Clayton Country Club

Clayton Country Club This beautiful and challenging public 9 hole course, located just off the shores of the St. Lawrence

05/25/2026

What a great day for a walk!!!
Walking only - thank you

05/13/2026

Wednesday May 13
The C Way and the CCC are Closed. Opening Day of Men's TwilightLeague is cancelled for today.

05/02/2026

OPENING
Friday May 8
Weather permitting
Staffed Minimum 10 - 2

10/18/2025

OPEN TODAY AND TOMORROW FOR GOLFERS AND/OR DRINKERS -
weather permitting
A Few Carts too

Take pieces for inspiration
10/09/2025

Take pieces for inspiration

She was only fifteen when they chained her to a bed in a saloon and told her that men with money now owned her life. By the time she was twenty, Lydia “Red” McGraw had seen the worst of Dodge City — the smell of whiskey, the fists, and the cruel laughter that hurt more than the bruises. But inside her, the fire never died. She was born in Kansas in 1854 and had grown up helping her father break horses before he died. What life couldn’t break when she was young, no man could break later.

One night, everything changed. There was a fight — a knife, a scream, and a lamp thrown hard enough to set the room on fire. Red walked out into the street barefoot, blood on her hands but freedom in her heart. She didn’t run away. Instead, she rode into the wild lands with a big revolver on her belt and a promise to never let anyone hurt her again. From Abilene to Deadwood, people whispered stories about a red-haired woman who stood up for girls who couldn’t fight for themselves.

Years later, they said she died in a gunfight trying to protect a frightened girl. But no one ever found her body — only a silver hairpin and footprints leading toward the mountains. Maybe she died. Maybe she lived. But the legend of Red McGraw lives on — the woman who turned her pain into courage and justice. And maybe, if you had lived her life, you would have fought back too.
Mysterious mystery

We grow when we work together
10/07/2025

We grow when we work together

This creative, cohesive and contagiously kind team from “3 +1” chose the CCC for their scavenger hunt photo opportunity....
10/02/2025

This creative, cohesive and contagiously kind team from “3 +1” chose the CCC for their scavenger hunt photo opportunity. THANK YOU …. Clearly already “winners”

Sunday October 12 th - SEAL THE SEASON ….Noon Shotgun ….9 holes It’s filling up - still room for 4 teams of 2
10/02/2025

Sunday October 12 th - SEAL THE SEASON ….Noon Shotgun ….9 holes
It’s filling up - still room for 4 teams of 2

What do we do with the hour frost  delay for the Thursday morning regulars? Patience….and a chipping contest …. Thanks g...
10/02/2025

What do we do with the hour frost delay for the Thursday morning regulars?
Patience….and a chipping contest …. Thanks guys for playing along

Small gestures …. Rippling kindness
09/26/2025

Small gestures …. Rippling kindness

You wouldn’t believe the number of kids I’ve seen cry in bathroom stalls, stuffing notebooks in their pants because they bled through.

My name’s Evelyn. I’m 68. I mop the floors at Lincoln High every night after the last bell. Most folks don’t notice me. That’s fine. Invisible people can see a lot.

I see the football players strut like kings, the girls in glittery sneakers whispering in packs, the shy kids trailing behind like shadows. I see which lockers get slammed shut with laughter and which ones stay empty, untouched, like even the metal knows its owner doesn’t belong.

One Tuesday night, late fall, I saw her. Jessie. Fifteen, maybe. She sat on the bathroom floor, knees pulled tight, face blotchy. She had wrapped her sweatshirt around her waist, but I could see the stain anyway. Her hands were trembling as she tried to fold notebook paper, sliding it into her underwear like it was going to help. My heart broke so hard I had to lean against the wall.

I didn’t say a word. I knew that look—humiliation mixed with panic. Talking only makes it worse. So, after she left, I unlocked the last locker at the far end of the hall. Nobody used it anymore. I put a small grocery bag inside: a clean T-shirt from my son’s old college days, a pack of pads, and a note scribbled on a receipt: “You’re not broken. Take what you need.”

The next morning, it was gone.

I thought maybe she’d never use it again. But the following week, I left another bag—some socks, a little bottle of lotion from the dollar store, another note: “You matter more than you know.”

Gone again.

By December, it wasn’t just her. Someone left a granola bar in there. Another day, I found a pair of mittens. Then a sticky note with messy handwriting: “Thanks. Whoever you are.”

It snowballed.

One Friday, I came in to sweep and saw three girls huddled at the locker, whispering. One slipped a toothbrush inside. Another shoved in a hoodie. They glanced around like they were smuggling diamonds. When they saw me, they froze, eyes wide. I just winked and kept walking.

The Giving Locker, they started calling it.

By January, kids were checking it between classes, not just to take but to leave. Notes with doodles: “Stay strong, girl.” Little bags of Skittles. Hand warmers. A new spiral notebook. Even the star quarterback dropped off a six-pack of Gatorade once, mumbling something about “for whoever’s thirsty.”

Word reached the teachers. Some rolled their eyes, said it was a distraction. One even tried to tape it shut. But when that happened, the students raised hell. They stormed the principal’s office, waving little notes they’d saved from the locker. One girl stood up, voice shaking but fierce, and said, “That locker kept me alive when I thought I didn’t matter.”

Silence. Heavy and real.

The principal didn’t shut it down after that. Instead, he asked me to keep an eye on it. Like I hadn’t been all along.

But here’s the thing: it stopped being mine a long time ago. It belonged to them. To Jessie. To every kid who ever stared into a mirror and felt less than human. To every boy too ashamed to admit his shoes had holes. To every girl who thought she had to hide blood and tears and hunger behind a fake smile.

One afternoon, I caught Jessie again. She wasn’t crying this time. She was standing tall, slipping a box of pads into the locker. Her cheeks flushed when she saw me, but she smiled. A small, brave smile. “Thank you, Miss Evelyn,” she whispered.

I wanted to tell her it was nothing. Just old underwear and cheap chocolate bars, just scraps from a cleaning lady’s paycheck. But that would have been a lie. It wasn’t nothing. It was everything.

The last week of school, I found a note taped to the inside of the locker door in bright purple ink. It said:

“It’s not about what you take. It’s about knowing someone cares enough to leave something.”

I stood there in the empty hallway, mop still dripping, tears streaking my cheeks.

You see, we keep waiting for grand gestures—new programs, speeches, government funds. But sometimes change starts with an old woman slipping a pad and a candy bar into an unused locker.

The world tells these kids to toughen up, to stop whining, to figure it out on their own. But life is hard enough without carrying shame on top of hunger and loneliness.

That locker taught me something: You don’t have to be a teacher or a parent or a hero to make a difference. You just have to notice. And do the small thing in front of you.

So if you’re reading this—next time you see a chance to slip kindness under the door, or into a locker, or across a counter—don’t hesitate.

Because what looks like nothing to you might be the only thing holding someone together.

What’s the smallest act of kindness you’ve ever seen that made the biggest difference? 💙

📸 Image | © Awesome Moments

Address

105 State St
Clayton, NY
13624

Opening Hours

Monday 7am - 8pm
Tuesday 7am - 8pm
Wednesday 7am - 8pm
Thursday 7am - 8pm
Friday 7am - 8pm
Saturday 7am - 8pm
Sunday 7am - 8pm

Telephone

(315) 686-4242

Alerts

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