St. Clair’s first nine holes opened in 1917 as the St. Clair River Country Club. The club’s own history then records a second nine added in 1925, “with Donald Ross contributing to the design.” That phrasing indicates Ross was engaged during the transformation from nine to eighteen, though it does not specify whether he redrew the original nine, produced an entirely new routing, or focused primarily on the added holes.
A centennial article in the Times Herald offered a differing, more sweeping claim—“a new 18-hole course designed by Donald Ross” in 1923—which could reflect earlier planning, phased opening, or journalistic shorthand for the 1920s upgrade. No publicly accessible Ross plans or construction contracts have been posted by the club, Tufts Archives, or the Donald Ross Society to reconcile the 1923 vs. 1925 discrepancy. In practice, the safest reading is that Ross’s work occurred in the mid-1920s, contemporaneous with expansion to eighteen.
Subsequent modernization is better documented. Multiple directories and trade sources attribute a renovation to Jerry Matthews in the early-to-mid-1990s (often 1993–1994), aligning with Matthews’s extensive Michigan portfolio. The Michigan State University “Golf Architects” archive confirms Matthews’s involvement at St. Clair (though it does not list a year), and the club’s own present-day pages credit both Ross and Matthews in describing the course.
Unique Design Characteristics
While a digitized Ross routing has not surfaced publicly, the club’s hole-by-hole pages preserve several feature-level descriptors that map to “classic” Ross tactics and/or later sympathetic updates. Hole 10 is a short par-4 with a slightly elevated green and a false front, encouraging a positional tee shot to set up a precisely struck wedge—an approach pattern Ross frequently engineered on second-shot holes. Hole 12 describes a large green “front-to-back” with mounds that put a premium on approach placement relative to the day’s hole location. Hole 17 is a long par-4 to a tiny, guarded green with flanking bunkers, emphasizing exacting distance control on a rising approach. These characteristics—elevated, exacting targets; hazard placement that tightens the angle; and small greens at the finish—fit within well-established Ross strategies, even if the exact vintage (Ross vs. Matthews) of each green pad or bunker cannot be assigned without plan evidence.
Routing-wise, St. Clair’s parkland corridors reflect early-20th-century siting along gentle relief near the river, with some constriction where trees have matured. The club notes eight tee sets (3,065–6,816 yards), a modern flexibility layered onto the historic framework and consistent with a course that hosts association events and qualifiers.
Clearest surviving examples of historic intent—pending plan verification—likely include the short two-shotters (e.g., No. 10) where an elevated/false-front target and angled lay-up yield advantage to those who shape to the preferred side, and the late-round par-4s (e.g., No. 17) where small, defended greens test a running or clipped approach. These are the places where the present descriptions align most closely with Ross’s known second-shot emphasis, though primary-source confirmation remains necessary.
Historical Significance
If Ross’s authorship of the 1920s expansion is affirmed through primary records, St. Clair would sit within the Michigan interwar cluster of Ross work, alongside Detroit Golf Club, Oakland Hills (South/North), and other projects that carried his New England sensibilities into the Great Lakes. Within St. Clair County, the club became a recurring venue in the state competitive calendar, hosting the 2010 Michigan Women’s Amateur, 2014 Michigan Senior Women’s Amateur, the 2017 Women’s G.A.M. Championship, and multiple USGA qualifiers (2001, 2003, 2017, 2019). This tournament history substantiates the course’s continued standing and the club’s willingness to set it up to contemporary standards.
Secondary rankings roundly list St. Clair among Michigan’s notable member courses but do not place it in the state’s very top tier—unsurprising given the presence of marquee Ross venues in Metro Detroit. Nevertheless, as a Blue Water regional anchor with a plausible Ross expansion pedigree and ongoing competitive use, St. Clair holds local architectural and sporting significance.
Current Condition / Integrity
What likely remains of Ross. The most durable elements are the corridors and certain green sites that still play as elevated, compact targets (10, 17) or large surfaces with interior contour/mounding (12)—features that read “Golden Age” in scale and placement. Without plan overlays, it is not possible to parse which bunker lines or interior green contours are strictly Ross vs. later renovation.
Documented changes. The Jerry Matthews renovation in the 1990s introduced modernization typical of that era in Michigan: selected green/tee rebuilds, bunker updates, expanded tee sets (now eight), and agronomic upgrades (the club highlights bent-grass tees, fairways, and greens). Matthews’s touch is also visible in housing-edge holes noted by reviewers as feeling more contemporary mid-round, before the closing stretch tightens again.
Facilities & set-up today. The club maintains a robust practice complex (range, targets, short game) and regularly hosts GAM events/qualifiers, suggesting greenspeeds and firmness are maintained at competitive levels during the season. Recent club communications also show the course used for league/tournament play on rotating calendars.
Integrity assessment. On available evidence, St. Clair presents as a Ross-based 1920s expansion over a 1917 nine, with 1990s Matthews modernization layered atop. The routing logic and some green expressions plausibly preserve early intent; bunker forms and tree lines have evolved, and the multi-tee system reflects contemporary member-course demands. Confirming the exact proportion of Ross fabric will require archival validation.
Sources & Notes
St. Clair Golf Club — “Our History.” Confirms 1917 opening (nine holes) and states that in 1925 a second nine was added with Donald Ross contributing; notes later club developments and event hosting.
St. Clair Golf Club — “Club Amenities.” Details practice facilities (range with 18 stations and four target greens; putting/chipping/bunker), bent-grass playing surfaces, dining rooms, pool.
Times Herald (Port Huron) — “St. Clair Golf Club celebrates its centennial year” (June 7, 2017). Reports that a new 18-hole course designed by Donald Ross was built in 1923. Useful as a local secondary source that conflicts with the club’s 1925 claim.
GOLF.com Coursefinder — “St. Clair Golf Club.” Lists Donald Ross (1925) and Jerry Matthews (1994), 18 holes, 6,816 yards, par 72. Secondary directory; consistent with other listings.
GolfPass — “St. Clair Golf Club.” Attributes architects Donald Ross (1923) and Jerry Matthews (1993); reinforces the early-1990s Matthews renovation window. Secondary directory.
MSU Libraries — Golf Architects Collections (Jerry Matthews). Confirms St. Clair Golf Club among Matthews projects (year not shown), supporting involvement.
GAM (Golf Association of Michigan) — news/releases and event pages. Confirms St. Clair as host for 2010 Michigan Women’s Amateur, 2014 Senior Women’s Amateur, 2017 Women’s G.A.M. Championship, and USGA qualifiers (2001, 2003, 2017, 2019); lists recurring GAM Golf Day qualifiers at St. Clair.
GolfBlogger Review. Observational note that mid-round holes feel more Jerry Matthews in character before the Ross flavor returns near the finish—useful for interpreting on-course continuity, not for factual dates.