in 1910 to supply spark plugs to the Willys-Overland Car Company.

Robert Stranahan, also known as R.A., invented a copper-asbestos washer that revolutionized both spark plug design and automobile efficiency. By 1914, Champion Spark Plug had become the largest company of its kind in the world.

Young Frank Stranahan, who was named after his uncle, was born to R.A. and Page Ellyson Stranahan on Aug. 5, 1922. He was raised on the family estate off Central Avenue that is now Wildwood Preserve Metropark and at the Stranahans' summer home in Saugatuck, Conn.

He was raised as a sportsman at Inverness, where he learned the game of golf from his father, an accomplished player in his own right, and from top club professionals, including Tom Currie, Alfred Sargent, and the legendary Byron Nelson. Mr. Nelson, who was the golf professional at Inverness from 1940-44, was Mr. Stranahan's tutor.

Lord Byron, as he was nicknamed, signed his first contract to work with the Inverness Club in June of 1939 and won the U.S. Open two weeks later.

"It really did help me," Mr. Stranahan said of his time at Inverness during a 2001 interview with Blade sports columnist Dave Hackenberg, who was doing research for an Inverness Club history book published in 2003.

"There were very small greens and with the balls and clubs we played in those days, Inverness was a great test of golf. It rounded your game so that you could do almost anything. It was the start for me and I hardly lost anything in those days."

In 1941, he won the first of two straight Ohio Amateur championships at Inverness and, in 1945, he captured the PGA Tour's Durham Open to begin a 10-year stretch during which he won the national amateur championships of three countries, including the British Amateur, which was considered one of golf's major championship at the time, and finished as runner-up in both the Masters and British Open.

Many golf historians consider Mr. Stranahan's record, or at least his decade of dominance, as the greatest amateur career between those of the legendary Bob Jones and a young Tiger Woods.

From 1945-54, when he declared himself to be a professional and began accepting prize money, Mr. Stranahan not only captured 51 amateur titles but finished as the low-scoring amateur in 51 pro tournaments.

"I would say my greatest accomplishment as an amateur was having the opportunity to play in so many of those wonderful [pro] golf tournaments," he said in 2001. "At every tournament, [PGA officials would] put me with the winner from the week before. So I was always playing with Demaret, Snead, Locke, Hogan, and other tremendous champions. I was playing the best courses with the best players and it was very satisfying to do well in those situations."
A six-time winner of the World Amateur and the All-American Amateur, Mr. Stranahan also won the prestigious North & South and the Western amateur championships on multiple occasions.

He was a member of three victorious U.S. Walker Cup teams, posting at least one individual match victory during each appearance.

In 1946, Mr. Stranahan won two PGA Tour events, in Kansas City and Fort Worth, as an amateur. In 1947, he finished second at both the Masters, where he was tied with Mr. Nelson behind champion Jimmy Demaret, and the British Open, where he finished a single stroke behind winner Fred Daly. A year later, he won the amateur championships of Great Britain, Canada, and Mexico.

The British Amateur, played at Royal St. George's Golf Club in 1948, was the biggest of those, coming during an era when the Open and Amateur championships of both the United States and Great Britain were considered the sport's four major championships. The two amateur events were later replaced on the "major" rotation by the Masters and PGA Championship.

Mr. Stranahan captured the British Amateur title again in 1950 at the Old Course in St. Andrews, where he accepted the trophy from England's King George VI. He had great success playing in the British Isles and would later finish second in the 1952 British Amateur and as runner-up, part of a four-way tie behind champion Ben Hogan, in the 1953 British Open at Carnoustie.

Mr. Stranahan and his friend and fellow American Arnold Palmer were credited by many British golf historians as helping save the Open, a once-prestigious event that fell on hard times when most American professionals and amateurs declined to go to the expense of traveling "over the pond" in the years following World War II.

His golf career was interrupted from the autumn of 1943 to the spring of 1945 while he served as an Army Air Corps pilot during World War II, but he supported the British Open by competing for eight straight years (1947-54) after the war. His popularity in the British Isles helped revive interest in the tournament while Mr. Palmer's wins there in 1961-62 brought it all the way back to the world stage.

