Stymie
historyEarliest Established

Oldest Golf Courses in Wyoming

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

The oldest golf course in Wyoming on Stymie is Kemmerer Field Club in Kemmerer, designed by Dick Phelps, opened in 1920 — over 106 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.

14 golf courses in Wyoming were built before 1950, and the average build year across the state is 1962. 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
1,920
Avg year
1,962
Pre-1950
14
#CourseEst.
1
Kemmerer Field Club
Dick PhelpsKemmerer
1920
2
Buffalo Golf Club
6,516 yds · Slope 143 · Par 71 · Frank HummelBuffalo
1923
3
Douglas Country Club
6,287 yds · Slope 134 · Par 71 · Semi_privateDouglas
1923
4
Airport Golf Club
6,149 yds · Slope 134 · Par 70Cheyenne
1927
5
Highlands Park Course at Casper Golf Club
Robert Muir Graves · Semi_privateCasper
1929
6
Park Links Course at Casper Golf Club
Robert Muir Graves · Semi_privateCasper
1929
7
Kendrick Golf Course
6,677 yds · Slope 122 · Par 72 · Edward A. HunnicuttSheridan
1932
8
Lander Golf Course
6,560 yds · Slope 142 · Par 71Lander
1933
9
Casper Country Club
6,114 yds · Slope 131 · Par 70Casper
1935
10
Glen Red Jacoby Golf Club
Laramie
1940
11
Sinclair Golf Club
Slope 121 · Semi_privateSinclair
1940
12
Niobrara Country Club
6,492 yds · Slope 128 · Par 72Lusk
1942
13
Powell Country Club
6,968 yds · Slope 123 · Par 72Powell
1946
14
F E Warren AFB Golf Club
MilitaryFe Warren Afb
1949
15
Saratoga Inn Country Club & Rv Resort
ResortSaratoga
1952
16
Purple Sage Golf Course
7,018 yds · Slope 153 · Par 72 · Semi_privateEvanston
1953
17
Paradise Valley Country Club
6,669 yds · Slope 134 · Par 71Casper
1956
18
Wheatland Golf Club
6,294 yds · Slope 126 · Par 72Wheatland
1960
19
Green Hills Golf Course
6,378 yds · Slope 128 · Par 72 · Local DesignersWorland
1961
20
Jackson Hole Golf & Tennis Club
7,409 yds · Slope 149 · Par 72 · Robert Trent JonesAlta
1961
21
Legion Town & Country Club
6,266 yds · Slope 118 · Par 70 · Don BrunkThermopolis
1962
22
Old Baldy Club Golf
7,163 yds · Slope 139 · Par 72 · Henry HughesSaratoga
1962
23
Laramie Country Club
Laramie
1963
24
Rolling Green Country Club
6,844 yds · Slope 128 · Par 71 · PrivateGreen River
1963
25
Midway Golf Club
Semi_privateBasin
1965

Frequently asked questions

What is the oldest golf course in Wyoming?

Kemmerer Field Club in Kemmerer, Wyoming, designed by Dick Phelps, opened in 1920 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 Wyoming?

14 golf courses in Wyoming 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 Wyoming?

The average year of construction for golf courses in Wyoming is 1962. That puts the typical course at roughly 64 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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