RIDGEWOOD COUNTRY CLUB
🇺🇸 Paramus, NJ, USA
Designed by A .W. Tillinghast
Ridgewood Country Club in Paramus, New Jersey, features 27 holes designed by A.W. Tillinghast in the mid-1920s. The club opened in 1929 on a rolling, wooded property in Bergen County, and Tillinghast created three distinct nine-hole loops—originally named Center, East, and West—that can be combined into different 18-hole configurations. The terrain offers natural elevation changes and mature tree-lined corridors typical of northern New Jersey parkland settings, with the routing taking advantage of the property's ridges and valleys.
The course has hosted significant championship golf, most notably the 1935 Ryder Cup, one of the early matches held in the United States. Ridgewood also served as the venue for the 1974 U.S. Senior Open and multiple USGA amateur championships. The club's tournament history reflects the quality and challenge of Tillinghast's design work, which includes his characteristic strategic bunkering, green complexes with subtle contours, and holes that reward thoughtful course management.
Ridgewood operates as a private club with a membership rooted in the northern New Jersey business and professional community. The club maintains traditional country club amenities and has preserved much of Tillinghast's original design intent through the decades, though the course has seen periodic updates to address modern playing conditions and maintenance practices. The combination of championship pedigree, classic Golden Age architecture, and mature parkland setting makes Ridgewood one of the notable Tillinghast designs in the metropolitan New York area.
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
Cart was designed by A .W. Tillinghast.
Cart at Ridgewood Country Club is listed as private on Course Vaults; guest access is typically restricted.
Par at Cart is 34.
Cart plays 3,093 yards from the back tees on Course Vaults.
The slope rating at Cart is 137.
Cart is a 9-hole course.