"Frank and I have been pretty good friends through the years," Mr. Palmer said in a 2003 interview with The Blade.

"We go back a long way. I remember a lot of the matches we had. Frank was a great, great player."

Mr. Palmer also was at the center of Mr. Stranahan's last hurrah as an amateur. Despite the incredible success of his career, he never won the U.S. Amateur, perhaps the one title that would have meant the most to him.

He suffered a heart-breaking defeat in the final match in 1950, losing in three extra holes to Sam Urzetta in Minneapolis. Four years later, in his 11th U.S. Amateur bid, he would advance to the fifth round before losing to Mr. Palmer at the Country Club of Detroit.

Although Frank Stranahan claimed his father had long discouraged a professional career, perhaps enjoying the attention and publicity his son's career brought to Champion, Mr. Stranahan turned pro almost immediately after the loss to Mr. Palmer.

"He told me [a week earlier] that if he didn't win in Detroit, he was going to turn pro," Mr. Palmer recalled. "As it turned out, I played him in the fifth round. I won, 3 & 1, and sure enough, Stranny turned pro the next day."

According to PGA Tour records, Mr. Stranahan won six tournaments, was runner-up seven times, and posted 67 top-10s in a combined amateur-pro career that lasted through the 1964 season, when he retired from competition. His most prestigious win as a pro was the Los Angeles Open in 1958, when he finished a career-best 15th on the tour money list with $16,642.

"Today, if a player turned pro with the credentials and accomplishments I had, it would [mean] millions and millions of dollars," Mr. Stranahan said in 2001. "It was nothing like that for me."

His critics, and there were some sprinkled through the amateur and pro ranks, would suggest he already had plenty. Mr. Stranahan dealt with considerable jealousy, not only because of his wealth but also his Hollywood good looks and a physique he worked hard to achieve and enjoyed showing off by wearing tight polo shirts on the course.

He would travel with barbells, weights, and squat racks and was among the first to add a serious fitness regimen to golf. Although the media often found it a curiosity - Mr. Stranahan was tagged "The Toledo Strongman," "Muscles," and "The Blond Adonis" - Gary Player, the globetrotting South African golfer who followed in those fitness footsteps and became a close friend, once said, "Nobody worked harder than Frank."

Mr. Stranahan retired from competitive golf after the 1964 PGA season, returned to college, and earned a master's degree in business from the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School of Finance. He briefly worked for Champion before opening Stranahan Investments with offices in New York City and Palm Beach, Fla., where he took up residence.

He married the former Ann Williams in Chicago on July 17, 1953. She took up golf after her marriage to Mr. Stranahan. Within five years, she reached the finals of the Toledo Women's District Golf Association tournament. She went on to win 25 tournament titles and competed in several national and international tournaments. She died on April 8, 1975.

Frank and Ann Stranahan lived in the West Central Avenue estate that was owned by his parents before they moved to Palm Beach in 1968.

In addition to Lance, the couple had two older sons: Frank Stranahan, Jr., who died on Aug. 23, 1966, at age 11 from bone cancer, and James, who died in 1977.

Mr. Torio said he and Mr. Stranahan met in the early 1950s at the Central YMCA in downtown Toledo.

Mr. Stranahan was one of the pioneers who showed that weight lifting could be beneficial to golfers, Mr. Torio said.

He said Mr. Stranahan was known to carry Olympic barbells in his car trunk.

"He had friends all over the country who were bodybuilders and weightlifters," Mr. Torio said.

Mr. Stranahan "appreciated anyone who helped him, who spotted him [watched and guarded the weight lifting] at the gym, or helped him in any way," Mr. Torio said.

He said he was impressed to have received a call from Mr. Stranahan one time, thanking him for showing a lifting technique that helped keep his back muscles from being overexerted.

Mr. Torio said, "He was a quiet man. He was reserved, but quiet. He was just interested in anybody who would work hard and achieve anything."

The younger Mr. Stranahan said his father began running in his late 40s, eventually competing in major marathons, including Boston, New York, and Chicago. He said his regular routine was to get up before 3 a.m. for runs of 15 to 20 miles and then work out of his office in his home, where he had a home gym and weight-lifting equipment.

