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Gambling · Vice · Peru · 1933–19531930–present

South Bluff Country Club

Tinney Cosgrove's other club — and his family's home

229 N 2550th Rd, Peru, IL 61354

Then

Period photograph forthcoming

South Bluff Country Club today
Now — The same corner today. © Google Street View

A par-36, 2,851-yard golf course built on the bluff above Peru in 1930. By the late 1930s William R. 'Tinney' Cosgrove Sr. — proprietor of the Silver Congo on First Street — was running the gambling operation here too.

A par-36, 2,851-yard golf course built on the bluff above Peru in 1930.

The remarkable part: the Cosgrove family lived on the grounds for a stretch in the early 1940s. When Mickey registered for the WWII draft on June 30, 1942, this country club was the address he wrote on the form. The clubhouse doubled as a Sunday brunch spot, a wedding venue, and an after-hours casino. The course is still open today and you can still walk the same bluff Mickey walked the morning he enlisted.

Who's Who

2 names
No portrait

William R. "Tinney" Cosgrove Sr.

active ~1933–1953

Independent operator — Silver Congo & South Bluff Country Club

The other gambling king of Little Reno. Cawley ran 641 First Street; Tinney ran the Silver Congo and the South Bluff Country Club — and at one point lived with his family at the South Bluff CC itself. Migrated from Peru to LaSalle between 1935 and 1948. Started in a Peru soft-drink parlor on East Fifth Street (Prohibition-era code for a saloon). Was building a movie theater called The Peacock in LaSalle when his son Mickey was killed in WWII in August 1944 — he walked away from the project, and the unfinished building stood for years.

No portrait

William R. "Mickey" Cosgrove Jr.

Apr 9, 1924 — Aug 29, 1944

Tinney's son · Pvt., 33rd Armored Regiment · KIA 29 Aug 1944

Born in Peru on April 9, 1924 to William R. Cosgrove Sr. and Mabel Kohr Cosgrove. Five-foot-five, 155 pounds, hazel eyes, brown hair. After high school he ran a service station at 4th and Pike. Enlisted Feb 23, 1943 at age 18, placed in Company I of the 33rd Armored Regiment. Landed at Omaha Beach on June 26, 1944. Wounded in the Battle of Hill 91 on July 10–11, returned to duty August 7, killed in action twenty-two days later on August 29. His remains came home in 1948 — funeral and burial at St. Vincent Cemetery in LaSalle, Purple Heart awarded posthumously. The day Tinney got the telegram, he walked off the Peacock construction site and never came back.

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