1916: Ross lays out the original course. Club materials consistently credit Donald J. Ross with designing Pocasset in 1916, using the then-clubhouse and barn on the water side of Shore Road as his hub. Early construction, achieved with horses, plows, and hand labor, produced a full course on rolling, previously farmed land; four holes ran along the bluff above Hen Cove.
Post-war contraction and sale of waterfront ground. The club’s history records that “sometime after” the difficult economic years of World War II, the bluffside land—including the four waterside holes—was sold off to developers, and the remainder of the club was put up for sale. In 1948 the property was purchased by William Carr, who shifted the golf operation inland; he physically moved the old pro shop to the opposite side of Shore Road and established new start/finish holes parallel to the railroad. This marked the first major departure from Ross’s seaside footprint.
1970–early 1980s: consolidation inland and new holes. Carr opened a new clubhouse in 1970 on today’s site. In the early 1980s, the club brought the entire course to the inland side of the railroad by creating today’s 6th, 7th, and 8th holes. Those three are therefore not Ross-era holes and should be treated as post-Ross insertions in any integrity analysis.
1989: member acquisition; 1990s–2000s restoration under Ron Forse. In 1988 Carr sold to four members who organized the present private, equity club (closing in 1989). Over the next decade, “faithfully following a master plan,” the club undertook a total refurbishment. The club credits Ron Forse—a Ross specialist—as the architect of “all recent course restoration,” a program that continued into the 2000s (during which Forse often worked with partner Jim Nagle). Contemporary press also recalled the precarious finances leading up to the member purchase and the subsequent revival.
Recent championship use. The course has returned regularly to the state-event rota, including hosting the Mass Senior Amateur in 2021 (its first time since 1989) and serving as an opening qualifier site for the 2024 Massachusetts Open. These benchmarks chronicle how the restored inland routing performs at modern speeds and green firmness.
Documentation note. The club’s public history provides the post-war land transactions, the 1948 ownership change, the 1970 clubhouse, and the early-1980s creation of holes 6–8. It does not publish Ross plan sheets, hole drawings, or a hole-by-hole authorship map; those would be needed to precisely separate original Ross pads from later reconstructions.
Unique Design Characteristics
Ross ground, modern inland setting. Despite the loss of the Hen Cove bluff holes, much of Pocasset still plays with cross-slope fairways feeding into modestly elevated, back-to-front greens—a scale that matches Ross’s Cape Cod work. The restored mowing lines and green edges produce front-edge pressure and reward controlling spin beneath the hole. Club texts emphasize that “many of the original Ross designs remain,” and that restoration sought fidelity to their lines.
Specific holes and features.
• 3rd (par 3)—a one-shotter over water to a green that pitches strongly from back to front; contemporary descriptions and yardage guides warn that shots above the hole can retreat dramatically on quick surfaces, which comports with the club’s aim to recapture Ross’s short-grass surrounds and front-edge challenge.
• 4th (short par 4)—often played as a semi-blind approach from a positional tee shot, illustrating how the routing uses low rises rather than forced carries to shape decisions. (Public guides note its 330-yard scale and hidden green complex.)
• Back-nine pacing (pars 5 at 16 and 17). The official card shows 495 and 527 yards respectively from the Golds, a late-round lengthening that creates scoring volatility without compromising the course’s walk.
Which holes most clearly preserve Ross. Based on the club’s chronology, holes 6–8 are early-1980s creations; the balance of the routing occupies ground long used for golf and, in many corridors, traces Ross’s original inland lines. The interior sequences on the front (excluding 6–8) and much of the back nine therefore offer the clearest surviving window into Ross at Pocasset; a definitive list would require comparison of current pads to early aerials.
Historical Significance
Cape Cod Ross, reshaped by mid-century economics. Pocasset matters within Ross’s New England work as a 1916 Cape commission whose waterside holes were lost to post-WWII development—an instructive case of how market forces reshaped a Golden Age layout. The 1948 sale and inland consolidation recast the course without erasing its Ross character on much of the remaining ground.
Restoration as revival. The member purchase (1989) and Forse-led restoration exemplify late-20th-century efforts to recover Ross features at member clubs that lacked original documentation. The club explicitly credits Forse with “all recent course restoration,” and third-party listings reflect his lead role (often with Jim Nagle).
Competitive résumé. While not a routine USGA championship venue, Pocasset regularly supports Mass Golf events, notably the 2021 Mass Senior Amateur and 2024 Mass Open qualifying—evidence that the restored green sites and fairway lines retain competitive integrity at modern speeds.
Current Condition / Integrity
Routing integrity and alterations. The present course is entirely inland. The club’s history is clear that three bluffside holes were sold post-war and that holes 6–8 were newly built in the early 1980s to consolidate play on the inland side. Consequently, Pocasset is best described as substantially Ross in corridors and green settings outside 6–8, with targeted modern insertions.
Greens and surrounds. The Forse program focused on recapturing shrunk green edges, restoring short-grass fall-offs, and re-establishing angle-dependent approach values—work the club summarizes as staying “true to the Ross vision.” Contemporary descriptions of the par-3 3rd (front-to-back slope; front-edge rejection) align with those aims.
Bunkering and lines of play. Rebuilt bunkers generally resume diagonal influence rather than simply framing greens. Where length has been added (documented anecdotally in reviews and third-party listings), the club has used tee extensions rather than wholesale green relocation, preserving the scale of approaches typical of Ross’s Cape work.
Facilities and present set-up. The official scorecard lists par 72 / 6,542 yards (Gold), with ratings/slopes by tee; practice facilities are present. The course is maintained to host Mass Golf championships while remaining walkable for daily member play.
Sources & Notes
Pocasset Golf Club – “Our History.” Club narrative covering 1916 Ross build; four bluffside holes on Hen Cove; post-WWII land sale; 1948 purchase by William Carr; 1970 clubhouse; early 1980s creation of holes 6–8 to consolidate inland; 1988–89 transition to private equity; attribution of “all recent course restoration” to Ron Forse.
Pocasset Golf Club – Home/Membership pages. Reiterate 1916 Ross authorship; emphasize recent “total restoration,” and present the club’s identity as a private equity facility.
Pocasset Golf Club – Official Scorecard (PDF). Current par 72 and 6,542-yard maximum with tee-by-tee ratings/slopes.
Mass Golf – News releases. 2021 Mass Senior Amateur at Pocasset; 2024 Mass Open qualifying hosted by Pocasset.
Cape Cod Times (Sept. 7, 2009). Background on the 1989 member purchase and revival of the club following financial uncertainty; situates Ross authorship and 1916 opening.
Forse/Nagle listings & trade coverage (GolfNow/TeeOff entries; general references). Identify Ron Forse (and Jim Nagle) as recent restoration architects at Pocasset; used only where consistent with the club’s own attribution.
Public hole guides/reviews (GolfTraxx; Worldgolfer review). Descriptions of hole 3 (over water; strong back-to-front slope) and hole 4 (semi-blind short par-4). Treated as secondary, descriptive sources to document present features rather than historical authorship.