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historyEarliest Established

Oldest Golf Courses in Oregon

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

The oldest golf course in Oregon on Stymie is Waverley Country Club in Portland, designed by Jack Moffett, opened in 1896 — over 130 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.

46 golf courses in Oregon were built before 1950, and the average build year across the state is 1965. 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
1,896
Avg year
1,965
Pre-1950
46
#CourseEst.
1
Waverley Country Club
6,669 yds · Slope 141 · Par 72 · Jack Moffett · PrivatePortland
1896
2
Tualatin Country Club
6,700 yds · Slope 138 · Par 72 · H. Chandler Egan · PrivateTualatin
1912
3
Gearhart Golf Links
6,551 yds · Slope 141 · Par 72Gearhart
1913
4
Portland Golf Club
6,944 yds · Slope 145 · Par 72 · George Turnbull · PrivateBeaverton
1914
5
Corvallis Country Club
6,162 yds · Slope 135 · Par 71Corvallis
1917
6
Eastmoreland Golf Course
6,513 yds · Slope 134 · Par 72 · H. Chandler EganPortland
1921
7
Seaside Golf Club
H. Chandler EganSeaside
1921
8
Hood River Golf & Country Club
6,076 yds · Slope 130 · Par 71 · H. Chandler EganHood River
1922
9
Oregon City Golf Club
5,872 yds · Slope 129 · Par 72 · Joe Herberger · PrivateOregon City
1922
10
Coos Golf Club
6,403 yds · Slope 144 · Par 72 · H. Chandler EganCoos Bay
1923
11
Rose City Golf Course
6,437 yds · Slope 120 · Par 72 · George OttenPortland
1923
12
Roseburg Country Club
6,530 yds · Slope 138 · Par 72 · George JunorRoseburg
1923
13
Astoria Golf & Country Club
6,550 yds · Slope 134 · Par 72 · George JunorGearhart
1924
14
Oak Knoll Golf Course
6,065 yds · Slope 134 · Par 74Ashland
1924
15
Reames Golf and Country Club
H. Chandler EganKlamath Falls
1924
16
Rogue Valley Country Club
6,603 yds · Slope 133 · Par 71 · H. Chandler EganMedford
1924
17
Alderbrook Golf Course
Local DesignersManzanita
1925
18
Columbia Edgewater Country Club
6,823 yds · Slope 142 · Par 71 · Vernon MacanPortland
1925
19
Illinois Valley Golf Club
5,939 yds · Slope 124 · Par 72 · John NelsonGrants Pass
1925
20
Alpine Meadows Golf Course
6,072 yds · Slope 131 · Par 72Enterprise
1926
21
Bandon Face Rock Golf Course
Lee SmithBandon
1926
22
Lakeside Golf & Racquet Club
Semi_privateLincoln City
1926
23
Oswego Lake Country Club
6,557 yds · Slope 135 · Par 71 · H. Chandler Egan · PrivateLake Oswego
1926
24
Riverside Golf and Country Club
James Henderson · PrivatePortland
1926
25
Vernonia Golf Course
5,670 yds · Slope 131 · Par 68 · George JunorBanks
1926

Frequently asked questions

What is the oldest golf course in Oregon?

Waverley Country Club in Portland, Oregon, designed by Jack Moffett, opened in 1896 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 Oregon?

46 golf courses in Oregon 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 Oregon?

The average year of construction for golf courses in Oregon is 1965. That puts the typical course at roughly 61 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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