He said his father also completed in ultramarathons of 50 miles in England. "He kept running pretty much up until a few years back," he said.

Surviving is his son, Lance.

A memorial service is planned for July 2 in the Quattlebaum Funeral Home in West Palm Beach. Tributes are suggested to Hospice of Palm Beach.

Staff writer Tom Henry contributed to this report.
Contact Mark Reiter: at [email protected] or 419-724-6199.
Published by The Blade on Jun. 25, 2013.

Memories and Condolences
for Frank Stranahan

Not sure what to say?





56 Entries

Ian Puttee

November 24, 2013

A true champion and incredible life thank you for your time.

Jay Rhodes

July 4, 2013

My grandfather, Lloyd Gullickson, followed Byron Nelson as the pro at the Inverness Club from 1945-1966. He was privilaged to serve its members and in particular, the Stranhan family. All of Lloyd's family were well aware of this special relationship. On behalf of the Gullickson grandchildren who survive, I would like to extend our condolences to the his family.

THOR EVENSEN

July 3, 2013

FRANK WILL BE MISSED,HE WAS VERY INSPIRATIONAL,AND A GOOD FRIEND.

Ms. Alexander

June 30, 2013

I would like to give my condolences for the lost of your love Frank.

June 30, 2013

Sorry for your loss..may Frank rest in peace.

June 30, 2013

Dear Stranahan family,
I am very sorry for your loss i hope this bible scripture gives you comfort. (john 3:16)

June 29, 2013

IM SORRY FOR YOUR LOST. MAY YOUR FAMILY RELY ON GOD IN THIS TIME OF GRIEF.

Jim Pyle

June 29, 2013

To The Frank Stranahan Family and Friends. As a young man in high school in Augusta, Georgia, from 1945 thru 1950, I was honored and privileged to serve as a Gallery Guard to the Masters Golf Tournaments. The ROTC Cadet sat Richmond Academy performed that service, in uniforms of Army cadets, and found so much history about golf and the great players from around the world. I well remember Frank Stranahan back then, when he was a well-built man, blond hair, well tanned, with a following of fans of all sexes. In addition he always looked the part as a gentleman of the highest order. My friends and I were impressed with his golfing abilities out there among the world's finest, some of whom were Ben Hogan, Dr. Cary Middlecoff, Sam Snead, Jimmy Demaret, Bobby Locke, and many others. We all still have such pleasant memories of those times out there, watching Frank and all the rest playing for the pleasure of the Patrons and, of course, for the trophies which came their way. I am sure that many thousands of Golf patrons will remember Frank Stranahan for years to come when they speak of the top Amateur Golfers who ever played. I feel that Frank has been rewarded in the Hereafter for his deeds and kindness to others less fortunate. May Our God bless you all, and give you comfort at this time of sorrow.

Ryan

June 29, 2013

I would have loved to seen him golf in his prime sorry for your loss and god bless

Floyd

June 29, 2013

The Bible says the earth will return to a garden-like park state. No more sickness or death.

June 28, 2013

When I was Director of the Glass City Marathon in the late 70s, I had to tell Frank that he couldn't run one year, officially, because our rules requird pre-registration.

When I completed one of my 2 Bostons in 1971 or 73, after showering, I went up to the top of the Prudential building, but didn't feel very, so I lay down on the floor. Frank put his coat over me. He was that kind of guy.

Arthur S. Johnson (b. 8-26-1922)

Frank Sheldon

June 28, 2013

Fellow Aviation Cadet, Avon Park FL, 1943
'Tis time to Praise God for the design equipping us each with the Gift of Memory by which we are able to remain "connected" with those moving on ahead.

Eva/Crystal Purnia/Neibert

June 28, 2013

My Condolences to those who knew Mr.Stranahan...We enjoy his familys home and the Park that surrounds it now!They truly are a fabulous family.Fairwell Frank! enjoy God Course!

June 27, 2013

Please accept my condolences. May the family be comforted by our Heavenly Father's promise at Isaiah 65:17,22-24.

Carmen

June 27, 2013

I would like to express my sympathies. I am truly sorry for your loss. John 5:28

Frances Mathews

June 27, 2013

May the thoughts filled your heart with warm treasured moments of your dear love one.

