State build-out and where Course #2 fits. Ponkapoag began as a state public-golf project in the early 1930s with an 18-hole Ross course; official planning histories for the Blue Hills Reservation date the first 18 to 1933, followed by an expansion to 27 holes in 1938 and the completion to 36 holes in 1956. Those same histories place the work within the broader New Deal era of park improvements. Course #2, as it exists today, is the second 18—assembled from the late-1930s increment and the 1956 nine—rather than a contiguous, single-season Ross build.
Authorship allocations. Multiple independent summaries (including Golf Digest’s 2022 U.S. Open feature and local reporting when Course #1 reopened) credit Donald Ross with 27 of the complex’s 36 holes and William F. Mitchell with the final nine added in 1956. These accounts stop short of publishing a hole-by-hole map for #2, but they align on the general division: Ross (c. early 1930s) + Mitchell (1956). In other words, Course #2 is part-Ross / part-Mitchell, though the precise split by current hole number is not specified in public documents.
No documented, modern restoration of #2. Unlike Course #1—which DCR restored and reopened in 2015 to “its original 1936 design” under Brian Silva—public sources do not identify a comparable, architect-led program for Course #2. Course #2 has remained open for daily-fee play with routine maintenance and incremental improvements.
Unique Design Characteristics
Par and pacing. The DCR scorecard shows a par-71 structure with two distinct pacing elements. Outward, the card mixes a reachable par-5 at No. 4 (475 yards Blue) with a pair of par-3s at 3 (198) and 8 (165) and mid-length two-shotters (e.g., 1 at 381, 6 at 392, 7 at 335), totaling 3,042 yards to the turn. Inward, the longest single-shot test is No. 16 (192 yards), bracketed by medium par-4s (10 at 485/Par 5 from the forward sets; 14 at 398; 18 at 404) and one additional par-5 at No. 11 (485), for 3,153 yards home. This card-level cadence emphasizes approach precision and wind judgment over sheer length.
Targets and corridors. The official map indicates open-fronted greens flanked by modest bunkers and cross-corridor play where fairway camber sets angles—traits consistent with Ross’s 1930s public work—while several south-end holes (notably 13–15) occupy lower, wetter ground more typical of mid-century public-works additions. Without plan overlays, it is methodologically safer to say that Course #2’s feel alternates between classic Ross proportions and mid-century additions than to assign specific current greens to a named author.
Holes most likely to preserve Ross intent. Contemporary summaries assert that Ross contributed 27 holes to the complex, suggesting that nine of today’s #2 corridors likely descend from his 1930s work, while nine are Mitchell’s from 1956. Given that the 2015 restoration targeted Course #1 only, the clearest Ross survivals on #2 are likely where green sites sit on slight benches with unobstructed fronts and flanking rather than carry bunkering—but confirming which hole numbers those are requires drawings or aerial comparison.
Historical Significance
A public-sector Ross carried into the mid-century. Course #2 matters within Ross’s Massachusetts portfolio as the continuation and completion of a state project that began as a dedicated public Ross 18 and was enlarged to serve metropolitan Boston. The 27-plus-9 authorship (Ross then Mitchell) typifies how Depression-era park golf expanded after World War II. It is one of the few places in New England where a Ross municipal nucleus grew to 36 holes within one reservation.
Competitive footprint. Recent state-level events following the 2015 restoration have centered on Course #1 (e.g., the 2016 Mass Amateur Public Links qualifier). Public records do not show comparable post-2010 championships assigned specifically to Course #2, which has functioned primarily as daily-fee inventory within the two-course complex.
Current Condition / Integrity
Routing integrity today. The Course #2 scorecard and routing map confirm a stable 18-hole circuit with Blue 6,195 yards / par 71 and the same hole sequence published for several seasons. There is no evidence of recent hole eliminations or wholesale rerouting.
Feature integrity and authorship. Because no recent restoration has been documented for #2 and no archival plans are publicly posted, the present course is best understood as a composite: part 1930s Ross corridors and green concepts mingled with 1956 Mitchell work and subsequent maintenance updates. Any hole-by-hole claims of “original Ross greens” for #2 require verification against drawings or early aerials.
Facilities and operations. As with Course #1, #2 shares the complex’s practice range, practice green, and public tee-time system under DCR management. The Mass.gov Ponkapoag page and the operator’s site provide the current tee sets, yardages, and booking.
Sources & Notes
Massachusetts Department of Conservation & Recreation — Ponkapoag Golf Course (Mass.gov location page). Current yardages and par by tee for Course #2; public operations.
DCR / State Operator — “Course #2 Scorecard” (PDF). Official hole-by-hole card, routing map, and ratings/slopes.
Appalachian Mountain Club, Golf in the Blue Hills (history essay). Complex chronology within Blue Hills Reservation: original Ross 18; expansion to 27 (1938) and 36 (1956).
Boston Globe (2015 reopening coverage). Notes that Ross designed 27 of the 36 holes and that an additional nine were added in 1956, attributing the later work to a Ross protégé. Used here to corroborate the authorship split for the complex.
Golf Digest (June 14, 2022), “Why the ‘worst course in America’ was essential to the U.S. Open.” Summarizes authorship: Ross designed 27 holes in the early 1930s; William F. Mitchell credited with the other nine.
Mass Golf (2016) — Coverage of the Course #1 restoration and event return (for context that #2 has not had a comparable restoration).