Oldest Golf Courses
The existence of golf at Bruntsfield Links
was documented in 1695 in the City records and from the recently
confirmed position of the clubhouse built there in 1717, it is certain
the present area of play dates to this time. Because of the problems
confirming the exact location of the courses in the list below, this
makes Bruntsfield Links the oldest documented playing area, though only
the short-hole game is played there now. Never-the-less, it still has
golf and it can be played for free in the summer months.
This
list of oldest golf courses is based on the criteria of links golf still
being played where the following can be established: -
- Date - authoritative reference to a date on which play can be shown on the area of the current course
- Location - any part of the current course being within the area played at this date
- Continuity - continuity of play is disregarded
As
with other historical lists, this one reflects the records that we
have, rather than the reality of what may or may not have happened.
Some
may find it strange that this list is very different from the list of
Oldest Golf Societies. This is largely because all the oldest golf clubs
except those at St Andrews, Earlsferry and Fortrose had to move late in
19th century to locations where they could create an 18-hole golf
course. In golf history, space was of paramount importance.
Only
the Royal & Ancient and Musselburgh clubs were able to develop and
play continuously over their original golfing grounds. All the other
clubs of the 18th century and all the other 18 oldest golf clubs had to
relocate, if only a mile or two, to establish the courses that they play
today.
Kingsbarns and Scotscraig returned to their original
golfing grounds, having been unceremoniously turfed off the land by
tenant farmers who ploughed the courses up, leading to the demise of
both clubs for many years. In Montrose, the golfers play near the
original links but not exactly where the first links, called the
Mid-Links, was located.
Recently it has become clear that parts of the current Fortrose golf course play over the area used by the Fortrose golfers at the end of the 18th century, which means the course is older than the club.
The
course list is also different from the list of Oldest Golf Sites, for
several reasons. Sometimes, the early records are court or parish
minutes, which do not document the precise location of the golf.
The
right to play golf on the links was enshrined in the 16th century Burgh
records of St Andrews (1552) and, reputedly, at Elie (1589) and play is
recorded at Musselburgh from 1672, but not with the precision needed to
prove these activities were on today's course, though they almost
certainly were. Therefore the courses at St Andrews, Musselburgh, Elie
go back further than the index dates suggest, and they can rightly claim
to be the oldest golf courses still played.
Bruntsfield Links 1695 Oldest course in world where you can play golf for free
There are no longer any golf courses at all on Leith Links in Edinburgh, Sauchope in Crail, Glasgow Green in Glasgow, Burntisland Links at Burntisland, Ward Hill at Cruden Bay, West Links/Hedderwick Links at Dunbar nor the East Links at
North Berwick. This is because they could not expand to 18 holes in the
late 19th century, when this became the standard for a golf course.
For detail of Edinburgh and East Lothian, see below
The lack of space to create 18-holes also applied to the early English clubs such as Blackheath and Manchester, forcing them to move as well. An interesting (and recent) exception is Royston (1869), only a few years outside this list.
Pau is in southern France, The Curragh is in Eire and Westward Ho! is in south-west England and are not shown.
It may be surprising that there are courses outside
Scotland among the oldest 18 extant courses. These courses, though
established later, were located where there was enough room for 18
holes. They were founded by visiting Scots and local interest in golf
did not come until much later. This was also the case at at Wimbledon Common, founded in 1865, and therefore just outside this list, as are Haddington (1865) and Brook Common (1865).
The Golfers Yearbook of 1866 lists 38 clubs playing 23 courses. (The average' bogey' for
the course records is 5.21 per hole.) Of these, five clubs and eight
courses no longer exist, including many of the oldest courses. At the
turn of the 20th century, the number of clubs and courses would rise
rapidly. In 1888, the Golfing Annual lists 197 clubs playing about 126
courses, though some courses are not named. By the end of the century
this would be over 2,000 clubs, on over 1,000 courses.
You can play all the courses listed here out-of-season for £1,000.
- Origin of Golf Terms
- Earliest Golf Sites and Golfers
- Oldest Golf Societies
- Oldest Golf Courses
- 1754 St Andrews Old Course (1552)
- 1774 Musselburgh Old Course (1672)
- 1787 Elie and Earlsferry (1589)
- 1793 Fortrose (1702)
- 1812 Kinghorn
- 1817 Scotscraig
- 1818 Montrose
- 1823 Kingsbarns
- 1832 North Berwick West Links
- 1835 Carnoustie Burnside
- 1840 Gullane Links
- 1845 Monifieth Links
- 1846 Leven Links
- 1851 Prestwick
- 1851 Lanark
- 1856 Dunbar
- 1856 Pau
- 1857 The Curragh
- 1860 Perth
- 1864 Westward Ho!
- Oldest 18 Hole Courses
- Early Women's Golf
- References
- Origin of Golf Terms