Bogey Golf Club in St. Louis, Missouri, features a course designed by Robert Foulis, a Scottish-born architect who was among the earliest professionals to shape American golf in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Foulis, who served as a club professional and course designer, worked primarily in the Midwest and is known for straightforward layouts that reflect the practical, less elaborate design principles of golf's formative era in the United States. His courses typically emphasize playability and make use of existing terrain without extensive earthmoving.
The course occupies land in the St. Louis area, a region where golf took root in the 1890s and early 1900s as the game spread westward from the Eastern Seaboard. St. Louis golf courses of this vintage generally feature rolling terrain characteristic of the Missouri landscape, with mature tree cover and modest elevation changes that provide natural definition to holes. Foulis-designed courses from this period tend to be shorter by modern standards and incorporate strategic bunkering and green complexes that reward accuracy over distance.
Bogey Golf Club represents a piece of the region's early golf history, part of the wave of private clubs established as the sport gained popularity among American communities in the decades around the turn of the twentieth century. Courses of this era often retain a traditional character, with routing that follows the land's natural contours and a straightforward test of ball-striking and course management.
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FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
Bogey was designed by Robert Foulis.
Bogey at Bogey Golf Club is listed as private on Course Vaults; guest access is typically restricted.
Par at Bogey is 71.
Bogey plays 6,252 yards from the back tees on Course Vaults.
The slope rating at Bogey is 116.
Bogey is a 18-hole course.