Lake Hickory CC - Town Club

Hickory, North Carolina

About This Course

Lake Hickory Country Club’s Town Club in Hickory, NC, occupies a compact, in-town site along 17th Avenue NW. Today it functions as a private nine-hole executive course with a full practice complex, operated in tandem with the club’s separate Catawba Springs facility across town. The Town Club provides members with a driving range (grass and mats), expansive putting and chipping areas, a practice bunker, a golf shop, and food-and-beverage service in the clubhouse. The nine holes are commonly played twice from alternating tees to create an 18-hole experience measuring 3,806 yards at par 60, which suits the property’s limited acreage and hilly terrain. Membership is by invitation, with Town Club and broader “Platinum” categories covering access to the two club campuses. In practical terms, visitors encounter a neighborhood course that prioritizes convenient play, instruction, and short-game practice rather than championship length, while the larger-scale, traditional 18-hole experience for the club’s membership is supplied at Catawba Springs.

Course Details

Holes

9

PAR

Par

30

Total Distance

1,958 yards

Year Opened

1923

Course Type

Private

Ross Involvement

Original Design

Donald Ross History

The Town Club’s course began life as Hickory Country Club, which organized in late 1921, incorporated in 1922, and opened to members in October 1923 on roughly 62.5 acres about 2½ miles from the city center. Contemporary club accounts describe a clubhouse fronting a swimming pool and a nine-hole course climbing “steep hills,” a topography that would influence both routing and maintenance for decades. The Donald Ross Society’s most recent directory revision (June 2023) lists “Lake Hickory Country Club – Town Course (OKA Hickory CC)” as a Ross course, with nine holes and a 1923 date, reflecting documentation gathered at the Tufts Archives and through Society researchers. The 2023 update specifically noted the addition of Lake Hickory’s Town Course to the Ross list, indicating that its attribution was confirmed or clarified only recently in the scholarly record. Primary-source items that would nail down the precise sequence—Ross plan dates versus construction dates, contractor involvement, and any field changes—have not been made publicly accessible online. Through the mid- and late-20th century, the club’s own historical overview records that the in-town course “was re-worked several times,” including re-routing of a creek on two or three occasions, and that the steep terrain posed challenges for early cart use. Those remarks confirm that material alterations occurred, but they do not identify architects, dates, or the scope of specific projects. By the early 21st century, Lake Hickory’s golf identity had bifurcated: the Town Club remained a compact, practice-forward nine-hole venue, while the larger-scale 27-hole course at Catawba Springs (a Willard Byrd design outside the Ross lineage) handled most championship-style play and, more recently, underwent a master-planned renovation under architect Jeff Lawrence. Unique Design Characteristics Assigning hole-specific Ross characteristics at Town Club is difficult because the nine has been “re-worked several times” and now operates as a par-60 executive layout played from alternating tees. Publicly available materials do not provide a detailed hole-by-hole tour, green drawings, or bunker maps for the present course, and the club website does not describe surviving Ross features by hole number. Historical Significance Within Ross’s North Carolina portfolio, the Town Club represents a small-town nine-hole commission from the early 1920s—part of the statewide expansion of golf during that decade. Its significance rests on two points supported by current documentation: first, it is one of Ross’s 1923-dated designs in the state; second, its recognition has been sharpened by recent research, as the 2023 Ross directory update explicitly included Lake Hickory’s Town Course in the canonical listing. This late addition underscores the evolving nature of Ross scholarship and the value of archival work at Tufts and individual clubs. While Lake Hickory Country Club has hosted Carolinas Golf Association competitions in the modern era, those events have been held at the Catawba Springs facility rather than the Town Club; there is no evidence of significant state or regional championships contested over the in-town nine. Current Condition / Integrity As it stands, the Town Club is a nine-hole executive course of 3,806 yards (when played as an 18 via alternating tees) at par 60. That configuration, combined with the club’s acknowledgment of multiple re-workings and waterway changes over the decades, suggests that the course’s present greens, tees, and bunkers have diverged from the 1923 build in meaningful ways. However, the precise degree of integrity—what remains in-situ from Ross’s original green pads, which fairway corridors still overlap the 1923 routing, and how many bunkers follow original placements—cannot be determined from available public sources. Sources & Notes Donald Ross Society / Tufts Archives, Directory of Golf Courses Designed by Donald J. Ross (June 2023 revision). Includes “Lake Hickory Country Club – Town Course (OKA Hickory CC)” with nine holes and 1923 date; notes that the Town Course was added in the 2023 update. Lake Hickory Country Club – “Golf” (Town Course page). Confirms the present nine-hole executive configuration, 18-hole composite yardage (3,806) and par (60), and describes current practice facilities. Lake Hickory Country Club – “Centennial: The History of Lake Hickory Country Club.” Provides organizational milestones (1921–23), the nine-hole opening, and notes that the course “was re-worked several times,” including creek re-routing.

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Contact Information

430 17th Ave NW, Hickory, NC, 28601

+1 828-328-2981Visit Website

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