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The 9th hole | |
![]() Interactive map of Yale Golf Course | |
| Club information | |
|---|---|
| Location | New Haven, Connecticut, U.S. |
| Established | Surveyed 1923, constructed 1924-1925, opened for play April, 1926 |
| Type | Private |
| Owned by | Yale University |
| Total holes | 18 |
| Events hosted |
|
| Website | yalegolf |
| Designed by | Charles Blair Macdonald and Seth Raynor[1] |
| Par | 70 |
| Length | 6,825 yards (6.241 km)[2] |
| Course rating | 72.9[3] |
| Slope rating | 135[3] |
| Course record | 60, Li Wang (2016 Macdonald Cup) |
TheYale Golf Course, orYale University Golf Course, is a golf course inNew Haven, Connecticut, owned and operated byYale University. The course is the varsity facility for the men's and women'sYale Golf Teams and hosts three collegiate invitational tournaments each year. The course is primarily open to university students, alumni, and the university community.
In October 1895, Yale students began playing the at New Haven Golf Club in the city’s Newhallville neighborhood. That course expanded to 18 holes in 1899 and was home to the students and team until 1910, when the course was developed into housing. Some Yale students subsequently joined the new Race Brook Country Club inOrange, Connecticut, but it was relatively far away and not convenient to campus.
In 1922, Yale Athletic Advisory Committee memberGeorge Adee, a noted athlete in the Class of 1895, advanced a proposal to the Yale Athletic Association. He described the current students’ enthusiasm for golf and frustration, and noted thatPrinceton University already had a university golf course whileHarvard University had begun talking about building one of its own.[4] Adee's proposed to ask Sarah Wey Tompkins, the window ofRay Tompkins, to purchase and donate a plot of land on which Yale could build a course of its own. Ray Tompkins was a Yale football captain in 1882 and 1883. Tompkins had become wealthy while serving as the president of theChemung Canal Trust Company in New York. Upon his death in 1918, Tompkins left his Sarah more than $1 million. However, in his will existed a provision that upon the death of his wife the remainder of his wealth would be given to Yale "to furnish facilities for extending and developing the practice of athletic exercises on the part of students of the University." In 1923, following Adee's proposal, Yale approached Sarah Tompkins in hopes that she would purchase a plot of land known of the Greist Estate and donate it to the University. She accepted without hesitation and the 720 acres (290 ha) was purchased for $375,000.[5]
After the donation of the Griest Estate by Sarah Tompkins, a Yale Golf Committee was formed. With George Adee as its first chairman and J.F. Byers andJess Sweetser on the committee, they contacted golf course architectCharles Blair Macdonald to confirm the possibility of having a golf course on the estate. Upon viewing the property and seeing its potential, Macdonald agreed to serve as a consultant to the project. Macdonald pushed for the hiring of a former associate of his,Seth Raynor, to be the course architect. Raynor was paid $7,500 to complete the project and began surveying the land in the summer of 1923.[6]
To fund the golf course, the Board of Control of the Yale Athletic Association reached out to alums with the opportunity to become either a patron of the Ray Tompkins Memorial, a founder, or a member of the Yale Golf Club. To become a patron, one would have to pay $1000 but would be granted, “all privileges of the Ray Tompkins Memorial, including unrestricted lifetime use of the Yale Golf Course, and the option to make during lifetime one transfer of his rights, subject to the approval of the Board of Control.” Some of the alums who supported became patrons include Edwin Herr, George Adee, W. T. Adee, Charles Tiffany, Edward S. Harkness, M.N. Buckner, M.J. Warner, Clarence Blakeslee, Oliver Gould Jennings, J. Frederic Byers, Eben Byers, Charles Merrill, S. Brink Thorne, Julian Curtiss, Henry Havemeyer, Harry Rosenbaum, and S.B. Rosenbaum. Founders of the Yale Golf Club received lifetime use of the course, subject to restriction during the college year based on undergraduate use of the course. Founders within a 25-mile radius of the University paid $750 while those beyond 25 miles paid $500. Members of the Yale Golf Club received use, of course, subject to restrictions during the college year based on undergraduate use of the course. The initiation fee was $250 in addition to annual dues of $40 for those within a 25-mile radius of the university, or $20 for those beyond the 25-mile radius.[7]

The clearing of the Griest Estate began during the summer of 1923. The crew had to blast, dig and drain the land that was mostly swampland.
Macdonald described it:
The building of it was a difficult engineering problem. The land was high, heavily wooded, hilly, and no part of it had been cultivated for over forty years. There were no roads or houses upon it. It was a veritable wilderness when given to Yale ... When in the timber one could not see fifty feet ahead, the underbrush was so thick.
