Peter
O'Hare (aka O'Hara)
Married
Hanora
From
the ships manifest of the Cymric:
First Name: Peter
Last Name: O'Hare
Ethnicity: Britain, Irish
Last Place of Residence: Dublin, Ireland
Date of Arrival: Apr 07, 1915
Age at Arrival: 27 y Gender: M Marital Status: S
Ship of Travel: Cymric
Port of Departure: Liverpool
Manifest Line Number: 0018
Name of nearest relative
given as Mr Patrick O'Hare, Foxrock Golf Club on the passenger
list of the Cymric.
Peter O'Hara played
in the 1915 US Open at Baltusrol GC but like his travelling companion
on the Cymric, Patrick Doyle, he failed to qualify (85,79) and
at the time he was unattached. In the North and South Open in
March 1918 he was playing out of Haworth.
In the Western Open
Championship being played at Westmoreland CC, Evanston Ill between
15-17 September 1917 P. O'Hara playing out of Pittsburgh he was
joint fifth (296) behind Jim Barnes (283) and Walter Hagen (285).
At Interlachen in 1930 he finished joint 11th in the US Open Championship
a resident professional at the Westmoreland Country Club (Verona).
In the 1920 PGA Championship
at Flossmore Country Club he reached the third round after beating
Pat Doyle in the first round by a single hole.
Peter O'Hare was the
first of the O'Hare (or O'Hara as it became known Stateside) brothers
from Greenore G.C. to emigrate in 1915 and was engaged by Haworth
GC then followed by Shackamaxon CC where he was joined by his
brother Patrick, the reigning Irish professional champion in 1919,
in the Spring of 1920. Later Patrick joined the Richmond County
CC but not before the two brothers joined forces to record an
incredible 6 and 5 victory over Vardon and Ray at Shackamaxon
CC.

In the 1920 September
edition of the American Golfer in wrote a full page article entitled
- Eliminating Lost Motion
An Idea in Pulling Which Avoids Trouble from a Faulty Back Swing.

"..... Peter O'Hara,
the well known professional, used no back swing at all on a short
putt, merely placing the club head back of the ball and then hitting
it. I found this system good practice for developing a short back
swing." Golf Illustrated 8 April 1922
Reading
Sources:
The American Golfer
April 1922