Dave Cronin

June 27, 2013

Take comfort in knowing that now you have a special guardian angel to watch over you.

Nancy McDonald

June 27, 2013

Our paths crossed 20 years ago at a health food store in West Palm Beach. We became friends for many years. He was an inspiration and role model. Frank always remained in my thoughts and now my prayers.

June 27, 2013

I am very sorry for the loss of your father. How comforting t know that God will swallow up death forever. 2 Corinthans 1:3,4

Margaret

June 27, 2013

I send my condolence to the family and friends of Frank Stranahan, may the God of comfort give you all the power beyond what is normal to endure this difficult time in your lives. -2 Cor 4:7. I am sorry for your loss.

Bill Blevins

June 27, 2013

May your hearts soon be filled with wonderful memories of joyful times together as you celebrate a life well lived. My thanks go out the The Stranahan family for the Grade school I attended as a child.

Jay Ebert

June 26, 2013

As the days and weeks pass, and as you return to life's routine, may you continue to feel comforted by the love and support of family and friends.

Theresa Jeffers

June 26, 2013

May good memories provide solace for your family during this challenging time; and may God provide you with the assurance that you will see your loved one again in Paradise. You have my deepest sympathy.

Ken Parrish

June 26, 2013

Some of the best memories I have are from the health studio, I remember MR Stranahan as a guiding fixture there.
He lived his life well and we will miss him.

Kevin Eardley

June 26, 2013

As the days and weeks pass, and as you return to life's routine, may you continue to feel comforted by the love and support of family and friends.

somewhere...

June 26, 2013

Thanks from current,past and present Toledoans Stranahan Family ~ Deepest Sympathies

June 26, 2013

May God bring you peace and comfort during this difficult time.
Phillipians 4:7 I will not leave you comfortless: I will come to you.-John 14:18

Sandy Wilson

June 26, 2013

I remember him running alone (always alone)crossing the bridge over and back for hours in his black leotards and white broad brimmed hat. Mostly he ran in the heat of the day on the Blue Heron Blvd bridge. He never said much even though I would pass him many times as I trained on that bridge. For sure, he was fit.

June 26, 2013

May your happy memories of your loved one comfort you until you are reunited.

Rob Terpening

June 26, 2013

I'm sorry to learn of Frank's passing. I became familiar with Frank while researching Ray Billows, one of Frank's Walker Cup teammates. I feel like I knew Frank personally.

June 26, 2013

My condolences to the family. May the God of all comfort strengthen you during this time of distress. E.D; Park Forest, IL.

June 26, 2013

My heartfelt condolences go to the family of Mr.Stranahan may you find comfort by reading Isaiah 61:1,2 during this time of grief

Lance Stranahan

June 26, 2013

Thank you to everyone who posted on this guest book. Evelyn, I enjoyed reading your history and your father sounds like like a great golfer as well. I'm sure my father held him in high esteem.
Thank you Jerry and Sandy. I know my dad thought the world of you both.
Thanks for the kind words .
Kim, I appreciate what you wrote and I know my dad would have as well.
Sam, I saw Jim's exhibition also. His collection now resides at my grandfather's former home in Toledo..which is now known as The Manor House.
Robert, I also want to thank you for all your contributions to the Friends of Frank Stranahan site on Facebook. It means a lot.
Thank you all,
Lance Stranahan

irene rev.21:4

June 25, 2013

May God bless you and your family in this time of sorrow.

Bob Rorick

June 25, 2013

To an old Toledo and Family Friend,God Bless.

June 25, 2013

My sincere condolences to family and friends of Frank Stranahan. May the peace of God be with you.

:)admired 'gifted with venue to golf rip frank

Victoria V

June 25, 2013

Victoria&Andrew ~":"~

June 25, 2013

Its a Great Day
to go out n` Golf :)

Our condolences to
the Stranahan family
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Dwayne Bickham

June 25, 2013

in God's care rest in peace

Julie

June 25, 2013

One very handsome man; my sympathy to his son and to everyone who loved him.

gail minor

June 25, 2013

awesome person

June 25, 2013

Lance...

