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Cliff Roberts
Cliff Roberts
from Wikipedia

Clifford Ubert Roberts Jr.[1] (born 1933 or 1934) was an American professional football player who was an offensive lineman for one season for the Oakland Raiders.[2] He was born in Philadelphia and was a sergeant[3] in the United States Marine Corps, having served upon his graduation from high school.[4][5] He studied radio and television at the University of Illinois, where he also played college football.[6]

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from Grokipedia
Cliff Roberts was an American investment dealer and golf administrator known for co-founding Augusta National Golf Club with Bobby Jones and serving as its chairman from 1931 to 1976, during which time he shaped the Masters Tournament into one of golf's most prestigious and meticulously run events. Born in Iowa in 1894, Roberts built a successful career on Wall Street as a stockbroker and investment executive, becoming a lifetime partner at Reynolds & Company and surviving the 1929 stock market crash. His friendship with legendary amateur golfer Bobby Jones began in New York and led to the creation of Augusta National Golf Club in 1933 on the site of a former nursery in Augusta, Georgia, where Roberts handled the financial, organizational, and operational details while Jones lent sporting prestige and vision. Roberts served as the driving force behind transforming the original Augusta National Invitation Tournament into the Masters, introducing lasting innovations such as multiple leaderboards, red-and-green scoring indicators for under-par and over-par scores, spectator-friendly mound adjustments, low concession prices, and early television broadcasts that helped elevate the event's global standing. A perfectionist with a reputation for an iron-handed yet benevolent style of leadership, Roberts enforced exacting standards in every aspect of the club and tournament, often personally overseeing details to ensure continuous improvement. He maintained a close personal and professional relationship with President Dwight D. Eisenhower, managing the Eisenhower family's investments, inventing the blind trust concept for the president, and serving as an informal advisor during Eisenhower's White House years. Roberts' tenure also drew criticism for the club's historical exclusionary policies, including restrictions on membership and caddie assignments along racial lines during his leadership. He resigned as chairman in 1976 due to declining health and died the following year at age 83 from a self-inflicted gunshot wound on the Augusta National grounds, after a period of serious illness. His legacy endures in the enduring traditions and prestige of the Masters Tournament, which he helped establish as a model of excellence in sports administration.

Early life

Birth and background

Clifford Roberts was born on March 6, 1894, in Morning Sun, Iowa, on a farm. He was the second of five children, and his family faced financial struggles. They moved frequently during his childhood to places including Texas, Kansas City, and San Diego, where he spent part of his youth on a ranch outside the city. Little additional detail is documented about his family background or early personal life beyond these relocations and modest upbringing.

Early career

After high school, Roberts worked as a traveling wholesale clothing salesman. He later earned significant money buying and selling oil leases in east Texas. In 1921, at age 27, he used these earnings to buy a 15% interest in Reynolds & Company, becoming a partner on Wall Street and building a successful career as an investment dealer. He survived the 1929 stock market crash and became a lifetime partner at the firm. His career in finance eventually led to his friendship with Bobby Jones in New York and involvement in founding Augusta National Golf Club. No illustration, cartooning, or related artistic career is documented for Cliff Roberts (1894–1977), the investment dealer and golf administrator known for co-founding and chairing Augusta National Golf Club. The preceding content appears to pertain to a different individual, illustrator and cartoonist Cliff Roberts (1929–1999).

Early animation and commercial work

Television commercials and industrial films

During the 1950s and through much of the 1960s, Cliff Roberts engaged extensively in the production of television commercials, public service announcements, children's programming segments, and industrial films, contributing as a designer, writer, and director across a broad range of short-form animated content. This period of his career, spanning approximately 1950 to 1968, emphasized non-network projects often created for corporate, promotional, or instructional purposes rather than prime-time entertainment. Roberts began this work in the early 1950s at the Jam Handy Organization in Detroit, an industrial film and animation studio, where he collaborated closely with director Gene Deitch. He provided key design contributions to Deitch's first major directorial project there, the industrial film Building Friends for Business (1951), where his graphic style helped enhance the film's presentation despite its conventional narration and music. Following Deitch to United Productions of America (UPA) in New York later in 1951, Roberts served as a central designer on several landmark animated productions that reflected the studio's distinctive, non-realistic aesthetic, and he later designed the industrial film Depth Study for CBS-Terrytoons. In the late 1960s, Roberts worked at Paramount Cartoon Studios, where he wrote and designed the animated short The Plumber (1967), a Paramount Go Go Toon in which a plumber discovers he can play music using plumbing pipes, attracting growing audiences to his performances. The film was produced and directed by Shamus Culhane and animated by Howard Beckerman. This varied output in commercials, industrials, and animated shorts demonstrated Roberts' versatility in crafting concise, visually engaging material across corporate and promotional contexts. His experience in these areas laid groundwork for his subsequent transition to educational television projects. No contributions to educational television are documented for Cliff Roberts (the investment banker and Augusta National Golf Club chairman). Cliff Roberts, the co-founder and longtime chairman of Augusta National Golf Club, had no career in Saturday morning animation or any other form of animated television production. The content previously in this section pertains to a different individual with the same name, active as a writer and story editor in animation during the 1980s and 1990s.

Later years and death

Roberts continued to serve as chairman of Augusta National Golf Club until 1976, when he resigned due to declining health. He died the following year in 1977 at the age of 83 from a self-inflicted gunshot wound on the grounds of Augusta National Golf Club, after a period of serious illness.
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