Rich History and a Brilliant Future.

For Austin. For All. Forever.

Opened in 1924 by the Lions Club of Austin, Muny has been a public golf course for nearly 100 years. Lions Municipal is the first golf course in the South to desegregate and is listed in the National Register of Historic Places for its role as a civil rights landmark. Muny became a place where all people, regardless of race, could meet and play golf together.

It means too much to us to let it go. ​

Lions Municipal Golf Course is a part of our history. It has stories that need to be told. ​

 

As the first public course in the South to racially desegregate, Muny is listed in the National Register of Historic Places for its significance as a Civil Rights landmark. In late 1950 – the same year the Supreme Court’s decision in Sweatt v. Painter was rendered but well before Brown v. Board of Education – two young black youths, one a caddie just 9-years-old, walked on to the course and began to play.

Still in the throes of the Jim Crow era, there were no integrated public golf courses in the South. The Muny staff working that day called City Hall to seek advice on how to handle the trespassing youth. After a quick discussion with council members, Mayor Taylor Glass said, “Let them play”.

​This simple act is how Muny earned the title of the first peacefully desegregated course. From that day onward, Lions Municipal Golf Course was open to all who came to play. Blacks from all over the state and beyond would come to Muny to meet and play the only public course to allow minorities to play in the South.

Why now?

From the beginning, Lions Municipal Golf Course leased the land on which it sits from The University of Texas. Now, UT is ready to find a permanent use for these 141 acres. We want Muny to be that permanent use. The Muny Conservancy was created in 2019 to raise funds and work with the University of Texas to purchase the course. Once the land is secured, the Conservancy will renovate and operate Lions Municipal Golf Course for good.

“Muny’s history doesn’t belong in the back of the bus, crowded inside a Jim Crow clubhouse while condos sprout up all around so that the university can shroud the history. It should be out in the open where all can see it and remember what it means.”

- Volma Overton Jr.

Muny Conservancy Board Member