Category Archives: Best public golf courses in America

Six different types of golf courses

United Kingdom heathland course

Golf just published an article detailing the six different types of golf courses. We searched our guide to provide examples of these types of courses in the United States.

Links Courses originated in the UK and are simply the sandy wasteland along the North Sea, the Irish Sea, the English Channel, and the Atlantic Ocean “linking” the agricultural land to the seas. Many people favor the courses in Bandon Dunes as the best example of U.S. links courses, but traditionalists point to this relic on Cape Cod as classic links.

Highland Links

Parkland Courses are simply layouts which are routed through fairways lined with trees for the most part. It’s the predominate type of layout in the U.S. and is easy to find in every state. While unusually, we don’t have a golf course named parkland in the guide, we do have one called Treetops!

Heathland designs are sometimes referred to as inland links in the U.K. They tend to be wide open featuring slight fairway undulations with very few trees, but with fairway bordered by heather, fescue, and gorse among other gnarly, undesirable grasses and shrubs. There’s very few heathland courses in the U.S. but Tom Doak designed one in Myrtle Beach, and there’s one in Bandon, just not at the Bandon you’re thinking of.

Sandbelt courses tend to be in or near Melbourne, Australia and are are on a deep sand belt featuring undulating surfaces and quick draining soils. There’s a few examples in the U.S., maybe in the most unlikely of environs such as this course in Oklahoma and this Nick Faldo design in the Palm Springs area.

TPC Scottsdale

Stadium Courses originated by PGA Tour Commissioner Dean Beaman with the TPC Sawgrass in Port Vedra Beach, Florida in 1980. The elements of a TPC course were to provide spectators with advantageous viewing areas with challenging design standards to the players. Today, there are 33 TPC Stadium courses in the U.S., this course in Arizona may be the most notable if only for the spectacle of its 16th hole!

Par 3 and short courses seem to be the rage today since they take less time to play, are maybe more enjoyable to the masses, and they provide ample opportunities for elusive hole-in-one. We profile a number of great par 3 and short courses in our guide, but our favorite is this one in the Palm Beaches of Florida on the Atlantic where Sam Snead famously lost to an Hall of Fame LPGA member Louise Suggs.

The Most Patriotic Golf Courses in the United States

In honor of the 4th of July, we thought we’d profile the most patriotic golf courses in the United States you can play. First off would have to be the Independence Golf Club. It’s a Tom Fazio original design redesigned by Lester George located in a wooded setting on the west side of Richmond. The course is partially routed through a residential community. It’s perennially rated as one of the top public golf courses in Richmond by the leading golf periodicals.

American Dunes, a Jack Nicklaus redesign of the former Grand Haven Golf Club. It’s on the shores of Lake Michigan 30 miles west of Grand Rapids. It makes the list, not only for its name, but also as it why it was build. It supports the Folds of Honor Foundation. This foundation provides scholarships to spouses and children of America’s fallen and disabled service members. It is a highly rated charity by Charity Navigator.

The Marine Memorial Golf Course is appropriately located near Camp Pendleton just north of San Diego. It’s a classic, Billy Bell design located in the foothills of Windmill Canyon.

2,800 miles to the east, the Marine Park Golf Course is a Robert Trent Jones, Sr. design. It’s on the north side of Dead Horse and Jamaica Bay on a narrow sliver of land between the Bay and Floyd Bennett Field which served as a Naval Air Station during WWII.

The Sound of Freedom Golf Course is on Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point. You’ll definitely hear the sound of freedom when one of the Harriers or KC 130 Hercules is taking off. Coincidentally, the golf course was designed by George Cobb, a Marine in WWII. He also designed six other military courses including Paradise Point at Camp LeJune.

The final patriotic golf course is Patriots Point Links located in Mount Pleasant, SC. It’s at the mouth of the Cooper River with commanding views of downtown Charleston, Fort Sumter, and the Harbor. Make sure you take the time to visit the namesake Patriots Point Naval and Maritime Museum. It’s one of the largest of its kind in the world and home to the USS Yorktown.

As always please let us know here if we’ve missed any of the most patriotic golf courses courses in the United States.