Club information
Buffalo Hill Golf Club is located in the United States
Buffalo Hill Golf Club
Location in the United States
Coordinates48°12′50″N 114°18′55″W / 48.2139°N 114.31541°W / 48.2139; -114.31541
LocationKalispell, Montana
United States
Established1918
TypeParkland (public)
Total holes27
Events hostedLabor Day Tournament
WebsiteBuffalo Hill GC
Championship Course
Designed byRobert Muir Graves[1]
Par72
Length6,605 yd (6,040 m) Longest hole is #2 - 598 yd (547 m)
Course rating71.9
Slope rating121
Course record 64 – Scott Desmarais
(Labor Day Tournament)

Buffalo Hill Golf Club is a public 27-hole parkland golf course located in Kalispell, Flathead County, Montana. The course was founded in 1918.[2] Prior to becoming a golf course the land was owned by the affluent Conrad family and used as a buffalo pasture.[2][3] The golf course is located 31 miles (50 km) southwest of Glacier National Park and 8 miles (13 km) north of Flathead Lake.

Dave Broeder—who was appointed as PGA head professional in 1990—had worked at the club since 1974. He announced his retirement in early 2018 and was succeeded by Casey Keyser. The Championship 18 Course at Buffalo Hill was designed by noted golf course architect Robert Muir Graves.[1][4]

History

In 1918, land was purchased where part of the Cameron 9-hole course now stands.[2] The Cameron course is named for Dave Cameron, a former Kalispell mayor and early golf administrator in the area.[5] Another nine holes were built with sand greens and no irrigation on the fairways. This 18-hole course continued to operate until the late 1930s when the Works Progress Administration (WPA) built the rustic log clubhouse. The WPA also improved the golf course by building a 9-hole irrigated grass course. Some holes are still in service today while others have been modified during subsequent expansions.

In 1964, the club made a major improvement with the construction of nine more holes,[1] four of which are incorporated into the Championship 18 course. In 1974, members of the Kalispell Golf Association decided to expand the course to 27 holes with construction of new golf holes around and over the Stillwater River.

The nearly $1,000,000 expansion project, led by expansion committee chairman Otis Robbins,[4] was financed by donations from the Buffalo Hill members, sales of debenture bonds, and matching funds from the Bureau of Outdoor Recreation. An 82-acre tract of land was donated by Kalispell furniture merchant Duane Bitney and businessman Sid Torgerson for the project.[4] The cooperative efforts and commitment to the completion of this expansion reflected the heart, dedication, and vision of the leaders of the Kalispell Golf Association of that era.

PGA head professional George Haddow served at Buffalo Hill for 25 years.[6] After Haddow's resignation in late 1976, Butte, Montana, native Charles "Skip" Koprivica was hired as the new head professional in December 1976.[6] Kalispell native and LPGA Tour golf professional Alice Ritzman played the course in her youth before her successful career on the LPGA Tour.

Championship 18 Course

On August 11, 1978 the legendary Arnold Palmer—accompanied by fellow PGA Tour professional Bob Dickson—was on hand to celebrate the Grand Opening of the "Championship 18 Golf Course". In 1967, Dickson became the first amateur golfer since 1935 to win both the U.S. Amateur and British Amateur. He turned professional and joined the PGA Tour in 1968. Mac McLendon had originally been scheduled to appear with Palmer for the dedication but could not attend due to a bout with tendonitis.

Designed by Robert Muir Graves—with the expert assistance of construction superintendent John Steidel[7]—the course was referred to as a "monument" and rivals as one of the best golf courses in the Pacific Northwest. Since the 1990s the golf course has continued to make improvements by rebuilding tee boxes, upgrading irrigation systems, reshaping bunkers, improving sand quality and, most recently in 1999, rebuilding of four new greens on holes 12, 13, 16 and 17. In 2011, the Cameron 9-hole golf course was remodeled to accommodate a new driving range and practice facility.

Tournaments hosted

Buffalo Hill Golf Club has hosted many important tournaments over the years. The club is best known for the annual "Labor Day International Classic" tournament which is a 54-hole event first played in 1939. Dozens of players from the Canadian province of Alberta attend each year along with a large contingent of local and regional players. The first round consists of two trips around the Cameron 9-hole course, which plays to a par 33, and the second and third rounds are contested on the Championship Course.

Scorecard

Tee Rating/Slope 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Out 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 In Total
Flathead 71.9/121 450593363328226387483359197339341653510944134947016440532332126605
Stillwater 70.4/119 4085833293111963684633361793173 37951310740831244715139231830266199
Whitefish 65.5/108 3674772932591473224063141572742 3454398535225738111530925425375279
SI Men's 3115137511179 86182141016412
Par Par 45443454336 4534453443672
SI Women's 9171715351113 64181281016214
Par Par 55443454337 4535453443774

Course location

1176 N. Main Street
Kalispell, MT 59901

Notes

The tournament course record is 64 by Scott Desmarais of Calgary, Alberta, Canada. The non-tournament course record of 63 was posted by Logan Lindholm of Kalispell.

References

  1. 1 2 3 "27 Holes Expected to Challenge Golfers". No. p. 5. The Daily Inter Lake. March 24, 1974.
  2. 1 2 3 "New golf era dawning in Kalispell". The Daily Inter Lake. April 4, 1977.
  3. "Conrad Family History". conradmansion.com. Archived from the original on 18 May 2015. Retrieved 7 May 2015.
  4. 1 2 3 "Golf Links Expansion Grant Ok'd". No. p. 1. The Daily Inter Lake. May 24, 1974.
  5. "Hanson wins sixth, Simpson first golf titles". The Daily Inter Lake. Kalispell, Montana. August 15, 1977. p. A-5 via Newspapers.com.
  6. 1 2 Geise, George (December 28, 1976). "Skip Koprivica named pro". The Daily Inter Lake.
  7. "Steidel is supervisor". The Daily Inter Lake. June 27, 1976.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.