Tedesco began life in the early 1900s on a six-hole seaside layout at Phillips Beach (Swampscott) before relocating inland during the 1920s. The club’s public materials and independent course profiles align that the new 18-hole course was designed by Eugene “Skip” Wogan, a longtime Essex County Club superintendent and prolific New England practitioner; the move yielded a routing split by Salem Street with contrasting nines—flatter farmland on the outward side and rugged, wooded slopes on the inward side.
Within that Wogan framework, Donald Ross’s role at Tedesco appears to have been discrete rather than comprehensive. Multiple sources (a contemporary architecture essay and regional course profiles) identify Hole 12 as Ross’s contribution, often described as the “single hole” he designed (or, in some tellings, the 12th tee), and generally date this touch to the late 1920s. No publicly available Ross plan set for Tedesco has been located online; the surviving claim is repeated but not yet backed by a scanned, dated drawing.
After mid-century tournament activity and incremental evolution, the club undertook a comprehensive, historically informed renovation by Ron Forse (master planning initiated circa 2016; work completed around 2018). Forse’s program rebuilt and repositioned bunkers, expanded several greens to original extents, restored fairway width where appropriate, and advanced a targeted tree-management plan guided by an unusually rich trove of mid-1920s ground-level photographs from the club archives. The stated aim was to re-unify the two nines aesthetically and strategically while honoring the Golden-Age DNA.
Unique Design Characteristics
The routing cadence is central to Tedesco’s identity: back-to-back par-3s (7–8) on the outward nine are followed immediately by back-to-back par-5s (9–10) crossing the road, a sequence that shapes scoring swings and demands rapid adjustments in trajectory and tempo. On the homeward half, sustained elevation movement culminates at 16, a long two-shotter that plays over a hogback fairway to a dramatically downhill approach, while 15 and 18 add pressure with narrowing corridors and a saddle-like final green that can repel long-iron approaches.
Specific green-site traits echo Golden-Age tactics. The 1st employs a false-fronted surface best approached on the ground from a wide, elevated opening line; 4 employs cross-bunkering that enforces angle and depth control into a surface that falls front-to-back; 7 asks for a high, shaping long-iron/wood into a compact, well-bunkered target; and 12—the hole tied to Ross—plays to a shelf green well above the fairway, punishing approaches from compromised stances. While Forse’s work sharpened and, in places, rebuilt surrounds and hazards, the hole concepts align closely with the course’s documented interwar character.
Clearest surviving examples of Ross’s hand at Tedesco focus on Hole 12. Absent a published Ross drawing, the recurring description of the 12th’s elevated, shallow target—and period photographs that guided recent restoration—make this the best candidate for feature-level continuity of Ross intent, even if the teeing angles and surrounds have been sympathetically updated.
Historical Significance
Tedesco’s significance within Ross studies is narrow but notable: it is a New England example where Ross’s involvement was limited to a single hole/feature within another architect’s 18-hole work, illustrating the piecemeal commissions Ross sometimes accepted during the 1920s when clubs requested targeted solutions rather than wholesale redesigns. More broadly within Massachusetts architecture, Tedesco exemplifies the contrasting-nines North Shore archetype and holds a robust competition pedigree, having hosted the Massachusetts Open multiple times (e.g., 1961, 1993, 2003) and numerous Mass Golf qualifiers.
Current Condition / Integrity
Routing and greens. The Wogan routing remains intact in concept, with the outward/inward contrast very much in play. Forse’s program (completed ~2018) concentrated on bunker architecture, green-edge reclamation, fairway width, and selective tree work, guided by archival photography from the 1920s; that approach aimed more at restoration/renovation than at re-routing. Consequently, the course today reads as a tightened and clarified Golden-Age presentation of the historic corridors rather than a modern reimagination.
Preservation vs. change. The 12th remains the prime locus of Ross attribution, but, as public documentation stands, the attribution rests on narrative sources rather than a publicly circulated Ross plan. Forse’s attention to greens-to-surrounds transitions and historically photographed bunker styles suggests that several complexes (e.g., 2, 4, 16) now present closer to their interwar appearance, though exact as-built dimensions necessarily reflect modern construction. Yardage remains in the ~6,4xx range at par 70.
Facilities and play. While the club’s site is largely members-only beyond the homepage, Tedesco continues to host Mass Golf events and regional tournaments, consistent with its long role in the state competitive ecosystem. Day-to-day, the course plays as classic New England parkland with fast, contoured greens and a demanding late stretch that tests approach control and recovery skills.
Sources & Notes
GolfClubAtlas – “Tedesco Country Club” (Bradford Tufts). Narrative history and hole-by-hole with design credits: Wogan as 1920s architect; detailed descriptions of holes 1–18; explicit statement that Hole 12 is “the single hole on the course that Donald Ross designed”; course length ~6,500 yards; par 70; tournament mentions.
Top100GolfCourses – “Tedesco.” Club chronology (original seaside start; 1920s relocation); credit to Skip Wogan; notes on contrasting nines; specific call-out that 12th is “said to have been designed by Donald Ross”; documents 2018 renovation by Ron Forse and its scope (greens-surrounds and bunker overhaul).
Golf Course Trades – Jay Flemma, “Tedesco Country Club – Opera, Shipwrecks, and Golden Age Golf” (Jan. 14, 2020). Longform account of the Ron Forse renovation/master plan (begun 2016, completed c.2018); reliance on mid-1920s ground-level photo archive; aims to reunify look/play across both nines; mentions Ross’s 12th-hole/tee contribution in late 1920s.
Tedesco Country Club – Public homepage. General club identity (organized 1900; incorporated 1903); summary description of course character and contrasting nines; confirmation of private-club status and North Shore setting. (Deeper pages require login.)
Mass Golf – Massachusetts Open past champions. Confirms Tedesco CC hosts in 1961, 1993, and 2003 (with winners). Establishes tournament pedigree.