John Andrew Tucker III, longtime champion of First Coast golf remembered as a 'good man'

John Tucker, 93, of Jacksonville,  former Florida Publishing Company president, passed away peacefully Dec. 30, 2022, according to his family.
John Tucker, 93, of Jacksonville, former Florida Publishing Company president, passed away peacefully Dec. 30, 2022, according to his family.

Family and friends are remembering John Andrew Tucker III, former Florida Publishing Company president, as "a good man" and civic leader whose passion for golf was instrumental in the PGA Tour returning to the Jacksonville area.

Mr. Tucker, 93, of Jacksonville, passed away peacefully Dec. 30 in hospice care with his family at his bedside, his son-in-law, Rufus Dowell, told the Times-Union.

Visitation will be 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Friday, Jan. 6, at Hardage-Giddens Oaklawn Chapel & Oaklawn Cemetery. The funeral will be at 11 a.m. Monday, Jan. 9 at Assumption Catholic Church, he said.

Mr. Tucker served as general manager then president of Florida Publishing Company, which included the Florida Times-Union, Jacksonville Journal and St. Augustine Record, from 1964 until retiring on Jan. 1, 1983, when Morris Communications bought the company.

An avid golfer, he championed the sport. Mr. Tucker leaves behind a legacy many say is intertwined with the PGA, especially TPC Sawgrass as well as other local golf clubs.

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“John was like a second dad to me. He was just a good man … first and foremost,” said Dowell, noting compassion for others was chief amid his father-in-law's virtues.

“He was a very caring man. He reached out and helped innumerable people in Jacksonville struggling with addiction,” said Dowell, noting Mr. Tucker, never sought the limelight for his actions to help others.

"He was a deeply religious man who cared and lived his life trying to always help others. There basically was nothing that he wouldn’t do for other people in his family or his community. He was very generous with his time and a very spiritual person. We believe God had him live to 93 because of the good works he was doing," Dowell said.

Golf, a lifetime passion

The late John Andrew Tucker III is remembered for being instrumental to First Coast golf including The Players Championship.
The late John Andrew Tucker III is remembered for being instrumental to First Coast golf including The Players Championship.

After his wife, Eugenia, their seven children and their grandchildren, golf was a huge part of Mr. Tucker’s life.

The last time Mr. Tucker played golf was in September with his oldest son, John “Tuck” Tucker IV at The First Tee-Brentwood Golf Course.

“He played nine holes and shot 39, which is very good,” Dowell said.

Mr. Tucker was the catalyst for the Greater Jacksonville Open (GJO) and The Player’s Championship, Dowell said.

The success of the GJO — launched in 1965 — convinced Deane Beman, then-PGA Tour commissioner, to bring the Players Championship and PGA Tour headquarters to Ponte Vedra Beach.

Mr. Tucker subsequently served as the first executive director of The Players.

He was the founder of good golf in Jacksonville,” longtime friend Duke Butler, former PGA Tour player and tournament executive, told the Times-Union.

Butler said Mr. Tucker’s passion for golf was rooted in humble beginnings. He was from Fort Pierce where he had caddied for a member of the Ponte Vedra Club, which he’d heard about throughout his youth.

At age 18, during his first weekend at the University of Florida, Mr. Tucker dressed in his best golfing clothes, slung his clubs on his shoulder and with 85 cents in his pocket, hitchhiked from Gainesville to the Ponte Vedra Club.

Arriving about 10 a.m., he went into the golf shop and asked to play the course because he’d heard good things about it. Because he wasn’t a member, an assistant pro kicked him out. Undeterred, Mr. Tucker went outside and stood beneath a shade tree.

The head pro, who’d overheard the conversation in the pro shop, went out and told him that if he stayed put and didn’t bother anybody, he might be able to play in the afternoon.

“At 1:30 p.m. the pro got him out to play the great Ponte Vedra Club Ocean Course. And he played til 5:30 p.m.,” said Butler, adding that the pro then gave Mr. Tucker a ride to U.S. 1. From there Mr. Tucker caught a ride back to Gainesville.

At age 33, Mr. Tucker began working for the Southern Bell telephone company when the chairman invited him to play golf at the Ponte Vedra Club. Mr. Tucker and the chairman played the course and defeated two of the chairman’s friends.

As a reward, Mr. Tucker was granted his longtime wish of becoming a member of the Ponte Vedra Club, Butler said.

Mr. Tucker’s affable persistence and salesmanship ultimately led to his persuading Beman to move the PGA Tour and The Players to Ponte Vedra Beach in 1976.

John Tucker, (second from right) former Florida Publishing Company president, received the Deane Beman Award honoring his longtime service to First Coast golf in 2020.
John Tucker, (second from right) former Florida Publishing Company president, received the Deane Beman Award honoring his longtime service to First Coast golf in 2020.

“If it wasn’t for John Tucker and a couple of other folks in town, the Jacksonville Open never would have been here. And if the Jacksonville Open hadn’t been here, we never would have brought the TPC here. They had the tournament organization well organized and doing a get job for the community and that’s one of the things that attracted us,” Beman said.

Beman also said in his opinion, if The players hadn't come to Jacksonville, it's unlikely that Mayo Clinic Jacksonville and other major businesses would have followed suit.

In 2020, Mr. Tucker received the Deane Beman Award, established in 2015 to recognize individuals who have had significant long-term impacts on area golf.  He was recognized for his work brining the GJO to the city and serving as its first general chairman.

Times-Union writer Garry Smits contributed to this report.

This article originally appeared on Florida Times-Union: Retired Florida Times-Union president. PGA golf advocate dies at 93