ROLLING GREEN GOLF CLUB
🇺🇸 Easley, SC, USA
Designed by Kenneth H. Dacus, William B. Lewis


Rolling Green Golf Club sits in Easley, a small city in the Upstate region of South Carolina near Greenville. The course was designed by William B. Lewis and Kenneth H. Dacus, architects who worked primarily in the Carolinas during the latter half of the twentieth century. Their designs typically reflect the rolling Piedmont terrain common to this part of the state, where courses move through wooded corridors and make use of natural elevation changes.
The layout at Rolling Green follows a traditional eighteen-hole routing across property that features the moderate hills and pine-hardwood forests characteristic of Upstate South Carolina. Holes generally play through tree-lined fairways with greens that incorporate the natural contours of the land. Water features and bunkers provide strategic interest, and the design asks players to manage both distance and accuracy given the terrain and vegetation.
Rolling Green serves as a community-oriented club in the Easley area, offering golf in a setting that balances accessibility with the challenge of navigating Piedmont topography. The course reflects the regional design approach of its era, when architects worked to fit layouts into the existing landscape rather than impose dramatic reshaping. For golfers visiting the Greenville-Spartanburg corridor, Rolling Green represents the kind of local club that has anchored golf in smaller Southern cities for decades.
Reviews
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
1~9/10~18 at Rolling Green Golf Club has a Course Vaults score of 3.5 out of 10 based on 4 explicit golfer ratings.
1~9/10~18 was designed by Kenneth H. Dacus and William B. Lewis.
Yes. 1~9/10~18 at Rolling Green Golf Club is listed as welcoming public or guest play on Course Vaults.
Par at 1~9/10~18 is 71.
1~9/10~18 plays 6,116 yards from the back tees on Course Vaults.
The slope rating at 1~9/10~18 is 119.