Minikahda was organized in 1898; nine holes opened in 1899 under the direction of the club’s first professional, Willie Watson. As membership and acreage grew, the course expanded to eighteen holes in 1906–07, with work credited to member-leaders C.T. Jaffray and Robert (Bob) Taylor in concert with Scottish pro-architect Robert Foulis; Tom Bendelow made adjustments in 1908.
The club’s first national championship—the 1916 U.S. Open, won by Charles “Chick” Evans—brought national scrutiny. Contemporary accounts and later summaries recorded sharp criticism from visiting East Coast players about green quality, which helped spur a comprehensive reset. The club engaged Donald Ross shortly thereafter; World War I delayed implementation, and his redesign was completed and opened for play in 1920.
Ross’s rebuild formed the template on which Minikahda’s tournament legacy was built. Subsequent eras saw periodic modernization: Geoffrey Cornish and Craig Schreiner undertook lengthening and tee work in 1988–92; Ross specialist Ron Prichard led a restoration in 2001, explicitly using original Ross materials to recapture green sizes/shapes and reconstruct numerous bunkers. Beginning in 2018 the club commissioned Kyle Franz to prepare and execute a master plan that “brought back many of the Ross features enjoyed in 1927,” with the principal on-course work completed in fall 2021 alongside re-grassing and a new, year-round practice facility.
Unique Design Characteristics
Ross’s 1920 plan capitalized on Minikahda’s rolling glacial ground and lake-edge setting by routing a sequence of angled approaches and green sites that accept (or reject) shots based on precise line of play. Several present-day holes showcase these traits:
No. 10 (par 4): A long two-shotter where width off the tee gives way to a demanding, elevated target; approaches from the proper side gain a far easier putt. Observers consistently note the green’s strong interior contour and the premium on angle—classic Ross when the green pad is perched and flanked by bunkers.
No. 12 (short par 4): A drivable or lay-up hole with a green guarded tightly by flanking bunkers; its orientation and contour reward a precise wedge from the correct side of the fairway, punishing approaches that miss in the wrong quadrant.
No. 13 (par 5): A true risk-reward three-shotter whose restored hazards re-establish Ross’s intent around the green complex; the second-shot decision is shaped by water and sand that squeeze the lay-up, producing one of the course’s most decisive scoring swings.
As a city course bisected by Excelsior Boulevard, Minikahda also exhibits a distinctive circulation element: a steel-arch bridge that carries players across the road, a landscape and access solution documented in the site’s cultural-landscape record.
Historical Significance
Minikahda occupies an early place in Twin Cities golf development and stands as a case study of how a championship experience catalyzed a Golden-Age redesign. The 1916 U.S. Open (Evans) made clear that a national venue in Minneapolis required superior green surfaces and strategic hazards; Ross’s subsequent work underpinned a century of championships: the 1927 U.S. Amateur (won by Bobby Jones), the 1957 Walker Cup, the 1988 U.S. Women’s Amateur, the 1998 Curtis Cup, and the 2017 U.S. Senior Amateur. This continuity is documented across USGA records and event histories.
Within the broader Ross canon, Minikahda is significant as a post-Open corrective that shifted a pre-war, member-built course into a refined, tournament-caliber layout. Its standing in contemporary assessments reflects that legacy: in 2024 reporting on Golfweek’s Classic list, Minikahda was noted among Minnesota’s highest-rated classic courses.
Current Condition / Integrity
The bones of Ross’s 1920 redesign remain legible, especially in the siting and orientation of green pads and in the placement of primary hazards. Intervening decades introduced tree growth (and later Dutch elm loss and replanting), irrigation and bunker aging, and modernization that softened some Ross features; Prichard’s 2001 work, using Ross’s original plans, re-expanded green perimeters and rebuilt bunkers to Rossian proportions. Franz’s 2018–21 master-plan work continued that trajectory—re-emphasizing ground contours around greens, restoring hazard schemes (e.g., at the 13th), widening fairways to re-open angles, and pairing on-course work with a campus program (re-grassing and a new year-round practice facility). On balance, the course today presents high integrity to the Ross era in its strategic questions, even as yardage, turf systems, and selective hazards reflect modern standards.
What’s been preserved vs. altered
Preserved/recaptured: Many Ross green platforms and their perimeter extents, restored or enlarged to historic outlines; greenside bunker relationships that dictate preferred angles; widened fairway corridors returning options lost to mid-century narrowing.
Altered/modernized: Tee complexes and overall yardage evolved during 1988–92 lengthening; selective hazard relocations or additions accommodate today’s ball-flight distances; systemic agronomy and irrigation were renewed. The bridge over Excelsior Boulevard and circulation across split parcels remain integral site signatures.
Sources & Notes
The Cultural Landscape Foundation (What’s Out There: Minikahda Golf Course): landscape overview, early chronology (1899 9-hole Watson; 1906 expansion by members Jaffray & Bob Taylor), post-1916 critique of greens, Ross redesign completed 1920, later tree loss and replanting, and restoration intent to use Ross’s plans.
USGA – 2017 U.S. Senior Amateur Fast Facts (venue profile): architect chronology (Watson & Foulis first nine; Taylor/Jaffray & Foulis 18-hole layout; Ross redesign 1920; Prichard restoration 2001), event yardage/par.
USGA – Minikahda to Host 2017 Senior Amateur (2012 news release): confirms 1920 Ross redesign and 2001 Prichard restoration.
Minikahda Club – Our Story (public history page): club founding (1898), status as a premier regional private club. (Note: limited detail publicly accessible.)
Wikipedia – The Minikahda Club: corroborates practice-area inventory; summary of restoration timeline (Cornish/Schreiner 1988–92; Prichard 2001; Franz master plan 2018 with work completed 2021) and USGA championship history (used here only where independently supported by USGA sources).
USGA – Championship records: 1927 U.S. Amateur (Jones), 1957 Walker Cup, 1988 U.S. Women’s Amateur, 1998 Curtis Cup, 2017 U.S. Senior Amateur.
GolfCourseGurus – Minikahda Club review/photos: observational documentation of holes (e.g., strategic character of Nos. 10, 12, 13) with recent-era restoration notes; used to illustrate current on-the-ground features (secondary source).
PGA Section site (Google Sites) – Minikahda 2022: notes completion of course restoration work led by Kyle Franz in fall 2021 and the addition of a year-round practice facility.
Bring Me The News (Minnesota) – Golfweek lists Minnesota classics (2024): contextualizes Minikahda’s placement among Golfweek classic-era rankings.
Uncertainties & Items Requiring Primary Verification
Exact authorship of the 1906–07 expansion: TCLF credits members C.T. Jaffray and Bob Taylor with the new nine (with Foulis’ involvement evident in other sources). USGA’s Fast Facts attribute “first 18-hole layout” to Robert Taylor, C.T. Jaffray & Foulis.
Hole-by-hole survival from Ross’s 1920 plan: Public sources document overall integrity and restoration intent but do not publish a definitive Ross-era hole plan.