Stymie
historyEarliest Established

Oldest Golf Courses in Maryland

The 25 oldest golf courses in Maryland, ranked by year of opening.

The oldest golf course in Maryland on Stymie is Elkridge Club in Baltimore, designed by Seth Raynor, opened in 1895 — over 131 years ago. Courses from the late 1800s and early 1900s were typically routed by hand across natural land, before earth-moving equipment let architects build courses from scratch — meaning these layouts tend to follow the original contours and reward shot-shaping over raw distance.

32 golf courses in Maryland were built before 1950, and the average build year across the state is 1968. The pre-1950 layouts are often referred to as "Golden Age" courses — a period (roughly 1900-1937) widely considered the high-water mark of American golf architecture, when designers like Donald Ross, A.W. Tillinghast, and George Crump produced the country's most enduring layouts.

If you appreciate the history of the game, want to play classic Golden Age architecture, or are putting together a heritage golf trip, this list is your starting point. Many of these courses have hosted championship events and remain on the bucket lists of serious golfers — even when their modern slope ratings look modest compared to newer layouts.

Ranked
25
Earliest
1,895
Avg year
1,968
Pre-1950
32
#CourseEst.
1
Elkridge Club
6,450 yds · Slope 132 · Par 71 · Seth RaynorBaltimore
1895
2
Columbia Country Club
6,693 yds · Slope 139 · Par 71 · Walter TravisChevy Chase
1898
3
Suburban Club of Baltimore County
PrivatePikesville
1898
4
Chevy Chase Club
6,803 yds · Slope 137 · Par 70 · Donald Ross · PrivateChevy Chase
1910
5
Talbot Country Club
6,923 yds · Slope 134 · Par 72 · Ed AultEaston
1910
6
Green Spring Valley Hunt Club
6,890 yds · Slope 145 · Par 72 · Robert Trent JonesTowson
1912
7
Cumberland Country Club
6,182 yds · Slope 127 · Par 71 · Xenophon HassenplugCumberland
1919
8
Rolling Road Golf Club
6,382 yds · Slope 142 · Par 70 · Willie ParkTowson
1919
9
Clifton Park Golf Course
6,016 yds · Slope 130 · Par 71 · Gus HookBaltimore
1920
10
Sherwood Forest
Herbert StrongArnold
1920
11
Extons Nine Course at Golf Courses At Aberdeen Proving Ground
MilitaryAberdeen Proving Ground
1921
12
Regulation Course at Manor Country Club
Harry Collis · PrivateRockville
1922
13
Blue Course at Congressional Country Club
Devereux Emmet · PrivateBethesda
1924
14
Burning Tree Country Club
7,040 yds · Slope 127 · Par 71 · Alister MackenzieBethesda
1924
15
Country Club of Maryland
6,487 yds · Slope 144 · Par 70 · Herbert StrongTowson
1924
16
Fountain Head Country Club
6,291 yds · Slope 125 · Par 71 · Donald RossHagerstown
1924
17
Gold Course at Congressional Country Club
Devereux Emmet · PrivateBethesda
1924
18
Annapolis Golf Club
Slope 128 · Charles Banks · Semi_privateAnnapolis
1925
19
Eighteen Hole Course at Sparrows Point Country Club
William · PrivateBaltimore
1925
20
Green Hill Yacht & Country Club
PrivateQuantico
1925
21
East Course at Baltimore Country Club
A. W. Tillinghast · PrivateTimonium
1926
22
Chester River Yacht & Country Club
6,349 yds · Slope 131 · Par 71 · Alex Findlay · PrivateChestertown
1927
23
VFW Country Club
6,017 yds · Slope 126 · Par 70 · PrivateFrederick
1927
24
Woodholme Country Club
7,226 yds · Slope 141 · Par 72 · Herbert StrongTowson
1927
25
Carroll Park Golf Course
5,574 yds · Slope 119 · Par 68 · Gus HookBaltimore
1928

Frequently asked questions

What is the oldest golf course in Maryland?

Elkridge Club in Baltimore, Maryland, designed by Seth Raynor, opened in 1895 and is the oldest course in the Stymie directory for the state. Courses from the late 19th and early 20th century are some of the most historically significant layouts in American golf.

How many pre-1950 golf courses are in Maryland?

32 golf courses in Maryland were established before 1950 according to the Stymie directory. These "Golden Age" courses — typically designed between 1900 and 1937 — are prized for their classic routings, natural land contours, and small angular greens.

What's the average age of a golf course in Maryland?

The average year of construction for golf courses in Maryland is 1968. That puts the typical course at roughly 58 years old — old enough for established greens and mature trees, while still benefiting from modern agronomy.

Why play an old golf course?

Historic courses offer a layout designed before earth-moving equipment let architects re-shape entire holes — meaning they tend to follow the natural land more closely. They also often feature signature design elements (small greens, blind shots, fescue rough) that modern courses smooth out. For many golfers, walking a course that's 100+ years old is as much about the history as the round itself.

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