BUTLER COUNTRY CLUB
🇺🇸 Butler, PA, USA
Designed by Tom Bendelow


Butler Country Club sits in the rolling hills of western Pennsylvania, about 35 miles north of Pittsburgh. The course was designed by Tom Bendelow, the prolific Scottish-born architect who laid out hundreds of courses across America in the early twentieth century, primarily during his long tenure with A.G. Spalding & Brothers. Bendelow's work ranged from simple nine-hole layouts to more substantial designs, and he is known for bringing golf to smaller cities and towns throughout the Midwest and Northeast during the game's first wave of American expansion.
The course occupies terrain typical of the region, with moderate elevation changes and tree-lined fairways that reflect the area's hardwood forests. Bendelow's routing philosophy generally emphasized playability and straightforward strategic choices, making his courses accessible to members of varying skill levels while still presenting challenges through green complexes and natural land movement. Butler Country Club has served the local golfing community for decades, providing a traditional private club experience in a mid-sized Pennsylvania town.
The club represents the kind of established, community-centered institution common to American golf in the early and mid-twentieth century, where golf is one element of broader social and recreational life. Like many Bendelow designs that have endured, the course likely reflects both its original character and modifications made over subsequent decades to accommodate modern equipment and maintenance practices.
Reviews
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
Butler at Butler Country Club has a Course Vaults score of 8.4 out of 10 based on 15 explicit golfer ratings.
Butler was designed by Tom Bendelow.
Butler at Butler Country Club is listed as private on Course Vaults; guest access is typically restricted.
Par at Butler is 70.
Butler plays 6,727 yards from the back tees on Course Vaults.
The slope rating at Butler is 138.