The property operated as a half-mile horse track and riding academy through the early 20th century. Local owner Anson B. Evans hired Donald J. Ross to convert the tract to an 18-hole golf course; the course opened in 1931 under private ownership, later purchased by West Norriton Township in 1972. Surviving club and municipal accounts establish Ross as the original architect and identify the racing-oval setting that shaped his compact routing.
No documentary evidence accessible in the public domain shows Ross returning for a redesign phase after opening. The next architect of record to make significant changes was William Gordon in 1964, when several holes were repositioned to accommodate the Continental Pipeline corridor that intersected the property. The extent and exact hole numbers of Gordon’s adjustments are not detailed in the sources consulted here and would require review of township engineering files or Gordon’s plan sets to specify precisely.
By 2000–02, West Norriton embarked on a restoration directed by Ron Prichard, explicitly aimed at recovering Ross’s original features while modernizing infrastructure. Prichard and the township re-added more than forty bunkers in Ross’s style, rebuilt tee complexes throughout, installed full-course irrigation (previously only greens were irrigated), and implemented a routing tweak to strengthen the finish—work that began with today’s 17th and 18th holes before continuing through the rest of the course.
Superintendent Rich Shilling, on site since 2001, subsequently maintained and refined the restoration’s outcomes—among them the deliberate use of push-up green construction for restored surfaces and an ongoing tree-management program (roughly 400 removals since 2012) that reopened playing corridors and expanded fairway and short-grass surrounds. These measures, coupled with the restoration, have kept Ross’s original intent legible in day-to-day play despite mid-century alterations.
Unique Design Characteristics
Jeffersonville’s present-day features that most clearly track to Ross’s 1931 work are concentrated in the green pads, the use of diagonal and cross hazards, and the way the routing leverages subtle natural contour on a compact site. The opening hole (par 4) immediately displays steep-faced fairway bunkers biting into the dogleg’s inside corner and a two-tiered green protected front-left—an introduction to the course’s central defense: angles into firm, elevated targets. The short one-shot 4th is fronted by a grass cross-bunker and a masking swale; the hazard both foreshortens depth perception and punishes timid carries, a Ross hallmark deployed here within the small scale of the property. The back nine reprises this cross-hazard theme on the par-5 18th, where a diagonal carry over a cross bunker sets up a strategic second and a dramatically pitched final green.
Green contouring is varied yet compact. The 1st and 7th feature distinct tiers; the long par-3 12th has a front-left hump that complicates front pins and recoveries; the uphill par-3 15th requires extra club to a large surface that runs strongly from back to front, where above-the-hole positions are precarious. The course’s most exacting two-shotter is the 17th (452 yards), a dogleg right with a fairway creek about 85 yards short of the green and multiple bunkers on the corner—demanding a shaped tee ball to secure a preferred angle. The downhill 13th uses similar creek-bed topography, with a descending fairway and a receptive but quick green beyond. These touches collectively preserve the old Ross rhythm of alternating short and stern tasks within a modest yardage total.
Because of the 1964 pipeline shifts and the early-2000s finish-hole adjustments, the “clearest surviving” Ross holes are best inferred from those corridors and greens that align with the club’s pre-1960s aerials and the municipal description of restored bunkering. Based on published hole notes and the distribution of re-added hazards, the 4th (cross-bunker par-3), 8th (long par-3 to a small target), 10th (tilted fairway feeding approaches left), and 14th (short par-4 climbing to a perched green with flanking bunkers) read most authentically Ross today.
Historical Significance
Within Ross’s Pennsylvania portfolio, Jeffersonville is notable as a Depression-era (1931) course conceived on a racetrack property—a constraint that shaped a compact, walkable routing with prominent cross hazards. Its mid-century municipal acquisition and subsequent rediscovery/restoration make it a widely cited case study in returning a modest-length Ross to strategic relevance without resorting to wholesale lengthening. Contemporary assessments consistently place Jeffersonville among Pennsylvania’s better public courses, and national value rankings have highlighted it as a standout sub-$100 Ross that punches above its card.
Tournament history reflects that public mission: the course has twice hosted sectional qualifying for the USGA Amateur Public Links, along with Philadelphia-area Publinks and county championships and junior finals—events that have kept elite regional amateurs and juniors in regular contact with a Ross municipal layout.
Current Condition / Integrity
Routing integrity is mixed by necessity. The broad pattern of Ross’s holes remains, but several corridors were reworked in 1964 for the pipeline and again circa 2000–02 to strengthen the closing stretch. Prichard’s restoration prioritized Ross’s green-to-bunker relationships and the visual/strategic vocabulary of his hazards: more than forty bunkers were rebuilt or reintroduced with steep, flashed faces and Ross-appropriate footprints; tees were rebuilt to restore skew and width; and modern irrigation was extended wall-to-wall so agronomy could support firm, fast conditions. Three greens were newly constructed during the project (specific hole numbers are not identified in sources accessible here), while others were restored as push-ups in keeping with Ross’s era. Post-restoration maintenance has emphasized tree removal (roughly 400 since 2012), expansion of fairways and collection areas, and everyday set-up that allows the green slopes and surrounds to dictate strategy. The current scorecard remains par-70, 6,430 yards from the back tees—evidence that the course has preserved its scale while sharpening its demands.
Elements that appear most altered from Ross’s opening day are therefore (1) the specific alignment of several mid-course holes affected by the pipeline, and (2) the modernized finishing sequence centered on 17 and 18. Conversely, the small-scale greens, cross hazards (notably at 4 and 18), and the diagonal bunker asks at doglegs such as the 1st endure as the course’s Ross DNA.
Sources & Notes
Jeffersonville Golf Club, “Golf Club Foundation & Course History.” Accessed 2025. (Course origin, racetrack history, 1931 opening, municipal purchase, summary of 2000 restoration scope, and event hosting.)
Jeffersonville Golf Course (West Norriton Township) “Course Hole Layout.” Accessed 2025. (Hole-by-hole descriptions used to identify present-day cross-bunkers, creeks, tiering, and specific green features on holes 1, 4, 8, 12, 13, 14, 15, 17, 18.)
Golf Course Industry, Rick Woelfel, “Pennsylvania Preservation.” December 10, 2024. (Ross authorship and on-site supervision; 1964 William Gordon pipeline adjustments; early-2000s Prichard restoration phases; irrigation and “three new greens”; Shilling’s tenure and tree-removal program; current yardage/par.)
GOLF.com, “America’s best golf courses for $100 or less.” September 4, 2024; and Zephyr Melton, “How this $80 Ross muni transformed into a Philadelphia gem.” September 17, 2024. (Recent reputational assessments and pricing context; Jeffersonville’s inclusion on value lists.)