My parents, the late Minnie Emma Wistinghausen Powers Allison, who died on February 26 of this year at the age of 103, and my Dad, the great golfer, Walter Powers, who died on November 19, 1969, at the age of 59, told me wonderful stories about their friendship with your Dad. In fact, I mentioned your Dad in my Mother's obituary published in The Blade on March 6, 2013. My Dad was the Assistant Pro at Sylvania Country Club when Byron Nelson was the Pro at Inverness. Your Dad and my Dad played golf together many, many times, including on The Tour. In fact, your Dad, Byron Nelson and my Dad were all elected to the Toledo Area District Golf Association's "Hall of Fame." I got to talk, at length, with your Dad when he visited the man I was working for in New York City. He remembered both my Mother and Dad fondly. In fact, my Mother talked about how dashing your Dad was and how tickled she was when he asked her to dance at a Sylvania Country Club event. I want to thank your Mother and Dad and the Stranahan family for all they did for Toledo! I know most everyone who grew up in Toledo (I grew up in Temperance) knows the Stranahan name, but, I am not sure they know just how much your family contributed to the well being and economic growth of Toledo over the years. Your Dad got a big kick out of something that involved my Dad and Byron Nelson. My Dad was the Pro at Kettenring Country Club in Defiance, Ohio, when he asked Mr. Nelson if he would come there and play an Exhibition with him. Mr. Nelson agreed. He was quite famous by that time and the gallery consisted of hundreds upon hundreds of people. My Dad won! I have the newspaper clipping in my Dad's scrapbook! Your Dad thought it was great that a little scrapper like my Dad could beat the GREAT "Sir" Byron! Please accept my deepest condolences upon the loss of your Dad, and, please carry on the incredible philanthropic work your family has always done in Toledo and elsewhere. God speed, Mr. Stranahan. And, Lance, take good care of all those memories you have made with your Dad over these many years. In sympathy and friendship, Evelyn Powers, Bloomington, Indiana

June 25, 2013

Lance,

Sandi and I send our heartfelt condolences to you.

I had the privilege of spending many wonderful times personally with my dear friend Frank. We played golf, talked business and shared the journey of life. Socializing with Frank, Ann, Shirley and Irwin Fruchtman were some of the best times of my life.
Frank was an incredible talent to say the very least. His accomplishments are recorded in history for all to enjoy forever. He was even a better man.

Rest in peace my good friend. You will be eternally missed.

Jerry and Sandi Shulak
Scottsdale, Arizona

My deepest sympathy goes out to Lance and family. Frank was a great guy. I thought he was crazy when he told me to try mango skins. Glad I listened.

Tony Sacco

June 25, 2013

anonymous

June 25, 2013

I am not a golfer, but I, too, had the privilege of being invited to see the tribute of Mr. Stranahan at Habitec by Jim Smythe. At the time I was taken by Jim's deep admiration for this prolifically talented golfer who he so admired. Still not a golfer but now I understand his devotion to the man. What a beautiful story of a life. I send my regards to all who had the pleasure of knowing him and will miss him, especially family. I am honored to have learned more of this gentleman and will remember him as I saw his tributes.

Kim Toczynski

June 25, 2013

Very inspiring man

Kim Toczynski

June 25, 2013

Inspired by the way he lived

My fav pic of Frank winning the British Am

Robert Reifert

June 25, 2013

Frank Stranahan, a remarkable golfer, father, husband, weightlifter, marathoner, and anything he did was extraordinary. From Toledo, OH....
RIP Stranny!

Frank's 1940 Toledo District Junior Championship trophy

Robert Reifert

June 25, 2013

Muscle Man mag cover

Robert Reifert

June 25, 2013

A young Frank Stranahan at Inverness Club (?)

Robert Reifert

June 25, 2013

Frank With the British Am Trophy

Robert Reifert

June 25, 2013

Toledo's Strongman Frank Stranahan

Robert Reifert

June 25, 2013

The Stanahan Family, sorry for you Loss.. Peace and Love to you all..

V Giovannucci

June 25, 2013

Sam Besase

June 25, 2013

RIP Frank Stranahan, probably the greatest amatuer golfer of his time, his record is astounding. A great and humble man. I had the priviledge of viewing his golfing memorabilia on display at Habitec Security.

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