Documented local sources credit the “Mount Crotched Country Club” at Francestown—also referenced historically as “Tory Pines”—with opening as a nine-hole course around 1929–1930, and they attribute the design of that original nine to Donald Ross. The Town of Francestown’s Community Facilities chapter (2015) states that the club’s nine-hole course was “designed by famed golf course architect Donald Ross,” operating at the Mount Crotched Country Club site. The club’s present-day website also markets the front nine as a Ross layout. However, neither the Ross 1930 course booklet nor digitized Ross plan indices have, to date, surfaced publicly to corroborate the commission with primary materials. A long-running thread of independent Ross research likewise notes no entry for Mount Crotched in the 1930 booklet and reports the absence of archival proof in hand, while still listing the site as “new in 1929” based on secondary references. Taken together, the preponderance of current secondary testimony supports a Ross attribution for the early nine, but the precise commissioning date, plan set, and construction oversight remain unverified.
When the second nine was added to create the present 18, sources diverge. Some golf directories assert a 1930 Ross opening for nine holes with a later expansion; others place the course’s first play in 1929. A frequently repeated note in tee-time directories cites a back-nine renovation in 1992, but it does not identify the architect of record. No primary club minutes, construction contracts, or contemporary newspaper accounts have been identified publicly to pin down the second-nine’s architect and build year.
Unique Design Characteristics
Because the front nine is the portion most often attributed to Ross, present-day observation focuses there. The club’s own hole-by-hole descriptions and current scorecard outline a compact, mixed sequence featuring two par-3s (at 3 and 6), two par-5s (4 and 7), and five par-4s of moderate length. The 1st plays uphill to a green that “has more slope than it looks,” consistent with the front-to-back tilt and short-grass surrounds frequently associated with 1920s construction in New England. The 3rd (155 yards blue) is a mid-iron par-3 that sits on a shoulder above its approaches; the 4th (504) and 7th (466 par-4) stretch across the higher, breezier ground where lateral bunkers and outcroppings influence line choice. The 8th (355) and 9th (422) close the outward half with angle-sensitive tee shots to modest, perched targets. On the inward nine—added later—the club’s tour flags a demanding 13th with a green that sheds approaches from short or long, and a 14th framed by bunkers fore and aft, features that today create continuity of challenge across the non-Ross side. Absent original drawings, it is difficult to identify which surviving greens retain 1920s contours intact; nonetheless, the present form of 1, 3, and 9 reads as the most “old” in presentation, with compact putting surfaces falling chiefly from back to front and tightly mown surrounds.
Historical Significance
If the Ross attribution is confirmed, Crotched Mountain would represent one of the smaller-scale New Hampshire Ross commissions—a nine evolving to eighteen—alongside the state’s better-documented works at Bald Peak Colony Club, Manchester CC, Bethlehem/Maplewood and others. Its value within Ross’s portfolio would lie less in tournament pedigree and more in the vernacular of a rural, resort-adjacent nine set on hard New England ground: short par-4s demanding position over power, an uphill opener with a defensive green, and a mid-length par-3 integrated with natural grade. Unlike several New Hampshire Ross courses preserved within private clubs, Crotched Mountain has remained public-access, which has kept the site’s early-era playing values visible to a broad audience. No state or national championships of note are documented in the sources reviewed; local and regional play appear to have defined its competitive life. (Ross course list for NH context; club materials for present access.)
Current Condition / Integrity
The current scorecard documents an overall yardage of 6,111 (par 71) with modern bunker placement and mowing lines that vary from historical norms. The club’s hole-by-hole notes emphasize green slopes and angle-of-approach strategy, particularly on holes 1, 13 and 14, which is consistent with a mixed-era course in which an older outward nine is paired with a later inward nine. Several online directories state that the back nine was “renovated in 1992,” but they do not specify whether original front-nine greens were rebuilt at that time or in subsequent projects. The club’s public pages do not list architects for any later work. Given that the property has operated under different names (Mount Crotched, Tory Pines, Crotched Mountain), and that resort operations changed over time, it is plausible that tree planting, bunker re-edging and selective tee additions have altered the early corridors. A reliable integrity assessment would require: (1) access to any original Ross plan(s) or grading sheets (if they exist) for Mount Crotched; (2) comparison with historic aerials (1930s–1960s) and (3) club green-construction records identifying rebuilds or re-grassing cycles. In the public record consulted, none of these materials are yet available.
Sources & Notes
Crotched Mountain Golf Club – official website (homepage and course pages), accessed 2025. The site repeatedly states the front nine was designed by Donald Ross and provides present-day amenities and access information.
Town of Francestown, Community Facilities Chapter (2015): names the Mount Crotched Country Club and states its nine-hole course was designed by Donald Ross. Local government document; still a secondary statement for authorship and date.
Wikipedia – List of golf courses designed by Donald Ross: lists Crotched Mountain (first 9 holes) among New Hampshire works. Tertiary/compilation; requires verification against primary archives.
GolfClubAtlas “Reunderstanding Ross” research thread: notes no listing for Mount Crotched in the 1930 Ross booklet and that the compiler had “nothing on Ross here,” while still recording “9 Holes, New in 1929” as a possibility. Research note; not a primary source, but useful for identifying gaps and contradictions.