In total 120 acres of the estate was made available for the course. Heavier construction began in April 1924. The project initially began with 60 workers and rose to 150 at the height of the project. Although the crew ran into irrigation issues that required 35,000 feet (11 km) of pipes to correct and the project itself ran way over budget, the course officially opened for play on April 15, 1926. Upon opening, the course set up as a 6,552-yard (5.991 km) par 71.[8] The courses' final cost was a then-record $400,000. One reviewer, the legendary sportswriterHerbert Warren Wind, wrote that the Yale Golf Course was, "a back-breaking job over an untouched plot of rugged land whose hazards and greens have the kind of dimensions that one would have expected of Michelangelo."[9]
In 1983,Ben Crenshaw referred to the course as a "national treasure."[10]
In 1994, Yale hired a new Athletic Director, Tom Beckett. He was "shocked" to find the course in such "poor condition." Beckett improved the financial situation of the course, which included an investment program and alumni support base.[11] With the additional funds Yale was able to advance the quality of the course through tree removal, improved irrigation, and regular visits fromUSGA agronomists.[11] Staffing on the course also increased which "made a tremendous difference in the conditions of the golf course."[12] By 2004, "a restored and beautiful course" had manifested itself.[11]
In 2006, the course was voted the top university golf course in the country.[13] In 2019, the course was ranked #53 inGolfweek's Top 200 Classic Courses.[14] It was also voted Best Campus Course in 2019 by Golfweek. According to theUSA Today, it is the "perennial" #1 pick.[15]
Yale Golf Course has hosted many significant golf tournaments. These include significant amateur tournaments like theU.S. Junior Amateur Golf Championship andConnecticut Amateur.[16][17] In addition, the course has hosted many significant college tournaments including the NCAA Regional Championships, Macdonald Cup,[18] and the Yale Spring Invitational.[19] The course has also hosted some significant professional tournaments. It hosted theConnecticut Open in 1931 and 1981.[20] The course also hosted aBen Hogan Tour event,New Haven Open, in the early 1990s.[21]
David Patterson, the Scottish-bornYale Bulldogs golf coach during the late 20th century, also helped establish a number of significant tournaments at Yale Golf Course during his tenure. These included the 1988 USGA National Junior Championship, 1991 and 1995 NCAA Regional Championships, 1995 World Special Olympics Golf Championship, and the Yale Golf Classic, a senior event.[22]
Like many courses, the course has a club championship. Reverend William T. Lee, who won theConnecticut Amateur three times, has won the club championship 11 times.[23]
In 2004, the course hosted the NCAA Eastern Regional tournament.Bill Haas, fromWake Forest University, won the tournament at two-under-par.[24]

| Tee | Rating/Slope | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | Out | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | In | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Par | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 3 | 34 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 3 | 5 | 4 | 5 | 36 | 70 | |
| SI | 3 | 13 | 7 | 1 | 17 | 15 | 11 | 9 | 5 | 2 | 14 | 8 | 10 | 12 | 18 | 16 | 4 | 6 | ||||
| Championship | M: 72.9 / 135 W: 79.6 / 146 | 420 | 374 | 411 | 437 | 160 | 421 | 377 | 406 | 213 | 3,219 | 396 | 379 | 400 | 230 | 365 | 225 | 553 | 437 | 621 | 3,606 | 6,825 |
| Long (blue) | M: 71.3 / 133 W: 77.1 / 140 | 383 | 362 | 399 | 425 | 135 | 409 | 365 | 394 | 201 | 3,074 | 382 | 347 | 387 | 196 | 353 | 171 | 495 | 425 | 580 | 3,335 | 6,409 |
| Regular (green) | M: 69.3 / 130 W: 75.8 / 137 | 340 | 344 | 379 | 410 | 135 | 349 | 350 | 382 | 201 | 2,874 | 356 | 334 | 343 | 192 | 342 | 141 | 465 | 395 | 542 | 3,110 | 5,984 |
| Short (gold) | M: 65.4 / 114 W: 70.2 / 121 | 310 | 280 | 332 | 344 | 115 | 317 | 288 | 328 | 165 | 2,479 | 235 | 303 | 318 | 182 | 331 | 126 | 435 | 255 | 480 | 2,665 | 5,144 |
| SI | (Short) | 9 | 11 | 1 | 3 | 17 | 13 | 15 | 7 | 5 | 6 | 10 | 2 | 8 | 12 | 18 | 14 | 16 | 4 |
41°19′10″N72°59′10″W / 41.31944°N 72.98611°W /41.31944; -72.98611