Hall Thompson (May 28, 1923 – October 27, 2010) was an American businessman and developer from Birmingham, Alabama who established the Shoal Creek Golf and Country Club in 1977 as an invitation-only private golf club. Thompson courted controversy around the time of the 1990 PGA Championship, which was held at Shoal Creek, when it came to public attention that the club did not admit African American members, triggering a wave of protests. In the aftermath of Shoal Creek, the Professional Golfers Association of America, the PGA Tour and the United States Golf Association established regulations that require host clubs to have non-discriminatory membership policies.
Thompson was born on May 28, 1923, and established a heavy equipment company in the 1950s. He developed Shoal Creek and created the Golf and Country Club in 1977. The course held a number of notable tournaments, with major events such as the 1984 PGA Championship won by Lee Trevino passing without incident. In the months before the 1990 PGA Championship which was to be played in August at the club, Thompson was approached by a reporter from the Birmingham Post-Herald who asked about the club's admission policies, with Thompson noting the inclusion of Jews and women as members, saying that "we don't discriminate in every other area except blacks".[1] Civil rights organizations announced that they would stage protests.[1]
IBM and other key corporate sponsors such as American Honda Motor Company, Lincoln-Mercury and Toyota pulled out of the television advertising during the tournament, costing the tournament's broadcasters ABC and ESPN an estimated $2 million in advertising revenue.[2] On July 31, in an agreement reached between the club, the PGA and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, Shoal Creek announced that it would begin accepting blacks as members. Following the agreement, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People announced that it too would not conduct protests at the club.[2] The tournament went off in the absence of any confrontations.[1] Sports Illustrated called Thompson "Alabama's second-most-effective catalyst for change in race relations" after Rosa Parks, noting that the effect of his remarks led to club's admission of Louis J. Willie, president of the Booker T. Washington Insurance Company as an honorary member, meaning that he would not have to pay the club's standard $35,000 initiation fee and paved the way for the sport's governing bodies to end play at clubs that practiced discrimination.[3]
Thompson remained involved with the Shoal Creek club until his death, and saw the admission of members such as former United States Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.[1] A junior amateur tournament was held at the club in 2008,[1] and in 2010 Shoal Creek the PGA Champions Tour announced it would move one of its major tour events, The Tradition (now to be called "The Regions Tradition") to the club in 2011.[4]
Thompson died at the age of 87 on October 27, 2010. He was survived by his wife, Lucille, as well as by two daughters, three sons and eight grandchildren.[1]
Thompson's remarks led to greater introspection by the golf world regarding the membership policies at the clubs that serve as tournament hosts, with an official at the USGA estimating that 75% of private clubs in the United States in 1990 had membership policies that exclude minorities and women.[5]
As part of an effort that "helps change the climate" executive director David B. Fay of the United States Golf Association, the organization that sets rules for the sport and operates the U.S. Open, the second of the four major championships, announced new regulations in November under which the USGA would not hold tournaments at private clubs that discriminate against women or minorities.[6] The PGA Tour and the PGA of America had already announced in August that clubs that discriminated based on race, religion or sex would not be accepted as sites for the 120 tournaments conducted each year.[7]