Riverton opened as a nine-hole club in 1900, quickly becoming a fixture of the Philadelphia golf scene. By 1915 the club had purchased adjacent land and hired Donald Ross to design a full eighteen. The Ross course opened for play in the summer of 1917. In carrying out the commission, Ross retained one hole from the original nine—the modern 14th—and otherwise rebuilt the course to his plan, establishing the routing pattern that still sends play out to the far parcel and back. The club’s own historical summary is the clearest public record of these decisions and dates.
After a long period of incremental alterations, Ron Prichard completed a master plan in 2004, and beginning in 2017 the club undertook a three-phase restoration informed by early photographs and surviving documentation. Phase I (2017) addressed holes 1, 3, 5, 7, 15, 17, 18; Phase II (2019) covered 6, 8, 11, 16; Phase III (2021–22) finished the balance—2, 4, 9, 10, 12, 13, 14—with completion marked in 2022. Architect Tyler Rae, a Ross-specialist who had long collaborated with Prichard, led the on-the-ground work during the restoration phases.
Unique Design Characteristics
The restored course puts cross-bunkering and angled green entries back at the center of Riverton’s challenge. Notably, Nos. 2 and 9 feature revived cross hazards that influence both line and lay-up choices, while No. 5 presents an “Alps-like” pit bunker guarding the approach—a feature singled out in independent appraisals of the restoration. Photographic documentation of the holes confirms the re-established sand forms and the way fairway width now feeds those hazards at playing angles, rather than as isolated ornaments.
Ross’s 18 also exploited the property’s subtle elevation: the opener runs uphill across a left-to-right slope, and several mid-length two-shotters place the preferred angle on the short side of diagonal bunkers. The 14th—the surviving original-nine hole—lands on one of the lower parts of the property near the interior connection between the two land sections, showing a slightly different scale and rhythm that the club’s history explicitly notes Ross chose to keep. Green pads at Riverton tend to sit proud of grade with short approaches that can release, a quality made more apparent since mowing lines and surrounds were restored; multiple independent course tours stress how the greens drive the strategy here.
Historical Significance
Riverton is among the earliest Ross 18s in the Philadelphia-area orbit and a representative commission in which he converted a turn-of-the-century nine into a cohesive 18. The club’s own record that only one original hole (No. 14) survived underscores the extent of his authorship. A century later, Riverton became a case study in documentation-led restoration: a 2004 master plan put the framework in place, and the 2017–22 works re-established specific bunkers, widths, and green surrounds in phases rather than via a single closure. Recognitions in regional course guides highlight that the course still measures approx. 6,600 yards from the back tees yet remains strategically modern after the restoration—an outcome consistent with the project’s intent to recover Ross’s ground-game options rather than inflate yardage.
Current Condition / Integrity
Routing & corridors. The 1917 routing—out across the property and back—is intact, including the kept 14th from the original nine. The corridor framework today reflects Ross’s principal lines with modern safety and maintenance adjustments.
Greens, bunkers, mowing lines. The 2004–2022 program rebuilt and expanded bunkers to historical footprints, re-established short-grass surrounds, and adjusted mowing to re-open run-up options. While green pad locations correspond to the historic plan, interior contours necessarily reflect renovation craftsmanship; the club and outside photo essays document the restored sandy hazards and surrounds as the primary sources of renewed character.
Set-up and yardage. The current back-tee scorecard shows par 71 at 6,627 yards, with alternate tees down to ~4,814 yards and women’s par of 73 on designated sets.
Facilities & ongoing work. In parallel with course restoration, the club advanced a facility master plan that included a new golf center and other campus upgrades (separate from the Ross work), signaling long-term investment in practice and member amenities without compromising the historic core of the course.
Integrity summary. Riverton retains high Ross integrity in routing and strategic intent, now expressed through reinstated cross-bunkering, fairway width, and short-grass surrounds rather than through added length or modern water features. The 14th stands as a tangible bridge to the 1900 iteration; holes 2, 5, 9 are among the clearest present-day expressions of the restored Ross vocabulary on site.
Sources & Notes
Riverton Country Club — “History.” Club history with founding in 1900, decision in 1915 to hire Donald Ross, opening of the 18-hole course in summer 1917, and note that today’s 14th is the single retained hole from the original nine.
Riverton Country Club — “Donald Ross Restoration.” Club page listing the restoration timeline: 2004 master plan (Ron Prichard); 2017 Phase I (holes 1,3,5,7,15,17,18); 2019 Phase II (6,8,11,16); 2021–22 Phase III (2,4,9,10,12,13,14); 2022 completion.
Top100GolfCourses — Riverton. Synopsis confirming 1917 Ross expansion/redesign, the kept No. 14, restoration by Ron Prichard & Tyler Rae, and the course’s <6,600-yard back-tee length; mentions cross bunkering at Nos. 2 & 9 and the Alps-like pit before No. 5.
Joseph Bausch Photo Pages — Riverton (2017). Hole-by-hole photo documentation (e.g., the uphill character of No. 1) corroborating restored sand forms and surrounds.
Riverton CC — Golf overview page (club). Club statement that 1916 land purchase and Ross hire expanded the course to a “premier championship 18”; also notes recent restoration language (used to cross-reference the history page’s 1915/1917 specifics).
South Jersey Magazine (feature items, 2022–2024). Local coverage referencing the club’s ongoing facility master plan improvements alongside the golf restoration phases.
GolfWRX forum thread (2021) and PJ Koenig photo essay (2022). Community commentary and photography noting 2017–22 restoration under Tyler Rae; used only as supplemental context to the club’s official timeline.