COLONIA COUNTRY CLUB
🇺🇸 Colonia, NJ, USA
Designed by Hal Purdy, Robert White, Tom Bendelow
Colonia Country Club, established in the 1920s in this central New Jersey township, reflects the work of three architects across different eras of American golf design. Tom Bendelow, the prolific Scottish-born architect who laid out hundreds of courses in the early twentieth century, created the original routing. Robert White, a prominent figure in early American golf who served as president of the PGA of America, later contributed modifications. Hal Purdy, active primarily in the mid-Atlantic region during the mid-twentieth century, added his own refinements to the layout.
The course occupies rolling terrain characteristic of New Jersey's Raritan Valley region, where natural elevation changes and mature tree corridors shape the playing corridors. The property sits in a suburban setting between the larger metropolitan areas of Newark and New Brunswick, part of the dense network of private clubs that developed across northern New Jersey during the region's golf boom. The routing takes advantage of the natural land movement, with holes that shift direction across the property's contours.
Colonia serves its membership as a traditional country club facility, offering a layout that balances the strategic principles of early American design with the practical demands of member play. The course represents a common thread in New Jersey golf history: clubs founded in the sport's golden age that evolved through successive architectural updates while maintaining their role as community gathering places for generations of local families.
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
Colonia was designed by Hal Purdy, Robert White, and Tom Bendelow.
Colonia at Colonia Country Club is listed as private on Course Vaults; guest access is typically restricted.
Par at Colonia is 72.
Colonia plays 6,380 yards from the back tees on Course Vaults.
The slope rating at Colonia is 142.
Colonia is a 18-hole course.